Aug 30, 2016

Posts Tagged ‘body image’

Drama not Trauma

Posted at September 2nd, 2013
Posted by Geoff Steurer
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Categories: Couples Pornography Addiction Recovery, General Sexual Addiction, Partners of pornography addicts, Shame, St. George Utah Pornography Addiction Treatment
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20121102-IMG_7855by Noelle Christensen, LPC
LifeStar Therapist

Have you ever expressed your needs to your partner and been told “stop being so dramatic!” If so, it may have felt like the wind was knocked out of you. In fact, what you may have heard instead is something like, “What you are feeling does not matter to me.”

While it may not have been your partner’s intentions to shut down your feelings, the effects are nonetheless painful. You made a commitment to love and cherish your partner, through the good, the bad, and the ugly. At times it may feel that when you are trying to communicate, out of what you believe is a desire to make your relationship better, you may feel rejection and shame in return.

Trauma in relationships that results from pain, betrayal, abuse, and addiction is termed “relational trauma.” Relational trauma results in behaviors that can often be misinterpreted by others as dramatic. Words like codependence, avoidance, and self-doubt all describe the way relational trauma shows up in betrayed partners. Relational trauma also creates grave mistrust of others along with mood fluctuations and depression. Some of the more subtle evidences of relational trauma might include flashbacks, anxiety, rumination (thinking about painful things over and over), sleep issues, loss of sexual desire, and other physical symptoms (headaches, muscle tension, clenching of teeth, and so on).

Relational trauma is your body’s way of responding to a lack of safety within your closest relationship. Because our bodies are hardwired to connect with other people, especially within the marital relationship, any events that threaten our ability to connect with those we care about (whether the threat is real or perceived) will naturally result in behaviors that scream out, “I need you! I need your acceptance! I need your love and attention! I need to be reminded that I am good enough, that I am loveable, that I am capable, that you value me!”

These behaviors often produce the opposite effect, leaving our spouse (and others) wanting to pull away from us in the moments when we need them the most. This only intensifies feelings of pain, rejection, fear, and self-doubt for the person in trauma, perpetuating a vicious cycle of desperate behaviors followed by more rejection, which produces even greater desperation.

Don’t wait for the next dramatic encounter to begin discussing the concept of relational trauma with your partner. Chances are they also feel the fear and desperation created by relational trauma. Discuss how certain responses contribute to a lack of safety within your relationship. Talk about each other’s needs and fears. Try to stay open to suggestions about ways you can create safety for each other. Perhaps you might consider gently bringing it to each other’s attention when one of you says something that stirs feelings of fear and rejection for the other partner. You might say something like, “When you said that just now, what I heard was….”, keeping in mind that just because it is what you heard, it does not mean it is what your partner actually said or intended. Guide your partner in understanding the sensitive nerve they just stumbled upon along with the fears associated with the painful encounter.

By discussing and understanding relational trauma, you can begin to identify it within yourself and between you and your partner. By identifying it, you can learn to respond differently to your partner, and communication will begin to flow more freely as safety begins to replace apprehension and fear. You will begin to experience a new level of emotional intimacy. In addition to hastening the healing within your relationship, you will hasten your own healing by showing yourself a new level of compassion that comes from understanding how your “dramatic” reactions have only been in response to painful trauma buried deep within you.

Making Self Care a Priority

Posted at August 1st, 2013
Posted by Geoff Steurer
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Categories: Pornography Addiction, self-care, Uncategorized
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Making self-care a priority

By Jon Worlton, LCSW

LifeStar therapist

 

I recently listened to a prominent religious leader use the analogy of fly fishing when teaching about Satanic efforts to “hook” and destroy human lives. Fly fishermen carefully get to know the habits and patterns of their prey. They design lures to mimic insects that fish are eating and also fish at times when fish are most active and hungry. In short, fly fisherman learn about and manipulate their prey’s needs.

