05-25-2017, 01:59 AM
Probably not, trauma are experiences that can be recognised the easiest to place the blame on for all issues, but the uniqueness of all experience and their unique outcomes, taken together with the knowledge that similar traumatic experiences lead to completely different outcomes or no observable outcomes at all.
Leads me to conclude that the experience of trauma is not the root of issues, it's just the easiest thing to pinpoint.
By placing the focus on the experience of trauma you're just creating a new problem, cause in that way every other cause goes by unrecognised.
What actually has to be recognised is the context people with issues live in cause even if a trauma has caused an issue to become apparent, the experience of the trauma is gone but the context maintains or nourishes the issue.
The past isn't a static object, whatever happened in it can always still be rewritten so naturally past trauma isn't a static object either and by rewriting it you may temporarily solve some issues, but when a person with issues lives in a context that maintains those issues the same patterns will just return. If you let that go by unrecognised while telling a person that the cause of their issues is a past trauma, you'll just make it harder for them in the long run, when the realisation comes that the recognition of that trauma, which was supposedly to blame, hasn't actually changed anything (in most cases)
Leads me to conclude that the experience of trauma is not the root of issues, it's just the easiest thing to pinpoint.
By placing the focus on the experience of trauma you're just creating a new problem, cause in that way every other cause goes by unrecognised.
What actually has to be recognised is the context people with issues live in cause even if a trauma has caused an issue to become apparent, the experience of the trauma is gone but the context maintains or nourishes the issue.
The past isn't a static object, whatever happened in it can always still be rewritten so naturally past trauma isn't a static object either and by rewriting it you may temporarily solve some issues, but when a person with issues lives in a context that maintains those issues the same patterns will just return. If you let that go by unrecognised while telling a person that the cause of their issues is a past trauma, you'll just make it harder for them in the long run, when the realisation comes that the recognition of that trauma, which was supposedly to blame, hasn't actually changed anything (in most cases)