How to Stop Getting TRIGGERED Forever

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The School of Life

The School of Life

Жыл бұрын

The concept of being triggered, though it may at times be overused, sits on top of a hugely important concept in psychological life. One moment we are calm, the next we are catapulted into despair and terror. It may be important to know how to be scared or incensed when situations actually demand it, but it is also deeply counterproductive to be visited by powerful emotions that aren’t warranted by what lies before us and that fail to advance our interests in any way.
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“The phenomenon of being ‘triggered’ - though it may, at times, be applied too liberally - sits on top of a hugely important concept in psychological life which demands our respect, compassion and attention. To be triggered is, in its most basic form, to respond with intense fear and anger to a situation in the here and now which, to other people, may seem blameless and unconcerning. One moment we are calm, the next we are catapulted into despair and terror; only minutes ago, the future looked hopeful, now only ruin and disaster seem to lie ahead…”
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@DonaldAMisc
@DonaldAMisc Жыл бұрын
"What disturbs people are not THINGS themselves but their JUDGMENTS about the THINGS." ~ Epictetus
@theschooloflifetv
@theschooloflifetv Жыл бұрын
A very wise thought from a very wise man!
@DonaldAMisc
@DonaldAMisc Жыл бұрын
@@theschooloflifetv Epictetus and the Stoic philosophers have made a tremendous impact on my mental health. ❤️
@annnee6818
@annnee6818 Жыл бұрын
Often true, but not always. You won't feel better about your child dying from cot death by judging it a benefit since you don't have to get up at night anymore, will you? And if you do feel better thinking that it's probably better not to spread your genes.
@Rogie12
@Rogie12 Жыл бұрын
@@annnee6818 L opinion
@PaperySloth
@PaperySloth Жыл бұрын
"Ah jeez, that guy just had his legs broken and all his money taken in broad daylight. It's fine though, my judgment on the situation is it didn't happen to me so lmao"
@sobrevida157
@sobrevida157 Жыл бұрын
Here is a process I’m using to manage my anxiety and feelings of worthlessness, and express my feelings and needs. I think they are taken from Patricia DeYoung’s book on chronic shame and Pete Walker’s CPTSD book. 1. Be aware of the feeling I'm having, and give myself permission to feel it. It may feel silly or scary or ridiculous, but giving myself permission to feel it makes it less scary. Don't compare myself with what I think of as normal, or to others. They may seem like they have it all together, but I'm probably comparing my insides to their outsides. Maybe inside they are just as lost and cowardly as I am. 2. Explore where this feeling comes from. I don't think I need to explore my whole past, but I need to ask myself the simple question: "Is this a feeling about NOW or about the past?" Usually, because I was discouraged from feeling certain feelings as a child, the intense feelings are from the past. Resmaa Menakem says, "Whatever is hysterical is historical." 3. Ask myself if that feeling is warranted given the present circumstances. 4. If not, I don't berate myself for having those feelings, and I don't give myself permission to be passive. I try to live in this moment, responding to this moment and not reacting to the past. So, I feel the feeling and 'do it anyway.' Here's an example. I want to ask my boss for a few days off. 1. I feel anxious, fluttery heart, tension in my forearms. Others may not feel anxious asking their boss for a few days off, but I do. So it's okay to feel that feeling. What am I afraid of? I'm afraid my boss will make a scene and make me feel bad. I'm afraid others will see me asking for a day off and think I'm a shirker. I'm afraid I won't get the time off, so my plans will be ruined. I'm afraid of causing a hassle for my boss and my co-workers . . . 2. I remember being teased by my older siblings for showing any sort of emotional neediness, like I was too sensitive. I also remember being praised by my parents for never complaining, and for feeling shamed whenever I asked for something. Like somehow my desires weren’t valid, no matter how simple they were. 3. This feeling can't be about today because my boss is very sweet, and it's in our contract that we can ask for vacation days. I see lots of others asking for days off, and he always approves them without any sort of protestation. 4. Ok. So, just feel those feelings, feel that anxiety. I settle my body a bit by breathing deeply and rhythmically for a few moments. I dont’ expect the anxiety to disappear altogether, but just reduce it a bit so I have a bit more conscious control . .Then I go ask my boss for a few days off. This routine has really helped me see what fears are from the past AND to live in the moment without denying my feelings or cowering in the corner. And every time I feel the fear and do it anyway, every time I exercise my will, I exorcise my demons and become more fully whole, a bit more healed. More able to feel and act. More able to have and express my feelings. A few more thoughts. Oftentimes neglect is a more powerful form of hurt than abuse. If my feelings, my being is not even noticed, my being alive must really be inconsequential. I must really be invisible. I must be worthless. If someone abuses me, at least I know that someone sees me and I'm worth being, if only to be abused. Oftentimes vulnerability is equated with sharing of weaknesses. I think sharing our strengths and enthusiasms can also be quite vulnerable. If I show my talents others can criticize or ignore; if I share my enthusiasm, I can be shamed and ridiculed. So we learn not to shine. All this self-work has not only helped me be more compassionate with myself, but also to treat others with love, with compassion and curiosity rather than judgement. I'm starting to see people as children who happen to have aged. We're all just looking for love and acceptance, for someone to notice us and value us, and how we were raised influences how we attempt to get those needs met.
@sobrevida157
@sobrevida157 Жыл бұрын
@@lelaine61 thank you for your kind words; wishing you peace on your journey..
@frontierflyer
@frontierflyer Жыл бұрын
This is really profound and I’ve copied it to read again and again. Huge thanks for sharing and for being vulnerable question!
@sobrevida157
@sobrevida157 Жыл бұрын
@@frontierflyer thank you for your kind words. . I'm glad you find something useful; I wish you peace on your journey..
@mykaratejournal2120
@mykaratejournal2120 Жыл бұрын
Very heart felt and eye opening at the same time. You reminded me of a precept in martial arts... "Accept (not embrace) everything (including oneself) just the way it is". I'm trying to experience and live it and it took me on a similar path as that of the OP.
@sinking5258
@sinking5258 Жыл бұрын
thanks,bro❤
@nizasiamehenry
@nizasiamehenry Жыл бұрын
We suffer more in imagination than in reality!
@karate4348
@karate4348 Жыл бұрын
Some people suffer more than anyone could imagine.
@Sylar-451
@Sylar-451 Жыл бұрын
Agreed, although imagination is part of reality. And can lead to physical suffering. Stupid universe
@qqwee9014
@qqwee9014 Жыл бұрын
This notion is wrong. Are you raised in a patriarchial family?
@ronanobrien836
@ronanobrien836 Жыл бұрын
Seneca 😊
@Phant0mGetsuga993
@Phant0mGetsuga993 Жыл бұрын
Jokes on you, I suffer on reality more than in imagination.
@mahikarao3922
@mahikarao3922 Жыл бұрын
"We're triggered now by what we devasted by then" - Beautifully put :'")
@northstar15
@northstar15 Жыл бұрын
Right, and upon re-examination, we might discover that what was then has been changed or worked through. It can now be perceived as irrational and this cure us by taking the emotion out of the trigger.
@Phot_
@Phot_ Жыл бұрын
if you have trauma from past or anything, your anxiety will be triggered even tho there is no danger right now. We'll carry that fear with us for many years to come and it will affect every aspect of our life. It's basically like an invisible handicap
@sobrevida157
@sobrevida157 Жыл бұрын
Yes, our survival brain is on high alert all the time. Instead of returning to a calm state, we are always at 80. So some things trigger us and it looks like our anxiety goes from 0 to 100, when it really goes from like 80 to 100.
@itsmaylise
@itsmaylise Жыл бұрын
The most annoying thing ever :/
@anarchist_parable
@anarchist_parable Жыл бұрын
I don't think we should be thinking about it as a handicap. It's difficult to work through and deal with but existing solely through the lens of our trauma keeps us victimized.
@lorenzrosenthal119
@lorenzrosenthal119 Жыл бұрын
you can see the same in dogs from a shelter: sometimes they are very fearful and then attack just because someone dropped a coin. You don't know what happened to them.
@mattdonna9677
@mattdonna9677 Жыл бұрын
TOXIC NOSTALGIA.
@BitterFlower
@BitterFlower Жыл бұрын
The eyes turning into scribbles that eventually fill the screen is so creepy and so accurate to the feeling
@mikaelaprim4273
@mikaelaprim4273 6 күн бұрын
Don’t like it, it makes my skin itch
@heatherstubbs6646
@heatherstubbs6646 Жыл бұрын
This video is remarkably accurate! My therapist has said, “If a response is hysterical, it’s historical.”
@sarah-rw3zg
@sarah-rw3zg Жыл бұрын
thats amazing, thanks for sharing
@chipbuttytime3396
@chipbuttytime3396 Жыл бұрын
but it doesn't solve the issue of being triggered. That is embedded and untouchable so your therapist spouting buzz phrases means nothing
@heatherstubbs6646
@heatherstubbs6646 Жыл бұрын
@@chipbuttytime3396 You’re absolutely right that it doesn’t solve the issue of being triggered. Nonetheless, I find it helpful for putting the current, triggering issue in perspective. It helps me to take a breath and think, “Okay, what’s this REALLY about?” which helps avoid a knee-jerk reaction. On occasion, it has even stopped me from saying something I might later regret. THEN taking steps to calm down the triggering is another matter. The perspective of understanding helps me stay out of the depths of the all-too-familiar pit.
