Anyone who experiences a traumatic event feels confused, lost, out of control, unsure, and unsteady—disoriented. This kind of suffering leaves marks, sometimes on the body, always on the soul, and sometimes both. In I Have PTSD: Reorienting after Trauma, counselor and trauma expert Curtis Solomon helps those who have suffered the disorienting effects of a traumatic experience to reorient their lives to the path God has for them. I Have PTSD gives readers the tools to understand their struggle and how the gospel brings hope and healing to post-traumatic stress. Solomon helps both those who have suffered trauma, as well as their loved ones, to understand the physical, emotional, and spiritual effects of trauma while offering practical ways to make that hope real in their lives. Q: When we hear “PTSD,” we often think of someone who may have been in military combat, but trauma can encompass so many different experiences. What other situations might result in someone experiencing post-traumatic stress? Great question. It is vitally important that people understand PTSD is not a military issue, a law enforcement issue, or an issue of any particular population. PTSD is a life issue. People experience Post Traumatic Stress after encountering all sorts of events that threaten to, or actually do, end life, cause serious bodily harm, or violate one’s sexuality. This can be anything from a motor vehicle accident, violent crime, watching a loved one die, living through natural disasters, etc. The list could go on and on. Q: The word that you use to describe what a trauma does to a person’s life is disorient. For someone who may not have experienced a trauma, please explain how the impact of a trauma can be disorienting. Disoriented is the best single word I can think of to describe the experience of PTS. It carries the concepts of confusion, disruption, and having what was once set and stable completely turned upside-down, tossed about, or shaken up. It simultaneously feels like you have been hit by a wave, driven under the water and rolled about until you don’t know which way is up, and the sensation of being out in the wilderness completely lost. Q: What is a transformation team? Why is it important to have an entire team walk alongside you? God says it best, “It is not good for man to be alone.” From the beginning, God declared our need for relationship, our need for one another, and He made that declaration before the universe was corrupted by sin. The enemy understands this reality and seeks to isolate people in whatever struggle they have. With trauma, the lie that screams loud and clear in the sufferer’s mind is, “No one knows what I’ve been through. No one understands me. No one can help me.” As Joni Earekson Tada says, “Community breeds life. Isolation leads to death.” A transformation team is a group of people that comes alongside the sufferer to offer hope, encouragement, friendship, and care. They include a biblical counselor, spiritual mentor/friend, and 3-5 other people who aren’t necessarily privy to all the details of the person’s struggle but who know there is a struggle and have been equipped with some interventions to help the person in key moments of need. Q: You write that no two people experience trauma in exactly the same way, even if they lived through the same event because they will have different responses and wounds as a result. However, there are common symptoms of PTS. What are some of the signs that loved ones can watch out for? Trauma is instigated by events of severe suffering. So, the first thing to note is you should be close enough of a friend or family member to know that severe suffering has occurred. If you aren’t that close of a friend, you may not be the one to intervene, unless the person specifically asks you. If someone you know has been through something that threatened her life, serious injury, or violation of sexual integrity, then stay close enough to observe her responses. In the immediate aftermath, ensure she is eating, drinking water, and sleeping. As time progresses, observe and ask about things like sleep loss, including nightmares, waking up in fright, or difficulty in falling asleep and staying asleep. Watch for increased irritability, jumpiness, a loss of interest in things she used to love, a change in personality, or a desire to isolate. She might try to avoid things that might remind her of the trauma or have a threat response (fight, flight, freeze, faint) to things that are not actually dangerous. She may express negative thoughts about self, life, God, others, the world, especially if that is a change from previous outlooks on life. Q: You are intentional to use PTS or PTSd rather than PTSD in the book. Why do you make this distinction? The “D” in PTSD stands for disorder. That label often communicates to people that they are disordered, broken, weak, or freakish. The diagnosis combined with the common prognosis, “There is no known cure for PTSD. It is something you are going to have to learn to live with,” robs people of hope. The reason I prefer PTS over PTSD is that it is less a diagnosis and simply a description of experiences that are common to people who live through severe suffering. I want people to understand that what they are living through is not a broken, abnormal response to normal life, but a common response to extreme suffering. Q: How does looking at the life of Jesus and how he handled himself provide hope and perspective for the traumatic events we have faced? Jesus is the exemplar human in all respects. He is the embodiment of what we were created to be. When we look at how Jesus suffered there is a great deal to learn. First of all, his life teaches us that Jesus understands, relates to, and feels for us in our suffering. Secondly, we see that Jesus suffered severely and expressed whole person lament for the pain and difficulty he went through. He did not “tough it out,” “suck it up,” or keep to Himself. He cried out with loud crying and tears, and He did so to someone—His heavenly Father. We are to follow that example of going to God with our griefs and grievances. Finally, Jesus’ suffering drew Him towards people in compassion and love. It did not drive the wedges of hardness, comparison, and looking down on others. We should follow His example by being softened towards others, and wanting to see our pain used for the benefit of others rather than allowing it to divide us. |
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