Aug 30, 2016

Posts Tagged ‘brain chemicals’

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.

A New Years Resolution Reality Check

Posted at January 17th, 2013
Posted by Geoff Steurer
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Categories: self-care, St. George Utah Pornography Addiction Treatment
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By Geoff Steurer, MS, LMFT

Executive Director – LifeSTAR of St. George, UT

 

This is the time of year when most of us are going to be on our best behavior. We have a new calendar and, therefore, a clean slate to live the kind of life we wanted to live all of last year. And the year before. And the year before that.

I’d like to help you save yourself some mental anguish by suggesting a new way of looking at our obsession with New Year resolutions.

We live in a perfectionistic age where we believe we can look perfect, act perfect, and create perfection anywhere we want to. As a result, I see many of us either apologizing in shame that we haven’t been perfect at what we were trying to accomplish, or simply giving up in defeat.
Most people manage their lives in a perfectionistic culture by either going into an extreme “control mode” or “release mode.” Both are harmful and create unnecessary pain and misery.

Today, and for the next few weeks, we’re going to see a lot of “control mode” behavior. People will be signing up for the gym, paying attention to their eating, and trying to do their goals perfectly. This level of control is like winding up a rubber band tighter and tighter. Eventually, it’s going to snap.

After the “control mode” has snapped, “release mode” takes over and the tendency is to give up and either pick a new start date in the future or completely give up and assume their goal was silly and not realistic. Or, worse, they may assume something is wrong with them. That last one is most certainly not true.

Let me suggest a third approach.

This approach is simply making the commitment that you will keep trying, especially when you make mistakes. For some, this may sound like its giving people excuses to fail, but its actually reflecting reality.

Most of us have habits and patterns that are highly resistant to change, based on years of behavioral conditioning, family patterns, and self-limiting beliefs. These changes aren’t simply going to happen by creating a steely resolve to never mess up again at the beginning of a new calendar year, or month, or whatever magical date you pick.

Instead, change is going to happen when you decide you want to get well and then commit to pay attention your mistakes, use that information as a way to make adjustments in your efforts, and gradually improve until you have made real changes.

This approach takes real courage, where living in “control mode” and “release mode” is actually playing it safe where we don’t have to be vulnerable.

I love how Theodore Roosevelt put it in his famous quote called “The Man in the Arena”:

“It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat.”

 

So, get in the arena and commit to making some changes in your life. Don’t step out of the arena when you fail to do it perfectly or consistently. And, don’t wait to step in the arena until you believe you can do it perfectly. Step in and courageously begin making the changes you need to make in your life, for as long as it takes to make them.

 

 

Looking for crumbs

Posted at June 6th, 2010
Posted by Geoff Steurer
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Categories: General Sexual Addiction, Pornography Addiction
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I once had a client tell me that he was “looking for crumbs” one evening while he was home alone. He had experienced a prolonged period of sobriety from viewing hardcore Internet pornography, but he recognized how he was constantly scanning his environment for any “crumbs” that would give him a little rush of excitement. He acknowledged that he would scan magazine covers, look lustfully at women, and not turn the channel on TV when racy commercials would come on. He recognized that he had been allowing himself to believe that these things didn’t count because they weren’t in the same league as the pornography he had allowed himself to view in the past.

He recognized that “looking for crumbs” meant that he will still trying to get a hit from anything that would create a buzz.

This was an important moment in his recovery work. An honest assessment of his commitment and and honest adjustment in his journey.

It’s easy to recognize when certain lines are crossed. “Looking for crumbs” is an internal measure of commitment to healthy recovery.

Pornography is Drug Abuse

Posted at May 23rd, 2009
Posted by Geoff Steurer
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Categories: General Sexual Addiction, Pornography Addiction
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Dr. Don Hilton is quoted in this excellent article on pornography addiction. I agree with his point that it takes about two years for an individual addicted to pornography to reset their brain to normal dopamine levels. After their brains have readjusted, they are able to better enjoy things in life that are interesting and stimulating to most people. This has been my observation over the years of working with individuals struggling with pornography addiction and it’s great to see others talking about it in such clear terms. Teaching the brain that it needs high levels of stimulation in the form of dopamine surges only leaves the addicted individual full of chronic disappointment and dissatisfaction with his life and relationships.