@vickimooredotco
@vickimooredotco 5 ай бұрын
@@chipbuttytime3396 It's one statement within the context of ongoing therapy. It's not meant to solve the issue. It's meant to help understand it.
@Etrehumain123
@Etrehumain123 4 ай бұрын
@@chipbuttytime3396i might be wrong but a therapist fix nothing. It clears the emotions fogs to help yourself sees your own fix
@kierlak
@kierlak Жыл бұрын
Been trying to recover from trauma: psychedelics helped to start the ball rolling, IFS therapy for almost a year now. But what really started to shift things was working on forgiveness (it's been very hard and painful work). It's interesting as I get triggered less. It's like the more I am able to work on forgiveness the safer my inner child feels. Perhaps it sees it like that: if I am able to consider forgiveness that means the events happened in the PAST, that I am safe NOW. That I am mature now, I can defend myself now and manage my emotions. With trauma the concept of time is very important. Our inner child/children usually are stuck in the past. Once we start inviting them into the PRESENT and show them that it is safe now they relax. As a result we relax too. Trauma changes the brain. The amygdala becomes over-reactive whereas pre frontal cortex gets under active. Result: when triggered we feel strong emotions first, then we don't understand why we react that way. Good news are: it's possible to reverse that.
@Gisellezaza
@Gisellezaza Жыл бұрын
Beautiful to hear
@cheesehill
@cheesehill Жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing your perspective. You've opened my eyes to a few things 💞
@MeatCatCheesyBlaster
@MeatCatCheesyBlaster Жыл бұрын
Psychedelics helped me a lot, Ayahuasca was a life changing experience.
@GermanGameAdviser
@GermanGameAdviser Жыл бұрын
🙇🙏
@OliverJazzz
@OliverJazzz Жыл бұрын
Complex PTSD here (neglected child etc...), with occasional violently sorrowful and hopeless emotional flashbacks that go on for hours. A lifetime of self reflection, four years of therapy, psychedelics and tDCS have only helped that much. It's really frustrating.
@pan7374
@pan7374 Жыл бұрын
I always feel guilty for my social anxiety. I wish I could be more receptive and honest but my brain literally turns off in 99.999% of social situations lately.
@ananefrimpongnicholas7824
@ananefrimpongnicholas7824 Жыл бұрын
It has never turned off. Until u are dead
@phaij4623
@phaij4623 Жыл бұрын
I feel you, It sucks because you don’t reply the way you want to.
@pan7374
@pan7374 Жыл бұрын
@@phaij4623 yeah man its like I know there’s more to me, I’ve seen it, but I’m hiding from myself.
@Shunarjuna
@Shunarjuna Жыл бұрын
I can completely relate!
@Mel-gq4op
@Mel-gq4op Жыл бұрын
Same it is soo annoying and isolating. I come across like I don’t care about anyone around me. But my brain just freezes, I can’t relax
@subiyaamreen3023
@subiyaamreen3023 Жыл бұрын
It is very important to understand your triggers and where they come from, almost all of them are deep rooted in the childhood. Going back to your inner child and understanding what and how it felt and giving yourself permission to navigate helps a lot. Personally self awareness of myself took lot of time and looking at yourself as an outsider helps to see what you are feeling rather than absorbing in the feeling it self. Go back to your childhood and come back with lessons and please forgive yourself and accept everything that’s the only way folks. Wish you all healing ❤
@lucylight176
@lucylight176 Жыл бұрын
Wonderful words
@catvonderahe1836
@catvonderahe1836 Жыл бұрын
So true. Childhood trauma is usually the root of it all.
@mojadah10
@mojadah10 Жыл бұрын
Sp true. I'm working on myself from that perspective now. 💕
@turnfrmsinorhell_jesus
@turnfrmsinorhell_jesus Жыл бұрын
Repent for sins in Jesus name sothat your conscience can stop convicting you and that spiritual attacks can't rise up against you. Jesus died for our sins sothat we could turn from sins and be saved to heaven instead of weeping and gnashing of teeth. Read bible book Matthew to be saved in Jesus
@cincin4515
@cincin4515 Жыл бұрын
Grow up. Nobody has memories of what was done to them as a baby but I suppose its okay for some people who were denied ice cream one day.
@tjordanlcsw
@tjordanlcsw Жыл бұрын
This is all true, but trauma is stored in the body. When one gets intensely triggered one enters the fight, flight or freeze state and it becomes extremely difficult to intellectually process what may be going on. The flooding that one experiences comes from the body and that is where the trauma needs to be addressed and re-processed.
@macmag123
@macmag123 Жыл бұрын
Well said, that’s what happens to me. It’s awful, I can come across stupid and vague.
@Dancestar1981
@Dancestar1981 Жыл бұрын
And if you’re Neurodiverse and have been living your entire life traumatised you never know when something is going to trigger you
@Siara259
@Siara259 Жыл бұрын
But how. I'm suffering so much because I can't process it.
@Catalystresource
@Catalystresource Жыл бұрын
I feel your pain but do not despair. I been a holistic therapist for decades and I have also worked on my own traumas for as long. Knowledge and self-awareness are just the first step and that is the essence of traditional talk therapy. Now you need daily accessible tools and techniques to process stuff and feel back in control, and there are many in these times. As the previous commenter stated, for many the trauma is stored in the body especially if it started at a young age, and there are so many body-based therapies and self-help tools now. My favorite as a practitioner and as a user is EFT tapping which is "Emotional Freedom Technique" . Super simple, easy, quick and can be used on anything. Lots of research on it and so powerful it's even been approved in some vet hospitals for PTSD and has been highly effective, and you can do it on yourself ! There is an art to what you say as you tap on various acupuncture points but you can't do it wrong even if you said nothing but "I release stress or I release whatever it is that is being triggered" . Lots of free resources online but I would check out the top experts like Nick and Jessica Ortner of www.thetappingsolution.com and David Feinstein PhD psychologist who has written books on it with lots of science data. His wife Donna Eden has some amazing energy management techniques also for mind, emotions and body. And I teach it and do sessions online with videos and detailed written instructions at www.catalystresource.com And as far as the general fight or flight or freeze syndrome... Even various breathing techniques can address that at least temporarily. Google stimulating the vagus nerve for emotional regulation. Check out energy work such as grounding and working with chakras and boundary strengthening through sura cleansing, etc. I can help you with that also if you're interested.
@Sharperthanu1
@Sharperthanu1 Жыл бұрын
A lot of people who create KZbin videos are good at the technology that goes into making those videos but they are sadly lacking in life skills.For instance being "triggered" is practically always your intuition being triggered and you should ALWAYS listen to your intuition.
@oo1straub665
@oo1straub665 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this. The drawing with the family where the mother is close to one child but the other child stands alone. I have a photo where my mother and brother stand close to each other and I am standing alone. I was neglected and alone all my childhood while my mother and brother were best buddies. I get triggered a lot and my family just don't understands. This is hell sometimes for everyone but I am getting better.
@SandraJane-ym4tl
@SandraJane-ym4tl Жыл бұрын
scapegoat
@xIssaBaex
@xIssaBaex Жыл бұрын
*hugs*
@margo3367
@margo3367 Жыл бұрын
At least you understand your triggers.
@macmag123
@macmag123 Жыл бұрын
I’m 63 and only when I turned 50 did I realise all this terror and instability was PTSD and late diagnosis ADHD. In the last few years I can identify a trigger…..but not all of them, still working on it. Take it easy everyone, a good friend of mine said “ that’s why we live so long we have much to learn. Do it with grace and kindness.
@oo1straub665
@oo1straub665 Жыл бұрын
@@margo3367 I know. This is really fortunate. I do not see myself as a crazed person anymore and I understand my reactions.
@XBret64
@XBret64 Жыл бұрын
"We want our awful hunches confirmed" this really resonated with me because I'm always wondering why I actively look at things that I know are gonna trigger me. It never made sense to me why I did this. Been working on my Shadow for over 2 years now, sometimes it feels like I'll never heal this wound.
@xw591
@xw591 Жыл бұрын
It may not seem like it heals becuase it will leave a scar. But you are making progress and it is a process. Even if you dont realize it, you are making progress. Love you.
@XBret64
@XBret64 Жыл бұрын
@@xw591 I really appreciate that. Thank you 💚
@nicholabrown11
@nicholabrown11 5 ай бұрын
I use to think I would never heal but after a big trigger today I realised that I have healed as there is no hurt in my soul anymore. I suppose what is left are scars and I just have to ride through the emotions, put myself in observer mood and painfully go back in my past as to when the same situation arose. I need to give myself time to process. I am hugely highly sensitive and find it very challenging living in this world and having relationships with people. I am going to try and go with the flow and my heart but feel I must accept I will keep having these triggers if I want to have relationships with people. I just wish people would be nice and just do the basics. I just find it unbelievable the way people are and why this keeps happening. It is groundhog day all the time.....I do not think it will bloody stop until I pass over lol. 😂
@gingerbeer849
@gingerbeer849 2 ай бұрын
@@nicholabrown11 I agree. I think the fairy tale that we can be "cured" of our life experience is . . . a fairy tale and pretty naive of those who believe it. I think an expectation of "cure" is not helpful because it's expecting the cavalry to come over a ridge and everything is magically hunky dory. I don't think life is really like that. I think we have to learn how to keep making adjustments, and sometimes call others on their shit, and figure out what our own shit is, and learn to like ourselves in the way we like our friends: we can tease them about their faults and all of you laugh because what you are really saying is "we see your flaws, but we love you anyway."
