| Attachment Theory is an interesting subject on the matter. A few useful books which helped me with both understanding and healing (there're still problems, but it gets better): 1. Love Sense, Sue Johnson. 2. The Power of Attachment, Diane Pooler Heller. 3. Understanding Disorganized Attachment: Theory and Practice for Working with Children and Adults, David, Shemmings and Yvonne Shemmings. 4. The Body Keeps the Score, Bessel van der Kolk. 5. Hold Me Tight: Seven Conversations for a Lifetime of Love, Sue Johnson. 6. "Focusing" practice, Eugene Gendlin. 7. How to survive the most critical 5 seconds of your life, Tim Larkin. The first four lay down foundations, explaining the mechanics, possible solutions, will help in navigating, filtering and planning the healing. The 5th and 6th are actual healing, former for couples, the latter mostly for individuals. The last one is about a wisdom of violence embedded into the body of affected individuals which is likely suppressed by the rational part of the mind. |
Somehow, humans managed to get by for thousands of years without any of this stuff. I can honestly say the people I know who are more knowledgeable in all this psychology-trauma material seem to be the least well adjusted. Conversely, my more religious friends (Catholic, Muslim) seem happier and more resilient psychologically. Maybe it's just correlation. Maybe if we didn't have all this academic literature on trauma becoming mainstream people would be doing even worse. But it also seems possible that over-analyzing and over-pathologizing 'trauma' can have exactly the opposite effect we hope it to have.