Hypnotherapy is well known for healing trauma and pain relief. Hypnosis is also extremely valuable in working with sports enhancement, weight loss, motivation, self-esteem, anxiety, panic attacks, insomnia, increased confidence, smoking, phobias and stress related issues.

Tag: Adverse Childhood Experiences

What are the 10 Adverse Childhood Experiences?

Experts define many things as adverse childhood experiences. But 10 things can happen during childhood that harms physical and mental health. 

The 10 Adverse Childhood Experiences list are as follows.

1. Physical Abuse

Physical abuse is non-accidental harm. It includes injuries like bruises, lesions, or fractures. People cause these injuries by hitting, punching, kicking, shaking, beating, burning, throwing, or stabbing.

2. Sexual Abuse

Sexual abuse is sexual behavior with a child or sexual exploitation of a child. This abuse also includes indecent exposure and using a child in prostitution or pornography.

3. Emotional Abuse

Emotional abuse is behavior that interferes with a child’s mental health. This type of abuse includes verbal abuse, mental abuse, and psychological maltreatment.

Emotional abuse can be many things, including:

  • Belittling
  • Rejecting
  • Ridiculing
  • Blaming
  • Threatening
  • Isolating
  • Restricting social interactions
  • Denying the child an emotional response
  • Purposely not talking to the child for extended periods

4. Physical Neglect

Physical neglect is failing to provide for the child’s basic needs. This neglect includes not providing food, clothing, shelter, or medical attention. It also includes a lack of supervision.

5. Emotional Neglect

Emotional neglect is the failure to meet a child’s emotional needs. Emotional neglect includes failing to provide social support or needed mental health treatment. This includes when a child’s needs are ignored. An example would be if a baby cried and no one tended to the child.

6. Mental Illness

Living with a relative with a mental health issue can have a significant impact on a child. Depending on their disorder, a parent may not take adequate care of the child. They also may fail to model appropriate behaviors for the child.

7. Incarcerated Relative

Children with an incarcerated parent may grow up primarily in a single-parent household. Having an incarcerated parent is challenging for the parent who is home and the child. The child also may have trauma or feelings of abandonment. The absent parent also may have modeled inappropriate behaviors before imprisonment.

8. Mother Treated Violently

Any violence in the home is traumatic. Witnessing violence toward the primary caregiver affects a child. This impact is because the mother typically is the primary caregiver. A child forms an attachment to her that tends to be stronger than with other family members. They rely on their mother to take care of them. Seeing her hurt, especially by another loved one, is traumatic.

9. Substance Use 

Substance use in the home can lead to a variety of unsafe conditions for the child. Parents may not take care of the child properly. There also may be other abuse and domestic violence associated with substance use.

10. Divorce

Divorce can impact children negatively. Some divorcing parents expose children to verbal or physical fighting. They also may ignore the child while working through their relationship issues. Some children feel they are to blame for the divorce.

Custody fights may make the child feel unloved or pulled in different directions. In addition, the child could learn unhealthy communication and coping skills.

Healing From Adverse Childhood Experiences With Hypnotherapy

Exciting advances in trauma treatment have led to many new self- and professionally-managed strategies that offset the harmful long-term consequences of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs).

However, in studying resilient survivors of serious adversities, we find that certain key attitudes are foundational to healing. These attitudes are essential complements to the newly developed strategies.

Here we explores the key healing attitudes.

The Key Healing Attitudes

1. Determined Optimism.

Resilient healers choose the attitude that “I will not be defeated by the past. I will keep my dreams alive. No matter how difficult the day, I will continue to find something to enjoy.” We think of the Holocaust survivor Viktor Frankl who stood in awe at the breathtaking beauty of the sunset, which he viewed through the barbed wire, while standing in formation in the freezing cold of the WWII concentration camp.

Determined optimism says, “If I continue to do my part, things will likely improve; if I keep searching, I’ll undoubtedly find ways to build a better, more enjoyable life.”

2. Relaxed Control.

It feels great to know that our lives are in control: physically, emotionally, mentally, socially, spiritually, and temporally.

An optimistic attitude impels us to take constructive actions in these areas and to enjoy the resulting sense of control. However, life is uneven. There will most certainly be circumstances that we simply can’t control. When this happens, relaxed control says, “I will roll with the punches: I’ll accept what is beyond my control to change or fix right now.”

3. Negativity Resistance.

Resilient survivors compassionately acknowledge their own pain and suffering. They are comfortable with, and accepting of, all emotions. However, they resolutely fight off depressing negativity. They might think, “I simply refuse to go to that dark place. I won’t allow myself to indulge unkind, negative thoughts, even for one moment.”

4. Inner, Unshakable Worth.

Resilient healers continually remember that nothing – not the way they were treated in childhood nor recently, not chemical imbalance, not financial challenges – alters their fundamental worth and potential as a person.

During difficult times, they might remind themselves, “I’m still a worthwhile person; I choose to love and respect myself: I’m in the process of learning and growing, just like everyone else.”

5. The Long View of Suffering.

Ben Franklin taught, “That which hurts instructs.” Suffering is not all bad. It can help us to realize, and take pride in knowing, that we can survive very difficult circumstances. Hard times can lead us to have compassion for ourselves and empathy for those who are similarly suffering. All experience can be profitable.

For example, one survivour of brutal mistreatment in childhood vowed that he would avoid his parents’ mistakes and become a loving father. Against all odds, he did. Though most resilient survivors say that they would not choose the suffering they endured, they also would not trade the lessons gained from their suffering.

6. Love Replaces Anger.

Anger toward offenders can be crippling.

Anger toward self for weakness can be crushing.

Resilient healers find a way to let go of anger and resentment; to look kindly toward self and others for their shortcomings. Paradoxically, kindness much more effectively promotes healing and growth than seething anger and harsh criticism.

7. Meaning and Purpose.

One woman, sold into sex slavery as a child, determined that she would make her experience count for something.

She became an articulate voice for protecting children from sex trafficking. As Frankl taught, each of us, in our own unique way, must find meaning and purpose for our lives in order to overcome difficult times. We can do that by finding ways to improve the world, to grow personally, and to enjoy wholesome pleasures. Instead of passively waiting for love or satisfaction, we can think, “What can I offer?

What can I contribute?

How can I lift others?”

8. Sense of Humour.

Humor is the ability to amuse or be amused; to be playful; to find the comical in any situation.

We can laugh at the ridiculous things we all do sometimes. We can notice the absurd, the ludicrous, the incongruities of life and people. To laugh at ourselves kindly is to think, “I’m more than my imperfections and weaknesses.”

Laughing along with others says, “We’re in this together; we’re not alone; it’ll be okay.”

9. Compassion.

Compassion is sorrow for a person’s suffering coupled with a desire to relieve that suffering.

Compassion is sometimes called lovingkindness, gentle friendliness, or mature love.

Compassion brings soothing, healing kindness to each moment of life.

We can feel compassion, rather than condemnation, toward offenders, who suffer for their weakness. We can feel compassion, rather than harsh judgments, towards ourselves, who haven’t yet learned all that life has to teach us.

Compassion toward self and others can indeed soften our battles in life.

Conclusion

The healing attitudes are chosen. They help us heal and live a happier, more satisfying life.

It is liberating to realize that they are within everyone’s reach. But they don’t fall in our lap without effort.

Like a beautiful plant, they are patiently, relentlessly cultivated. Looking back, the effort will seem enormously worthwhile.

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