@stephanimahl
@stephanimahl Жыл бұрын
“We can’t distinguish between something they’ve done that got them sent to prison and something we’ve done that won’t ever be noticed”. I relate to that SO BADLY.
@vanessamelchiori5096
@vanessamelchiori5096 Жыл бұрын
me too. That line really stuck out.
@lauraland9311
@lauraland9311 Жыл бұрын
Me too! Happy to know I’m not alone in that!
@erinsuzy613
@erinsuzy613 Жыл бұрын
I have a trigger that surfaces around a relative who exhibits narcissist behaviors, verbal abuse and toxic gossip. I've gone no contact as much as possible but at family gatherings I can't get out of, my body reacts with panic. I'm trying to fix it but it's harder when someone else is involved.
@sbduman
@sbduman 11 ай бұрын
Being alive is so hard
@bdjjosh1268
@bdjjosh1268 Ай бұрын
Why so ?
@Gabriel-fj7hm
@Gabriel-fj7hm 28 күн бұрын
Change your attitude! You’re making a self-fulfilling prophecy ;)
@bdjjosh1268
@bdjjosh1268 27 күн бұрын
@@Gabriel-fj7hm how dear??
@bdjjosh1268
@bdjjosh1268 27 күн бұрын
@@Gabriel-fj7hm how dear
@Gabriel-fj7hm
@Gabriel-fj7hm 27 күн бұрын
@@bdjjosh1268 Adopting a heroic attitude towards life. Yes, life is hard. But stop being a victim, lamenting, and start to live proactively with courage towards meaningful goals and ideals.
@niaselah3348
@niaselah3348 Жыл бұрын
I would love a video distinguishing triggers and re traumatization. We normalize a lot of mistreatment and abuse in society and people who were abused before correctly identify mistreatment but they are told they are " just being triggered" basically they are being gaslighted again into normalizing mistreatment and made to gaslight themselves also again. It's not the same to be in a safe situation and have a memory of an unsafe experience than to again be in another unsafe situation. Although now being adults, there are so many adults in positions of vulnerability that make it very similar to being a child. You can't quit that job, you can't get out of that relationship, you can't afford therapy, or a gym, etc. Not everyone actually have these options. Sometimes people try to do it anyways and end up in even more vulnerability without the job, etc We need to acknowledge trigger is not the same as re traumatization
@RioRav
@RioRav 10 ай бұрын
True
@NottaTrick
@NottaTrick 5 ай бұрын
A great example of this is Systemic Sexual Abuse. I live it every day of my life.
@Bhlisse
@Bhlisse 4 ай бұрын
So True !!!!
@niaselah3348
@niaselah3348 4 ай бұрын
@@Bhlisse Thank you for understanding and supporting raising awareness. Happy holidays to you 🤗
@mixingaband
@mixingaband Жыл бұрын
also remember to forgive yourself when you are triggered. It will take a while for us all to process what is actually happening
@JLakis
@JLakis Жыл бұрын
Still working on mine. Discovering trauma based therapy was a true revelation for me. I had been in traditional therapy for so long, and hit a wall. The best thing about trauma based therapy is that many organizations that deal with domestic/child abuse, and the YWCA provide this free or at a low cost. Breathing exercises, grounding mindfulness practices, and loving kindness and gratitude exercises along with yoga and walking my dog are super helpful for me. Having a dog is wonderful in so many ways. They love you. You can cuddle them. They need to go out, so you need to exercise, and consider another creature's well being.
@JLakis
@JLakis Жыл бұрын
@@alexandrugheorghe5610 I'm so sorry about your fur friend. That is the worst. It really is. I hope someday another will wiggle it's way into your heart. I was chosen by the sweetest little kitter cat one snowy day.
@RioRav
@RioRav 10 ай бұрын
Dogs trigger me
@lyricberlin
@lyricberlin Жыл бұрын
unless you have people in your life that trigger you on purpose
@jamiecee4960
@jamiecee4960 Жыл бұрын
Best thing for that. Try to ignore it.
@jamiecee4960
@jamiecee4960 Жыл бұрын
There are people that tend to love to trigger others.
@annacharity4520
@annacharity4520 Жыл бұрын
Cutting them off works until you feel better. If somebody isn't helping you or enhancing your life, you need to find other people to reach out to.
@Rob9mm
@Rob9mm Ай бұрын
@@jamiecee4960 Lots of them! Childish.
@DaysOfDarknessUK
@DaysOfDarknessUK 15 күн бұрын
Just pause, smile, then calmly say - why do you do / say that? Then look at them with a blank face.
@kasperchristensen8416
@kasperchristensen8416 Жыл бұрын
Another useful tool I've learned to use myself comes from Stoicism; specifically a realization of the fact that you can't control what other people do/say/think/feel/etc.; only how you choose to react to them.
@OneYellowFlower
@OneYellowFlower Жыл бұрын
This helps me feel better about when I’m triggered. More self compassion.
@brightmooninthenight2111
@brightmooninthenight2111 3 ай бұрын
How do you have self compassion when you hate yourself?
@OneYellowFlower
@OneYellowFlower 3 ай бұрын
@@brightmooninthenight2111 You go to a good therapist and work through the self-hate. And if you have chemical imbalances, you take prescribed meds.
@OpinioesLegais123
@OpinioesLegais123 Жыл бұрын
This actually really resonates with me. Last Saturday I went to a local (relatively big) choir for the first time, and the teacher separated us in the usual groups: sopranos, contraltos, tenors, etc. The criteria for this separation is generically the extension of voice, i.g., higher pitch female voices sing as sopranos and lower pitch female voices sing as altos. I haven't frequented such a big choir in years. I did sing in my university choir for a bit last year, but it was just starting out, besides, most people who were there were learning how to sing for the first time, whereas I have had individual and choir lessons since a was a child. I actually stopped attending such lessons during my highschool years, so I'd be able to cram for my university entrance exam, (that was four years ago). Moreover, I was always told by my teachers that I was a soprano, and that I didn't reach the characteristically high notes that I was supposed to "because I was too nervous". This made some sense, as I managed to sing them quite well in my bathroom shower, when I thought no one was listening. I was always very insecure and shy when it came to my voice. Anyways, I knew that I was a medium fish in a very small pond in my university choir. I knew I had not done any exercises seriously in years, and even if I did, I could not expect myself to sing like a Maria Callas or Anna Netbreko. Also, voices change as they mature, even female voices. I knew all these things. Still, I was very surprised when I was put to sing with the altos! "But why?" I asked my teacher, already feeling a little unbalanced. "Because you are a mezzo soprano." She answered. "You may have those high notes, but it's your lower tones that are the most lovely!" she said. She then started looking at me rather concerned. And that was when I noticed I had started crying. Convulsively and unconsciously, there I stood, my tears pouring more and more as I tried to hide my face with my hands, -- not myself understanding why I was having such an extreme reaction to being told I was a mezzo soprano. And my gentle teacher let me cry. She then said that it was okay for me to react that way, that maybe I was feeling overwhelmed because I was finally going to sing in a group again, and that maybe I should find a therapist to talk to. "Maybe," She said, "It's okay to cry. I cry at 61 like a child, and you are just 19. You don't have to hold yourself back from what you are feeling. There is no need to feel embarrassed. But why don't you try to find out what is really hurting you?" I am actually so grateful that she was there for me at that moment. I did already imagine that I had a few issues from my childhood or adolescence that associate my self-image to my singing voice. That's probably the reason why I did not get back to my lessons as soon as I entered university. Nevertheless, I thought that I had automatically overcome them, after all, "that was all in the past". Now I am beginning to accept that that's not the case, and that singing is not something trivial to me. It's an important part of my life and identity, and I should not stop myself from acknowledging that just because I that feel my singing is inadequate and not as good as it should be. To sing is one of the greatest wonders in my life. And, Thank you, School of life, for the wonderful video!
@wistfuloptimist1238
@wistfuloptimist1238 Жыл бұрын
it's beautiful to find someone with such a similar struggle with the musical crux of their identity as me. Best of luck to you
@OpinioesLegais123
@OpinioesLegais123 Жыл бұрын
@@wistfuloptimist1238 you too! ^^
@kevin000k
@kevin000k Жыл бұрын
What a lovely teacher. I'm sure you'll enjoy this new choir ❤
@farinshore8900
@farinshore8900 Жыл бұрын
I always understand why i am triggered. Given enough time, i can competently calm myself. But in the moment, i need to behave well in spite of my horrendeous anxiety.