Whether or not one believes in God or the Devil, it is hard to disagree with the reality of “lures” in our environment that will limit our freedom and ultimately destroy our lives. Addictions are the most common lures that hook and trap individuals. Addictions are a powerful and effective way of soothing emotional distress and satisfying unmet needs. Even though the relief is temporary, the experience the user is having feels authentic. Unfortunately, the emotionally “hungrier” one is, the more enticing the lure of the addiction. On the flip side, the more our real emotional needs have been met, the easier it becomes to discern between an artificial lure and something that will be healthy and nourishing.

The first way to begin meeting these important emotional needs is the engage in healthy self-care. Self-care is the intentional practice of meeting our needs in healthy and nourishing ways. Early in my work with the LifeStar program, I heard recovery summarized as deliberately creating healthy rituals which nourish, strengthen, and renew our individual energy. This renewal allows us to make meaningful contributions to our relationships. It is important for all of us to deliberately identify and practice self-care activities.

 

A blogger named Stephanie Neilson (http://nieniedialogues.blogspot.com/2010/10/3-simple-steps.html) listed the following things she does for self care:

 

1. Make a “Quiet Time” sign and put it on my front door when I need a nap, or down time with the boys. There is no reason why quiet signs just have to be for napping children.?I suggest you take full advantage of it too.

2. I make home a priority. Nothing ever comes before my family time. Nothing.

3. I leave at least one day a week of nothing. No house-work, yard work, errands, shopping, computer, and cooking (among other things). Life just comes as it comes.

 

While these are examples specific to a stay-at-home mother of small children, you can clearly see the priority she places on protecting and caring for those areas that will allow her to be more emotionally present for her loved ones.

In addition to personal self-care, relational care is also critical. Todd Olson and Dan Gray, founders of the LifeStar program, suggest the following for relationship care:

 

  1. A weekly date with your spouse that doesn’t include recovery/addiction talk.
  2. Weekly service (do one deliberate thing each week for your spouse)
  3. A monthly gift to your spouse (doesn’t have to be expensive).

Looking for love?

Posted at July 28th, 2010
Posted by Geoff Steurer
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Categories: General Sexual Addiction, In the news/media, Partners of pornography addicts, Pornography Addiction, Protecting Children from Pornography, St. George Utah Pornography Addiction Treatment
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I was recently reading the first section of the new book “Pornland: How Porn has Highjacked Our Sexuality“and ran across this tagline the author found on a pornography site. It said, “Don’t Come Here Looking for Love.”

Now, that’s probably the only honest thing one would find on a porn site.

Love is about mutual respect. It’s about fidelity. It’s about sacrifice. It’s about giving (not taking). They’re right…. there is no love in pornography. As a matter of fact, pornography is the opposite of love. It’s about exploitation. It exploits and uses those who make it. It exploits and robs those who view it. And, sadly, it traumatizes the romantic partners of those who view it.

I wish that tagline would say a little more. Perhaps there could be a warning label like on a cigarette package. As a matter of fact, Wendy Maltz has already written such a warning label. You can download it here: Hazards of Porn - Wendy Maltz

“Fake” is the new “Real”

Posted at October 18th, 2009
Posted by Geoff Steurer
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Categories: General Sexual Addiction, In the news/media, Partners of pornography addicts, Pornography Addiction, Protecting Families from Pornography, Shame
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Men and women are falling prey to the impossible standards of beauty perpetuated by the media. Magazine editors admit that virtually EVERY photo in today’s magazines has been modified. Most local family photographers also report that their clients demand photo retouching as part of the portrait package. It’s not okay to look “real” anymore. “Fake” is the new “real” and it’s driving people to be unhappy with their own and their partner’s appearances. Body image dissatisfaction among women and girls is higher than it’s ever been. Addiction to pornography in all it’s form is rampant. Imagine what would happen if we slowed down our media consumption and spent more time connecting with REAL people in REAL relationships in REAL time.