Anxiety and Trauma Recovery
Anxiety and depression are challenging conditions that can dog you throughout your lifetime. Often, you are coping with these symptoms by merely managing them and it does not always feel that you can shake the dark mood or the sense of being a “bundle of nerves”. The littlest things can set you off into a day, week or month of anxious depression.
One way of looking at these conditions is that the symptoms are a manifestation of an unresolved stress response in the nervous system. Think of it as a cog in the wheel of the nervous system that is stuck and can’t complete an action. It is just going to keep trying and trying without resolution. Often chronic depression or anxiety began to develop at a time that the nervous system was unprepared and could not resolve the stress of a life circumstance. You and I need to explore your triggers and understand where the stuck action is and learn to complete it.
My approach views the symptoms of depression or anxiety as a basically a function of a nervous system that got taxed at some point and is still trying to come back into balance. The approach includes developing daily coping skills to help stabilize the system as well as talking through the event itself with an eye to what happens physiologically in the moment that the past event is being described. This approach works directly with the sensations of the body to help you understand when you are keyed up or keyed down and helps you to learn how to key down and relax. Resolution comes from a place of self-love and resiliency is built by building support in one’s life.
Trauma can live in the body unaddressed for a lifetime. It impacts every aspect of the person’s experience, from health concerns to psychological instability to insecurities in achieving life goals. Working through trauma is the single most important piece in establishing a more harmonious life perspective. Adults often can’t identify the source of their anxieties because it is buried in childhood experience. Or, they know the source, but addressing the impact of trauma has been elusive. Whether you identify a single traumatic experience in your life or you experience the result through a highly strung nervous system, trauma can be addressed through working with the sensations of the body. “There is a mistaken notion that trauma is primarily about memory—the story of what has happened.” -Bessel Van Der Kolk
Helen Star was originally trained in Somatic Psychotherapy and have over 25 years of working with the language of the body. She works with trauma, anxiety, and depression through both coping skill building and through using body-oriented techniques to complete unresolved stress responses in the nervous system.