@andypeterson2126
@andypeterson2126 Жыл бұрын
Love is the answer? Being hugged is the answer? Good thing I’ve got my Sailor Moon hug pillow.
@volkerd714
@volkerd714 Жыл бұрын
I like the statement that feelings are our own signals to ourself about our needs. Feelings, and by extension trauma and triggered feelings, tell us about our needs and our experience and perception of whether they are / are not being met or will / will not be met. Been learning to listen to my traumatic feelings as not a fixed external reality but as telling me what I'm anticipating and what I need, a signal that can help me meet those needs.
@user-oy4vu3ck3u
@user-oy4vu3ck3u Жыл бұрын
I can't stand kindness. The smallest amount brings me to tears. I can't stand it. I don't know it.
@JohnnyCatFitz
@JohnnyCatFitz Жыл бұрын
You deserve kindness. You are enough. You are not made less or obligated. You are worthy. People are kind and you can learn to relieve it. I hope you start trying.
@andyc9902
@andyc9902 Жыл бұрын
Ok
@user-oy4vu3ck3u
@user-oy4vu3ck3u Жыл бұрын
@@andyc9902 lol thanks.
@user-oy4vu3ck3u
@user-oy4vu3ck3u Жыл бұрын
@@JohnnyCatFitz Thank you.
@patriciac.1546
@patriciac.1546 Жыл бұрын
It sounds like you don’t trust kindness. Be truly kind to yourself one minute, one day, one step and build on that. Other people can be truly kind but not always.
@Iisrupac
@Iisrupac Жыл бұрын
All emotional triggers are due to feelings of low self-worth AKA "are we worthy of connecting with other people". This is rooted in childhood if our parents tended to our needs or not. If they consistently neglected our needs, we feel unaccepted and unworthy of love. This manifests in our future lives when we perceive that we are being devalued, triggering our old feelings of unworthiness. "Perceived" is the key word here because it can be something like someone not replying to our text quickly enough, someone disagreeing with our opinions, or even seeing a person who's more successful than us in some aspect. It triggers the deeply rooted core belief within us that we are worthless and don't matter even if there are no ill-intentions. Truly, I don't know how to heal a person who's been wounded like this, and looking at the general population it looks like most people don't as well. All I know is that it can be prevented. So, try your best not to F your kids up.
@nicholabrown11
@nicholabrown11 5 ай бұрын
Gosh your words so resonated with me! I could not face having children of my own. I hate being ignored by people!
@mrmomo305
@mrmomo305 2 ай бұрын
Its so ironic because the person I’m dealing with appears to have a huge ego while my gut tells me that they are weak and fragile underneath the facade.
@anameliavitte4795
@anameliavitte4795 Жыл бұрын
Missed Alain's voice so much. TSOL videos hit different when it's him
@benedictaidehen7911
@benedictaidehen7911 Жыл бұрын
I was looking for this comment ❤️
@Reymundodonsayo
@Reymundodonsayo Жыл бұрын
The girl that narrates the other videos sounds like a student sorry no offence its just not as good
@GrayMattr
@GrayMattr Жыл бұрын
Hello 👋🏼
@joselinehernandez1405
@joselinehernandez1405 Жыл бұрын
this is my biggest problem for social media my mom and dad took my phone away when i first started high school because i just came out and told them i was gay (still am) they thought social media made me gay, but i realized i was gay wayyyy before highschool and it made me so mad and sad because i didnt have friends since i was an introvert and everybody knew i was gay and theres that stigma of "who wants to be seen hanging out with a gay kid who dresses feminine" my parents straight up said "if u were straight we wouldnt have taken your phone" but my lil brother got an iphone and hes only 11 yo?! it made me so enraged at that time because i didnt have any friends and all my friends were online. I'm 18 now w an iphone 14 and I hate to think about the situation but "its over now" so my family just acts like it didnt happen and swep it under the rug. but they "still and always loved me" though but never even wanted to hear/care/tried to understand my point of view of being gay..im shaking rn typing this out because of the past intense emotions of sadness and rage that i dont wana to come back up again. I am still gay.
@myrtila
@myrtila Жыл бұрын
Oh my God, I’m so sorry you went through this. Now you’re master of your own life and no one can take away your phone. You have the strength to overcome any obstacle and believe me there are people out there who love and accept you for who you are ❤️
@nicholabrown11
@nicholabrown11 5 ай бұрын
Be proud of who you are and surround yourself with people who truly love you regardless of your sexual orientation. Have you tried having an honest conversation about how they treated with you with your parents? Forgive them.
@TheDBro
@TheDBro Жыл бұрын
You guys really need to share the audio from the videos to either SoundCloud or Spotify, there’s no other content that I’ve actually wanted to listen to while keeping my eyes closed
@DS-fm1ej
@DS-fm1ej Жыл бұрын
Why not listen here and close your eyes?
@tumblingrosesstudio
@tumblingrosesstudio Жыл бұрын
Family scapegoat. The holidays wore my defenses down, plus a flashback. Tomorrow starts fresh but today was messy. Rewatching this. Thank you. Bless.
@stupidsquirrel12
@stupidsquirrel12 Жыл бұрын
Such an important video, saving for reference. 💛💛💛 a lot of my triggers are smell related, which is specific to my trauma. Any gas smell, rotting anything, hospital smells, etc. I've done a lot of work however and these things become a bit more manageable heading into my 30's. Stable emotional regulation is still a long and difficult process!
@NoeleVeerod
@NoeleVeerod Жыл бұрын
Certainly sounds deeply relatable to a situation I was living these days. My history of hostile, violent or otherwise unpleasant rejections has made me extremely wary of putting myself out there, and these days I'm regretting not taking a step forward towards someone potentially interested just because I was too afraid to be violently rejected again. I haven't started working on it recently but quite a while ago. And it'll take a while more by the looks of it.
@jun4863
@jun4863 Жыл бұрын
Damn. Really needed this rn. Never really knew what it was for the longest time but after some time and some growing up, i'm beginning to understand. Thanks for your vids, they've been a great help through my hellish yet progressive journey. ♡
@jhavajoe3792
@jhavajoe3792 Жыл бұрын
Good one. I gave up on any self-help videos long ago, but this one was simple, clear and irrefutable. Added, it helps getting older. You've heard old adages so much through the years, it becomes buried and forgotten. I've resurrected some and it helps tremendously,i.e., "Keep it simple, stupid!"
@2_blAck
@2_blAck Ай бұрын
Once I detached from people they failed to trigger me. I’m around people but they’re just objects in my path. I’m self absorbed and all about me now🧚🏾‍♀️💕🥰😎
@TheMonacleSpy
@TheMonacleSpy Жыл бұрын
5:17 is frighteningly accurate as someone who had a depressing 10 years of adulthood. When I gave into my triggers they became familiar to me and I began seeking out people and things to confirm what I was going through, no matter how harmful they were, while shunning experiences that didn't conform to what I felt inside. As a result I ended up pushing away family and friends. I'm glad I was able to get the help from a therapist and through practicing mindfulness it helped me to avoid negative experiences and accept influence from role models in my life. In turn the love of people in my life also helped with coming to terms with what was triggering me. To those of you going through the process of grief know that there are people who care, you need only seek them out.
@jayhay1237
@jayhay1237 Жыл бұрын
Venting doesn't release pressure. It only intensifies it later from the training effect. When people cheer and shout for their team, they don't feel less jubilant. Contrary. They feel more jubilation and the next time it grows. Awareness of your emotional response is the first step. Then you must practice the control. The training effect can work for you just as it can work against you. Take control. Use the training effect to practice your intended response. It takes time and effort, but you can overcome all the negative programming in your biocomputer by practicing your intentions more than your automatics. You must be the master programmer of your bio computer!
@davidpetersen1
@davidpetersen1 Жыл бұрын
I have only a couple of triggers and now go out of my way to avoid the situations where I can likely foresee something happening. In the last couple of years my anxiety has decreased significantly because of the strategizing. :)
@Forever_Rayne
@Forever_Rayne Жыл бұрын
As someone who gets very triggered with blood and graphic bodily injuries and is working in medical field, this was comforting to watch. I know my many triggers, but I'm struggling to overcome them.
@natashadickson4819
@natashadickson4819 6 ай бұрын
Take a few years to get qualified to can change professions without leaving the medical industry...a position where you are unlikely to see blood. Preventive medicine, Nutrition or hospital administration or staffing.
@p.rogers5625
@p.rogers5625 7 ай бұрын
Whoa! Hearing you say that we are often drawn to our triggers through a compulsive sense of familiarity sparked an instant enlightenment within me as to why I repeatedly chosen partners who are emotionally unavailable to me, exactly how my childhood caregivers were. Thank you!
