Trauma Reenactment & The Role of Excessive Thoughts

Trauma Reenactment & The Internalization of What Happened to You

Your thoughts aren’t just your thoughts. They are often the internalized representation of what was taught to you as a child.

If you were repeatedly told that you were no good and you took that on board, your adult self might continue to suffer the bombardments of guilt, shame, or self-reproach.

The trouble is that you see your internalized thought processes as part of self, and forget that, initially, they were a direct result of miseducation from, say, one of your parents.

Neglect, Abuse, and Trauma Reenactment

Furthermore, the thought patterns that you have now aren’t always the result of explicit behavior, like the psychological abuse you might have gone through. Persistent neglect and the absence of care, love, and validation, can equally create persistent thought patterns of unworthiness and self-reproach well into adulthood.

Your thoughts aren’t just your thoughts. They are often the internalized representation of what was taught to you as a child. If you were repeatedly told that you were no good and you took that on board, your adult self might continue to suffer the bombardments of guilt, shame, or self-reproach. The trouble is that you see your internalized thought processes as part of self, and forget that, initially, they were a direct result of miseducation from, say, one of your parents.

Triggers and trauma reenactment of previous abuse and neglect can further fuel your existing guilt, blame, shame, embarrassment, or self-reproach and reinforce your current reality through your continued belief and identification with those default thought patterns.

Differentiation between “Here-Now” and “Then-There”

When your Post-Traumatic Stress is activated, what happened in the past will associate to your unresolved emotions in the present.

The difficulty is that you won’t be able to differentiate between what is happening right now, and what comes rushing in as past emotional residue, which makes the situation worse.

This means that emotional residue keeps accumulating through trauma reenactment and through new experiences, interactions, and circumstances, thus further overwhelming you.

A Flight-Please Response and Trauma Reenactment

Let me illustrate this with an example and point out how you can potentially start to work through these complexities through differentiation of time-frames, and reestablishing boundaries:

trauma reenactment

When Harold was a child, his father was unsupportive, as well as verbally and sometimes physically abusive; he would often belittle Harold, and was an unstable individual overall.

Harold’s method of dealing with his father was to isolate and avoid where he could, or anticipate and adapt if he did not have another choice.

Thus, his first response would be to try to escape—or “flight”—and if that didn’t work, he tried to adapt through pleasing.

Trauma Reenactment & Suppressed Emotions

His suppressed emotions—related to his survival flight-please patterns—are anger and deep sadness. His internalization and thought patterns often go in the direction of feeling unworthy, and quickly feeling guilty or doubtful about whether or not he did the right thing in any given situation.

Doubting himself and not feeling adequate frequently come up when he has a challenge at work, or when he has a discussion with his wife; furthermore, he beats himself up over not being able to be more assertive and he tries, forcefully, to act out in order to overcome his internal thought patterns. The attempt to overcome and acting out do not address his deeper issues, and so he further defaults into guilt; this continues to be a psychological cycle for him.

Because these patterns are so internalized for him, he is not able to link how he thinks on a day-to-day basis to what he experienced in childhood.

Working Through Trauma Reenactment and Differentiation of Time-Frames

When we work together, I ask him to stay with the feeling of guilt, but to be careful not to drown in that feeling or try to escape from it by judging it further; rather, I ask him to hold it in awareness, and to track the sensation and feeling of guilt on a bodily level.

I then suggest that he look at it from a larger perspective, and not just as his own thought patterns. I do that by asking him: “When you allow yourself to go back in time, which person in your childhood would make you feel like you are feeling right now”?

  +   Read more about trauma reenactment right here.

As he has his eyes closed and he is tracking his body sensation, he is directly accessing memory that is stored in his body cells—as opposed to trying to just access the information cognitively—which gives him direct access to a part of his past.

Reestablishing Boundaries and Allowing Vulnerability to Heal Trauma Reenactment

Obviously, a memory of his father’s behavior comes flooding in, and he is aware again, on a visceral level, of the abuse he went through. Being able to relate how he feels in the here-now, and what he went through then-there, helps to both give him a wider perspective, and arrest his self-reproach and effort to overcome. It also takes away some of the edginess of feeling guilty, when he remembers where those thoughts and feelings came from.

Over the course of a number of sessions, we work on voicing his repressed anger to his dad, allowing him to be with his deep sadness of himself as a vulnerable young kid.

Expressing his anger as healthy boundaries assists him to feel more empowered, gives him a sense of self-worth, reduces his anxiety, and puts the guilt back where it belongs.

By owning his sadness and “reparenting” himself, he starts to heal his core wound by giving validation to himself—as opposed to continually looking for validation outside of himself.

It is the addressing and reestablishing of healthy boundaries and containing your core wound that paves the way towards healing.

In which way does your trauma reenactment express itself? Leave your comment below.

  • Do you want to reduce anxiety, hyper-vigilance, and being “ON” alert constantly?
  • Do you want to move out of a dissociated, fatigued and depressed state?
  • Do you want to work with anger and reestablishing boundaries?
  • Are you interested in sleeping better, having better relationships, and being able to live a normal life?

I have created The Trauma Care Exclusive Package which address the most fundamental insights into the processes of trauma and dissociation and how you can work through them.

  • Wendy Lavigne says:

    I think that is helpful for anyone feeling repressed and unable to validate their own efforts on their own terms and not having to feel the need to validate their own worthiness by pleasing someone who is not validating them in their
    own rights.

  • Eldon says:

    I was wondering what you mean when say, “containing your core wound”? Thank you.

    • Roland says:

      Through repeatedly going into connecting with the emotion(s) that are overwhelming for you, you will potentially build up enough resilience to stay with that emotion without dissociating into thoughts, addiction, or depression. As you progress, your ability to contain that overwhelming emotion increases. The more you can contain the emotion, the more you are able to process that very emotion.

  • >