@Alicapy
@Alicapy Жыл бұрын
Wow, I really needed this, just, as a reminder of sorts. I have CPTSD and because of the violent nature that a loved one died, it haunts me every day, especially since I was the last person to talk to them. This happened years ago though, and I've been trying to work on it daily. A problem arises because I already have festering agoraphobia contributed to by vicarious trauma (I used to watch a lot of true crime and I live in the United States so the media & the state of the country truly don't help). Being physically present on campus doesn't help either, because earlier in the year there was an incident with an individual and it was not a drill (even though the school immediately covered it up). The person didn't hurt anyone nor was there an actual gun (just BB) because it was a personal fight. This incident, however, really messed me up because I was doing so well before it. I ended up having a panic attack in a classroom closet full of kids because I didn't know if it was real or not and they refused to be quiet. Even the fact that I'm about to leave high school can't comfort me enough when I have to focus during the day because of just, this buildup of anxieties. A quick example is, kids stampede through the hallways when I'm in select classes because... they're freshmen (I guess? lol) and they're skipping class so they're running from the admins. My main PTSD trigger, from my major trauma, comes from loud sounds in general so that really disturbs me. I think being in a stressful environment so often has really taken a toll on me. I've been forgetting to eat and struggle to get even basic assignments done. And since my anxiety has been through the roof, I'm more prone to outbursts and even my already-crap memory keeps acting up more than usual. Sadly, physical attendance is mandatory due to the nature of my classes and I'll have to try to survive. On a positive note though, I'm getting closer to my friends so although I can't fully open up to them, I feel warm inside from just having them as company. So that's the love I can attest to for healing. And it's Thursday, so tomorrow is Friday, and then it'll be the weekend! I have an appointment today with my therapist so hopefully, we can try to think about ways to improve this stress. Thanks for reading this far 🤎
@mrrusteeshackleford
@mrrusteeshackleford Жыл бұрын
Just wanted to share a kind word-that all sounds so difficult. I don’t know you, but, I’m proud of you! Keep going! And contact your school administrators for any counseling options. It won’t be perfect, but it’s a place to start!
@whatwelearntoday
@whatwelearntoday 6 ай бұрын
omg ! I needed this so much i get triggered very much when someone raises their voice or when someone is disrespectful to me it just makes me go back that fearful blank moment where I feel like I have 0 control over my life and I'm drowning, this made me feel a lot better ❤
@markdmckenna
@markdmckenna 10 ай бұрын
I've been going through this my whole adult life, and I still feel kind of like I'm just getting started. Like a few others have said, trauma is stored in the body, as well as in the mind. As someone else said, sometimes you're triggered by a legitimate problem that's in front of you; sometimes by something trivial that reminds you of the distant past. Sometimes it's both. I have come to think of it as "little me" reacting like a child; there's almost two of me there, the adult self, and the little one, kind of competing for control. There are lots of things I've tried that work for me; none of them by themselves. It takes everything: * inner child work -- when I get upset, sometimes I just sit down and have a quiet conversation with "little me," offering to be their protector and nurturer, stay with them, and give them the things that they didn't get when they were little. * EMDR -- in a safe and calm environment, carefully sort back through the past, finding what's associated with this triggering experience; and lovingly rewrite that memory, so that the vulnerable me who was so deeply injured has emotional tools and support that he didn't have at the time. So the next time my mind chooses to rewind to that place, it finds a less volatile memory to draw on. * "feeling my feelings" -- sitting or lying down and meditating, keeping myself calm through breath control and the like, and asking myself "how do I feel right now?" and letting myself answer that question honestly. Asking only how I feel, and not why, because my emotional self has no idea why. * When I'm not in the middle of a triggered episode, using my logical brain to sort through all this other crap, and figure out what I really need to move forward. I used to think that nothing would help; but since learning a whole bunch of tools, and getting a whole bunch of support from people who legit understand, I've actually cast off triggers. There are memories and experiences that I used to be paralyzed by, that are trivial now. I don't know what works for other people, but these things truly work for me.
@gloriadawn7529
@gloriadawn7529 9 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing that.
@nicholabrown11
@nicholabrown11 5 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing what works for you x
@Radioactivepaladin0703
@Radioactivepaladin0703 Жыл бұрын
I have been suffering from triggers of unworthiness, inability, imperfection and the feeling of being unlovable for well over 3 years know without even know, except that now it has become so much worse I have realized there is definitely something wrong here. Nonetheless, videos like is is why I subscribed to this channel, a deep and profound, not-so-long explanation, that certainly serves as a reminder.
@nomadhatter8881
@nomadhatter8881 11 ай бұрын
go easy on yourself. Just keep learning and insights will come. There will be relief.
@instanta2693
@instanta2693 8 ай бұрын
if you haven't discovered Gabor Mate yet it could be good to do so.
@matteroftim3
@matteroftim3 Жыл бұрын
Truth is we all thrive for people to tell us what we know about what we should do to be complete with ourselves and never actually do something to empower ourselves or to put ourselves at risk in life. We comfort ourselves in the fact that "we know things".
@wayofspinoza2471
@wayofspinoza2471 Жыл бұрын
As a teacher of Spinoza and Gurdjieff philosophies and teachings. I have learned the importance of triggers. Events that are disappointed, when desires are not met, feelings of rejection, or being misunderstood. Our emotions are being triggered. Emotions of desire, pain, hate, and anger, communicate our state of being confused. We cannot willfully change or stop triggers. Growth is seeing and understand our triggers. I am looking for students who want a meaningful and purposeful life.
@NickRossi
@NickRossi Жыл бұрын
This was so beautifully and clearly articulated. Thank you.
@SilVia-hs2kb
@SilVia-hs2kb Жыл бұрын
I've spent my whole adult life trying to emotionally recover from my childhood.
@sgordon8123
@sgordon8123 Жыл бұрын
You and everyone else. Don't compare yourself to others' outsides. Look for their hidden insides.
@matthewbeesley5850
@matthewbeesley5850 Жыл бұрын
@@sgordon8123 Goodness. Sil was not comparing themselves to others, but instead sharing a little about themselves. Best of luck Sil.
@bmg2507
@bmg2507 Жыл бұрын
No offence but this is so vauge it is meaningless. I could bet you read qoutes on social medoa platforms.
@macmag123
@macmag123 Жыл бұрын
@@sgordon8123 It’s good practical advice. Tough but honest. 👍
@SUCCESSPASS
@SUCCESSPASS 2 ай бұрын
I love this video. 90% of the population are getting triggered every single day and instead of dealing with it they’ll overeat, take drugs, drink alcohol, scroll through social media or seek attention in destructive ways. Keep up the good work 👏 #growthmindset
@missmia5468
@missmia5468 Жыл бұрын
Triggers are often an expression of trauma. People need to respond with compassion. Not everyone has had the ability to deal with it or had the support to deal with it. First step is to understand what your triggers are and having a strategy for dealing with it. A lot of my triggers are about my self image because of my formative life experiences that were out of my control. Does that mean I should be responsible for dealing with them? Yes. But I also need the people around to me know about the emotional toll it takes to deal with it. I am learning to love myself and appreciate me. It’s taken me years but it’s mainly because I could never really afford good therapy so I have taken it on myself to fix the broken parts of myself. I have come a long way but like everything in life your human frailties are a constant work in progress. So my advice to everyone is to keep learning and growing. We are never the finished article and everybody has issues. Don’t bear yourself up if you have triggers, I think most humans do, the trick is to learn what they are so you can deal with it. Thanks for the video, thought provoking.
@mariahducker6840
@mariahducker6840 Жыл бұрын
The crazy scribble eyes is exactly how it feels lol
@MrFennmeista
@MrFennmeista Жыл бұрын
I totally go into tunnel vision
@Cutt1978
@Cutt1978 Жыл бұрын
Yes out of control smh
@Mel-gq4op
@Mel-gq4op Жыл бұрын
Hahaha 😂 I think my eye’s literally change
@beatsg
@beatsg Жыл бұрын
"What does my worry about what will happen, tell me about what did happen?"
@silrak5405
@silrak5405 Жыл бұрын
He's talking about a kind of dramatic trigger that I call reacting. but there is an ongoing low grade triggering which I call being defensive that seems to be more pervasive.
@Toastcat890
@Toastcat890 Жыл бұрын
I found numbing myself and feeling nothing has helped immensely I use distractions to get through the day so I’m not an emotional wreck.
@mindfulnesswithmatt
@mindfulnesswithmatt Жыл бұрын
Get to the root of the cause, understand that it's our inner child being triggered in those moments, take care of it and we'll never be triggered again.
@psyhense
@psyhense Жыл бұрын
I agree with the first half, but not the never being triggered again. That isn't something any of us get to decide. We do get to become very well versed at spotting, accepting, and working through our triggers. Making a declaration of never being triggered again seems like a sure fire way to invite negative self talk when you inevitably get trigged, and for a time forget the progress you've made. Longer than need be. Think about it, it's something you've never experienced, and have no way of knowing if anyone at all has experienced it. Dealing with them as they arise is enough for most of us I'd say.
@MohamedTarikRochdi
@MohamedTarikRochdi Жыл бұрын
As much as I agree with your premise, I want to focus a key concept: Understanding. There are two types of understanding intellectual and emotional, and both have several degrees. The deeper one's understanding of oneself (and by extension others), the less they are triggered (in both frequency and intensity). This deep understanding can only come with repetition of healthy behaviors over time. My advice is then, take your time, learn, don't hate yourself when you slip, and learn from your successes and mistakes.
@camez2345
@camez2345 Жыл бұрын
@@psyhense Agreed. If you set that high of a bar, you set yourself up for "failure." It's similar to declaring on Dec 31 that you're going to exercise every single day from now on -- eventually, you'll miss a day, then two, then three, because it's easier and more comfortable -- or so it seems in the moment -- to do the familiar thing that you've been doing all along than it is to do the hard thing that makes you struggle. If you've been triggered your whole life and then at 30, 40, 50 years old think, "I'll just do some inner work and put this all behind me," then when you backside, which you will, you'll feel like, "Great. Here's yet another thing I suck at. I can't even control my own self!" and now you've got not only your triggers to deal with, but another nail in the low-self-esteem coffin.
@dariusaudryc9958
@dariusaudryc9958 Жыл бұрын
This a great video!! Thanks for creating one! I’ve been fighting how to control my trigger, and it has been futile. My mom left me when I was young (divorce my dad and left the fam), and I subconsciously blame myself for it. I didn’t know this at first. As I grow older, I get triggered if I am accused of doing something wrong, even when the discussion might be hypothetical. I did some reflection and realised where the trigger comes from, but I have no way of controlling it. This video has given me a change perspective which I hope it can be helpful to overcome my issue. Thank you 🙏🏽
@atermonnomreta382
@atermonnomreta382 Жыл бұрын
Have you tried therapy?
@sobrevida157
@sobrevida157 Жыл бұрын
Here is a process I’m using to manage my anxiety and feelings of worthlessness, and express my feelings and needs. I think they are taken from Patricia DeYoung’s book on chronic shame and Pete Walker’s CPTSD book. 1. Be aware of the feeling I'm having, and give myself permission to feel it. It may feel silly or scary or ridiculous, but giving myself permission to feel it makes it less scary. Don't compare myself with what I think of as normal, or to others. They may seem like they have it all together, but I'm probably comparing my insides to their outsides. Maybe inside they are just as lost and cowardly as I am. 2. Explore where this feeling comes from. I don't think I need to explore my whole past, but I need to ask myself the simple question: "Is this a feeling about NOW or about the past?" Usually, because I was discouraged from feeling certain feelings as a child, the intense feelings are from the past. Resmaa Menakem says, "Whatever is hysterical is historical." 3. Ask myself if that feeling is warranted given the present circumstances. 4. If not, I don't berate myself for having those feelings, and I don't give myself permission to be passive. I try to live in this moment, responding to this moment and not reacting to the past. So, I feel the feeling and 'do it anyway.' Here's an example. I want to ask my boss for a few days off. 1. I feel anxious, fluttery heart, tension in my forearms. Others may not feel anxious asking their boss for a few days off, but I do. So it's okay to feel that feeling. What am I afraid of? I'm afraid my boss will make a scene and make me feel bad. I'm afraid others will see me asking for a day off and think I'm a shirker. I'm afraid I won't get the time off, so my plans will be ruined. I'm afraid of causing a hassle for my boss and my co-workers . . . 2. I remember being teased by my older siblings for showing any sort of emotional neediness, like I was too sensitive. I also remember being praised by my parents for never complaining, and for feeling shamed whenever I asked for something. Like somehow my desires weren’t valid, no matter how simple they were. 3. This feeling can't be about today because my boss is very sweet, and it's in our contract that we can ask for vacation days. I see lots of others asking for days off, and he always approves them without any sort of protestation. 4. Ok. So, just feel those feelings, feel that anxiety. I settle my body a bit by breathing deeply and rhythmically for a few moments. I dont’ expect the anxiety to disappear altogether, but just reduce it a bit so I have a bit more conscious control . .Then I go ask my boss for a few days off. This routine has really helped me see what fears are from the past AND to live in the moment without denying my feelings or cowering in the corner. And every time I feel the fear and do it anyway, every time I exercise my will, I exorcise my demons and become more fully whole, a bit more healed. More able to feel and act. More able to have and express my feelings. A few more thoughts. Oftentimes neglect is a more powerful form of hurt than abuse. If my feelings, my being is not even noticed, my being alive must really be inconsequential. I must really be invisible. I must be worthless. If someone abuses me, at least I know that someone sees me and I'm worth being, if only to be abused. Oftentimes vulnerability is equated with sharing of weaknesses. I think sharing our strengths and enthusiasms can also be quite vulnerable. If I show my talents others can criticize or ignore; if I share my enthusiasm, I can be shamed and ridiculed. So we learn not to shine. All this self-work has not only helped me be more compassionate with myself, but also to treat others with love, with compassion and curiosity rather than judgement. I'm starting to see people as children who happen to have aged. We're all just looking for love and acceptance, for someone to notice us and value us, and how we were raised influences how we attempt to get those needs met.
@TJ-bs4wv
@TJ-bs4wv Жыл бұрын
@@sobrevida157 thank you for sharing, veryinspiring🙏. I'm doing therapy, but I feel stuck, with grief, anxiety, guilt and self blaming, and especially after my mom died 3 - 4 months ago, it has become worse. It is very challenging
@xIssaBaex
@xIssaBaex Жыл бұрын
@@sobrevida157 can you please copy and email this to me😭😭😭
@sobrevida157
@sobrevida157 Жыл бұрын
@@xIssaBaex I can if you wish, and you can just copy and paste it to a google doc as well. I'm happy that you found value in my writing.. peace to you
@jdevine42
@jdevine42 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in New Jersey in the 60's and 70's The whole reason for being back then was to trigger people...Getting a rise out of was considered "a win"...NOT being triggered was an absolute necessity to remaining viable...Once people knew they could push your buttons the harassment never stopped
@laurawalker546
@laurawalker546 7 ай бұрын
School was like that back then ....
@soulventrus
@soulventrus Жыл бұрын
This was perfect! Thank you for this it was an excellent explanation! Very insightful! ❤
@sudhakar7889
@sudhakar7889 Жыл бұрын
I'm struggling with the same. I was bullied verbally and teased by group of boys when I was in my engineering because they found me very weak, thin in frame and with very strange high pitched voice for a boy. I wasn't well built like them all. Later I had to drop off for one year because I had failed in one subject for more than twice because of depression and anxiety. I couldn't concentrate on studies at all. Anxiety was on peak when I was there. Later when I came back to clear that subject, I had to leave hostel and live in a PG where my juniors were also having residence. One night even those juniors knocked my doors hard when they were intoxicated and I refused to smoke cigarettes with them. I was alone. These kinds of things were happening with me since I was a kid. People found out something funny or strange about me and they used to mock me in groups or torture me with words. My friends used to say I've a different personality which sometimes comes out very intimidating as I used to carry a lot of confidence for a thin man. I've been battling with depression for more than 10 years as far as I can remember. I get triggered whenever I recall those moments and whenever anyone mentions how my voice sounds. I've done a lot of things to change but nothing worked. So many exercises to deepen my voice but still. Maybe I look like a child for a man of over 25 years of age. I often link it with me being born a gay. I don't know if I'm completely a gay man or it's just because I've been always forced to never look at girls, talk to them and understand them. Otherwise I could have been a bisexual. God knows. In my mind every time I get triggered as I think I'm not a man manly enough to survive in this world, I blame my parents for giving me bad genes. Especially I think I should have not born to my dad because he has manly personality but is thin frame and can't rock muscles. I find his voice too a strange one. My mother is beautiful and has everything perfect for her physically. I blame God for whatever he has made me. Why he's to make me a man when he can't give me everything a man desires. Why should he make a man effeminate and weak? I often feel so lonely and fear of loneliness grips me very hard. I solace myself that I've to live life happily as much time as I'm healthy and energetic. Later on I can end my life anyway. Better live a good life than a long life.
@DrZombee999
@DrZombee999 Жыл бұрын
I hope you'll find good people, our body is just a vessel, keep going, take care ❤️
@chauminhpham6351
@chauminhpham6351 Жыл бұрын
Take care! You have been through a lot… and know that you deserve so much love!! I wish you health, love, freedom, confidence and so many happy moments ahead! Life isn’t always fair but you are stronger 🙏
@sudhakar7889
@sudhakar7889 Жыл бұрын
@@chauminhpham6351 Thank you
@michaelgraflmusic
@michaelgraflmusic Жыл бұрын
Have you had your hormone levels checked? Maybe you would benefit from TRT for example. This might make your muscles grow easier and lower the pitch of your voice. Just an idea.
@sudhakar7889
@sudhakar7889 Жыл бұрын
@@michaelgraflmusic What hormones? Testosterone? It's more than enough. No problem with that.
@rosefamilia3169
@rosefamilia3169 Жыл бұрын
I have always love your videos, very adequate, clear, and inspiring. Doing shorts is okay but I prefer the longer and animated ones.
@ananamu2248
@ananamu2248 5 ай бұрын
I found that being able to choose from 4 options and labeling the trigger pattern helped enormously ...1..blocking me for no good reason 2 .expectations not bappening 3.something not said or expressed 4 denial of existence ..the last one would devastate me ,but as a child if I didn't " follow the narcissists script " I'd be blasted even for little things ...if rejected in any way it would bring all that ba ck . Now I just name the trigger and the emotion disappears as not relevant to the situation present day . Your presentation was the clearest I have ever heard ,thankyou ...I'll passit on
@171reko
@171reko Жыл бұрын
Why are you calling me out like that? I had this episode today because I thought I messed up in my new job and started questioning my life goals or believing I would be a failure forever. One moment I was having a great after-glow of a tough job, done well. The next minute, I nearly cried as I talked to my supervisor. Just horrible.
@larsegholmfischmann6594
@larsegholmfischmann6594 Жыл бұрын
Whatever the question/problem, the answer/solution is love
@Lyrielonwind
@Lyrielonwind Жыл бұрын
In many cases is self love.
@jahstandedios7
@jahstandedios7 Жыл бұрын
to those confused about managing triggers. first and foremost, trigger is like a stimuli. it is something that is very spontaneous and may seem uncontrollable at first, but is usually from a stressor rooted by our past. what i learned from this video and in real life is that no matter how negative our thoughts may bring us, its almost always 99% worrying and 1% of whats actually happening. trigger management will never be the same as managing anxiety and/or depression. the latter is quite more complicated esp when it is bounded by ptsd too. for those ppl suffering in these mental health issues, just know that no person has 100% healthy mind and coping. we just have to learn how to find our internal zen and practice restrain rather than bursting out our emotions. not only that its very draining, it is really energy consuming. studies already proved that restrain is better than venting out especially in triggers when the stress level is still at its manageable point. and btw, i have a bg in psychology thats why i really appreciated this video for being precise about trigger management
@kimlec3592
@kimlec3592 Жыл бұрын
So many live alone. Shunned by abusive family, abandoned by "friends". Love from others is a myth.
@kashish291_0
@kashish291_0 Жыл бұрын
a myth and its hurts so bad when you get your first heartbreak
@Jack-vh5km
@Jack-vh5km Жыл бұрын
Very well said. We must learn how to control our emotions, then the reactions. Heal from our traumas, accept ourselves and move on with confidence and curiosity about life. Thak you for video, its really helpfull🎉❤
@tinysadpenguin
@tinysadpenguin Жыл бұрын
I'm at this point, after a year of ending therapy. I know every single tiny detail about my triggers, trauma and where they are coming from, and why. yet, it still doesn't help me when I fall into this spiral of sadness. I feel so hopeless.
@sobrevida157
@sobrevida157 Жыл бұрын
Here is a process I’m using to manage my anxiety and feelings of worthlessness, and express my feelings and needs. I think they are taken from Patricia DeYoung’s book on chronic shame and Pete Walker’s CPTSD book. 1. Be aware of the feeling I'm having, and give myself permission to feel it. It may feel silly or scary or ridiculous, but giving myself permission to feel it makes it less scary. Don't compare myself with what I think of as normal, or to others. They may seem like they have it all together, but I'm probably comparing my insides to their outsides. Maybe inside they are just as lost and cowardly as I am. 2. Explore where this feeling comes from. I don't think I need to explore my whole past, but I need to ask myself the simple question: "Is this a feeling about NOW or about the past?" Usually, because I was discouraged from feeling certain feelings as a child, the intense feelings are from the past. Resmaa Menakem says, "Whatever is hysterical is historical." 3. Ask myself if that feeling is warranted given the present circumstances. 4. If not, I don't berate myself for having those feelings, and I don't give myself permission to be passive. I try to live in this moment, responding to this moment and not reacting to the past. So, I feel the feeling and 'do it anyway.' Here's an example. I want to ask my boss for a few days off. 1. I feel anxious, fluttery heart, tension in my forearms. Others may not feel anxious asking their boss for a few days off, but I do. So it's okay to feel that feeling. What am I afraid of? I'm afraid my boss will make a scene and make me feel bad. I'm afraid others will see me asking for a day off and think I'm a shirker. I'm afraid I won't get the time off, so my plans will be ruined. I'm afraid of causing a hassle for my boss and my co-workers . . . 2. I remember being teased by my older siblings for showing any sort of emotional neediness, like I was too sensitive. I also remember being praised by my parents for never complaining, and for feeling shamed whenever I asked for something. Like somehow my desires weren’t valid, no matter how simple they were. 3. This feeling can't be about today because my boss is very sweet, and it's in our contract that we can ask for vacation days. I see lots of others asking for days off, and he always approves them without any sort of protestation. 4. Ok. So, just feel those feelings, feel that anxiety. I settle my body a bit by breathing deeply and rhythmically for a few moments. I dont’ expect the anxiety to disappear altogether, but just reduce it a bit so I have a bit more conscious control . .Then I go ask my boss for a few days off. This routine has really helped me see what fears are from the past AND to live in the moment without denying my feelings or cowering in the corner. And every time I feel the fear and do it anyway, every time I exercise my will, I exorcise my demons and become more fully whole, a bit more healed. More able to feel and act. More able to have and express my feelings. A few more thoughts. Oftentimes neglect is a more powerful form of hurt than abuse. If my feelings, my being is not even noticed, my being alive must really be inconsequential. I must really be invisible. I must be worthless. If someone abuses me, at least I know that someone sees me and I'm worth being, if only to be abused. Oftentimes vulnerability is equated with sharing of weaknesses. I think sharing our strengths and enthusiasms can also be quite vulnerable. If I show my talents others can criticize or ignore; if I share my enthusiasm, I can be shamed and ridiculed. So we learn not to shine. All this self-work has not only helped me be more compassionate with myself, but also to treat others with love, with compassion and curiosity rather than judgement. I'm starting to see people as children who happen to have aged. We're all just looking for love and acceptance, for someone to notice us and value us, and how we were raised influences how we attempt to get those needs met.
@Angelstar7774
@Angelstar7774 Жыл бұрын
The feeling/energy of the core negative beliefs still needs to be released then replaced with positive thoughts, despite you being aware of your triggers. I am working on becoming aware of when I’m becoming disregulated and that’s when to start the counteracting measures, before I’ve spiraled. It really helps!
@sobrevida157
@sobrevida157 Жыл бұрын
@@Angelstar7774 Do you have techniques/processes that you use to release the energy? Or any advice on how to notice when you are starting to become dysregulated? Thanks!
@KoushikPaulliveandletlive
@KoushikPaulliveandletlive Жыл бұрын
You are not alone brother.
@SS-in1ts
@SS-in1ts Жыл бұрын
I get what you mean. I understand it all now and at first felt like I got the ball rolling and hopeful but then it just stopped and I’m not sure what else to do to overcome it.
@SDCJabc
@SDCJabc Жыл бұрын
Although relationships can survive if one person gets easily triggered and lashes out whereas the other person has worked through their stuff and "loves" their acting-out partner, it is waaaaaay better if both people have done their personal work to manage their triggers without inflicting them on their partner.
@lizaptolemyyendrembam9415
@lizaptolemyyendrembam9415 Ай бұрын
There's so much built up anger within me from childhood as i have never confronted the people who have step on me for so long that sometimes i get trigger and my emotions are starting to overflow from me even at work ...
@quaord3738
@quaord3738 Жыл бұрын
Yesterday I was waiting 2 hours in the cold for a group of friends. they decided to cancel but never told me and I was very upset and they just looked confused so I just kept the feeling with me. (Not intentionally)
@quaord3738
@quaord3738 Жыл бұрын
And like I was asking them all the whole time "are you guys still coming", "have you left yet". It just felt like betrayal and abandonment but to them it was nothing.
@vg4917
@vg4917 Жыл бұрын
@@quaord3738 sorry to hear that man. hope you get some better friends
@brcyca
@brcyca Жыл бұрын
Consider giving them only 30 minutes, then give up and leave next time. Empower yourself. Truly inconsiderate of them to not even inform you. If they do this consistently, such as another two or three times, find other friends. I know that it is difficult - I have been there.
@quaord3738
@quaord3738 Жыл бұрын
@@brcyca thank you for your advice, I definitely need more rational answers to situations like these. I suspect that maybe I haven't given enough attention to receive, or I've just been out of touch with their lives and when I finally spend time with friends I may come off as selfish or arrogant because I spend so much time alone. I really look forward to meeting with friends and I will definitely struggle to find new ones which I really don't want to do. I really appreciate the advice thank you! I could avoid problems like these all together but sometimes I feel so helpless or hopeless, not worth the effort. But I will try to avoid these feelings and be a little more rational. Thanks again
@brcyca
@brcyca Жыл бұрын
@@quaord3738 Also, "don't take anything personally" the second of The Four Agreements. If they left you waiting in the cold, that's about THEM, and their lack of consideration, not about you.
@ratsontherails
@ratsontherails Жыл бұрын
How do you tell the difference between a past trauma response and a valid response to someone who genuinely isn't trustworthy?
@nicholabrown11
@nicholabrown11 5 ай бұрын
I think both can happen simultaneously. For me the crying and emotions are much bigger and longer if it involves past trauma too.
@HomemakerDaze
@HomemakerDaze Жыл бұрын
My social anxiety is bad and general anxiety. I get triggered very easily everytime I have to talk to strangers pretty much. Why is life so hard.
@djamiljo93
@djamiljo93 Жыл бұрын
This needs to be an add broadcasted on billboards and tiktok :') much needed in today's world
@michaelcondrey3510
@michaelcondrey3510 8 ай бұрын
I’ve been struggling at work, because due dates trigger me, and I feel powerless and I just start giving up and it actually makes me less productive, but we are always in this state of barley scraping by and getting things done right on time which is stressful
@jacksonrolle8062
@jacksonrolle8062 Жыл бұрын
I really needed this video. Thank you 🙏🏾
@laylasayed708
@laylasayed708 Жыл бұрын
We are animals who were primed to sniff out in the present the slightest sign of the dangers of the past.
@NoName-qv8sx
@NoName-qv8sx Жыл бұрын
Is there anyone who gets triggered by physical touch? I just have some triggers I really don’t understand where they come from. The worst trigger I have is physical touch, I hate it. I want it so badly and I am very lonely and dream of hugging somebody. Sometimes it feels okay or nice but most of the time I can’t deal with it in reality. I want to hug my father for goodbye - I can’t. Want to kiss my brother or mother on the cheek for goodbye but I can’t, sometimes not even say how much I love them. I can’t be touchy with my close friends even when I feel like it. But even WORSE is when someone touches ME. I am SO trigged. I get extremely angry when my brother does it, even when just his arm touches mine when we are watching TV on the couch. Or when I have to sleep in the arms of my boyfriend - I just cried most of the time and my body was completely stiff and I thought I couldn’t do anything about it. I don’t think I will ever figure out wich trauma caused THIS, because I had a loving family and all. I just know that I was like this since Kindergarten or earlier, maybe I am born like this or had some really bad experiences very early…
@jasonwilcox6637
@jasonwilcox6637 Ай бұрын
My goodness, I found myself looking for reasons to be rejected in social situations or to suppose something was wrong when it wasn't, even though there's a lot of evidence saying otherwise. Knowing is half the battle. ❤
@newhorizonsforfifty2833
@newhorizonsforfifty2833 Жыл бұрын
A very, VERY timely video. I needed this so much.
@krutikagedam
@krutikagedam Жыл бұрын
Thank you! Your videos are ever so helpful 🙏🏼
@theschooloflifetv
@theschooloflifetv Жыл бұрын
Thank you for watching Krutika!
@mariebrown345
@mariebrown345 4 ай бұрын
I love this video, though I might suggest that while triggers are often an overreaction to something many people would find blameless, it isn’t necessarily so. It can as well be an intense emotional reaction to something people might also have a response towards, but the key here is that while many move past that situation, the triggered person experiences much stronger emotions and it is harder for them to move past that situation. Triggers are not just pointed at “harmless” things, but can also be an initial normal reaction to an adequated situation, that then escalates into bigger emotions.
@KeyMan94
@KeyMan94 Жыл бұрын
The video is very well made and all the points which are super important, are put into it.
@stwida91
@stwida91 Жыл бұрын
I feel truly sorry for people who have triggers that they have to encounter every day. My only real "trauma" was a horrible experience with needles at the doctor's office when I was young. I now black out any time I am injected with anything, have my blood drawn, etc... But, thankfully, that pretty much never happens and certainly will never happen unexpectedly in the middle of my day. I can't imagine if my "triggers" were just regular things that I encounter every day, though.
@darh3375
@darh3375 Жыл бұрын
I appreciate your contribution to this subject..if we used a measuring device like a thermometer to understand the degree of each person’s trigger(s)..and therefore realize the degree of attention needed… I am very close to someone whose triggers come from extreme trauma and will most definitely need all the loving care forever… my personal triggers issue from a much lower degree ~ although I can understand “triggers” having been, a young person when initiated on the ‘trigger path’. As yourself, a fear of needles moved you to the pathway of triggers… Love, patience, and calmness on our part is a huge must do ~ for all in this world wide ballpark ~
@amelajay
@amelajay Жыл бұрын
Your empathetic thoughts are refreshing to see.
@JSFGuy
@JSFGuy Жыл бұрын
Salt shaker
@theschooloflifetv
@theschooloflifetv Жыл бұрын
🧂🎶
@LEONLOVESMUSIC
@LEONLOVESMUSIC Жыл бұрын
Never thought that way! Thanks.
@briananeuraysem3321
@briananeuraysem3321 Жыл бұрын
It triggers me! >:( (Joking)
@matree.5407
@matree.5407 Жыл бұрын
@@briananeuraysem3321 hahaha! That was funny!
@sun.sh.in.e
@sun.sh.in.e Жыл бұрын
@@briananeuraysem3321Don’t be salty. (Joke) 🧂🎶
@juliank3534
@juliank3534 Жыл бұрын
Thanks Alain, I was thinking about that topic a lot lately
@chaomano8615
@chaomano8615 Жыл бұрын
Beautiful helpful video I thank you so much for all your videos they have helped me so much in my life THANKS.
@mudskipper6702
@mudskipper6702 Жыл бұрын
sometimes it is both something in the past and something in the present needing addressing.dont avoid triggers. feel the feelings know the story and change the ending this time in the present. This Rewires the brain and gives us Confidence Outcomes Can Change.
@awesomelegs
@awesomelegs Жыл бұрын
Yes this is so very true but unfortunately on platforms like twitter, people can't seem to figure out the meaning of that. That is why I like it here on YT. Empathetic and compassionate discussions that are not always perfect, but also not entirely subjective either.
@lu-themadpillow2985
@lu-themadpillow2985 Жыл бұрын
But how do we change the ending? We relentlessly try to change it only to find it some other way.
@ootenba5910
@ootenba5910 Жыл бұрын
@@lu-themadpillow2985 Sometimes it means cutting a person out, changing jobs, speaking up for oneself, asserting boundaries 💛
@JonnyDSmitty
@JonnyDSmitty Жыл бұрын
this is insightful and helpful. i can use this!
@gibbieraven
@gibbieraven Жыл бұрын
I feel... I used to get triggered a lot by people that didn't share the same core values that I try to exercise. Core values as compassion, love, integrity, etc... Then I would pass judgment on those individuals that feel are "ugly" or "loveless" people. I have reduced my triggers in understanding that we are all humans and have so many emotions and motivations.
@ujytb9761
@ujytb9761 Жыл бұрын
These videos always make me feel so validated.
@JLDREAMS
@JLDREAMS Жыл бұрын
To stop caring is the 1 stop shop to stop ourselves from getting triggered
@josiecat8080
@josiecat8080 Жыл бұрын
😂
@AmbersSweatyChoker
@AmbersSweatyChoker Жыл бұрын
It is the easy out for sure
@siobhanorourke2570
@siobhanorourke2570 Ай бұрын
This is a good description of how and why we get triggered but it massively over simplifies how to deal with being triggered. Knowing the origin of triggers is a useful component of self awareness but the most powerful and essential element of responding to triggers is to develop self regulation. That can take time and practice and may require professional support. Best wishes to anyone suffering dysregulated responses. There is help available.
@natalieraulo9773
@natalieraulo9773 Жыл бұрын
BRILLIANT VID - Once we find the 'displacement; we're halfway to healing our terrified/terrifying outbursts :)
@WigglyTuffStuff
@WigglyTuffStuff Жыл бұрын
What's funny is that the book "The Body Keeps the Score" basically proposes that the way to stop being triggered is to get neurofeedback therapy. It's prohibitively expensive, so I see why it's not popular, but some public money should go into making it widely available. Especially since mental health issues are such a crisis.
@sobrevida157
@sobrevida157 Жыл бұрын
To be fair, the author writes of several different modalities, not just neurofeedback.
@bleakaf
@bleakaf Жыл бұрын
What I took from the book was that even something as simple as understanding how to breathe properly can give some respite. And how moving my body and learning physical skills can give a feeling of mastery that can help us feel more resilient when challenges arise. Not disagreeing with your take-aways from the book, just sharing what I took from it in case others haven't read it yet.
@Shubeeduwah
@Shubeeduwah Жыл бұрын
Love that book
@WigglyTuffStuff
@WigglyTuffStuff Жыл бұрын
@@sobrevida157 thanks for your addition. I am not finished with the book, I'm reading it piecemeal to compliment some research I'm doing. I guess my bigger point is that money should be invested into making sure everyone knows these techniques, and not just people who have the time to research it. Because their triggered state will likely hinder such efforts.
@WigglyTuffStuff
@WigglyTuffStuff Жыл бұрын
@@bleakaf I appreciate your additional information, thank you.
@teejay8258
@teejay8258 Жыл бұрын
Your content is the best out there, without exception. Thank you for all you do!
@Vivacious_Chaos
@Vivacious_Chaos 2 ай бұрын
I agree and also feel it's a tough task to manage. Because in reality, the fear I'm having can be equivalent to present day issues. Fear at the grocery store probably not, but when someone is being verbally abusive well then yeah. Balancing the two and remembering it won't always happen is hard. People can be absolutely terrifying but not all.
@florenced1649
@florenced1649 Жыл бұрын
This video came so loudly and unexpectedly through my headphones and I was not okay.
@victorjcano
@victorjcano Жыл бұрын
FOR ME, THE MOST DIFFICULT THING IS TO RECOGNIZE THAT I AM BEING TRIGGERED BEFORE THE ADRENALINE KICKS IN.
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