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Recovering From Post-Conflict Trauma
Thomas F. Fischer, M.Div., M.S.A
Number 156
Exhausted, it is normal to want to be alone. It is natural to want to have time for oneself to recuperate and regenerate. By not talking, loneliness is guaranteed...even when surrounded by people. Being withdrawn and preferring introversive behaviors are signs that the grief is still very much present. Yet, the grief also hinders pastors from sharing the hurt.
The effects of multiple rejection, betrayal, and disrespect shatter even the most trusting pastor's sense of trust. Boundaries become significantly--even severely--reset.
The only absolutely positive way to control being hurt more is to withdraw. Pastors may run into the castle, pull up the drawbridge, and isolate themselves to avoid further pain. Unfortunately, the pastor's pain will endure as long as the pastor remains in the castle.
Sooner or later the pastor will rediscover God's plan for relationships. Even in this self-imposed isolation the Christian leader will recognize that "it is not good to be alone" (Genesis 2:18) Developing new relationships and healing existing ones can seem to be an insurmountable challenge. For some, this may be the greatest and most difficult risk for recovery. Yet, recovery cannot and does not occur until existing relationships are renewed and new relationships initiated on a foundation of absolute trust.
In order to avoid a repeat of the painful feelings of failure, traumatized individuals may simply avoid feelings. Love, friendship, attachment, commitment and enthusiastic participation in life are jettisoned.
The fear of experiencing a rerun of the painful feelings of trauma is so great that traumatized individuals move into a "feeling management" mode. If one can avoid feelings, they reason, they can avoid pain. Just turn off the heart, turn off the attachments, and turn the cold shoulder. Don't get involved. Don't have friends. Don't make commitments. Don't empathize. Don't get passionately involved. Don't feel. After all, traumatized individuals reason, the only these things do is expose oneself to the possibility of more pain and grief. In order to avoid the trauma, one simply must avoid feeling.
- trying to control others;
- trying to help and understand others while ignoring our own needs;
- confusing our responsibilities with those of others;
- repressing feelings;
- being emotionally involved with addicts;
- believing that our self-worth is based on how someone else behaves.
"Codependency...explains the pain that many people feel. This pain comes from not being able to take care of ourselves while trying to hard to take care of others. The hurt comes from overworking, over caretaking, oversacrificing, while something in us is tired, hungry, needy, and never taken care of...
Codependency is like a mirror. We see ourselves reflected in someone else: our needs, our worth, our ambition, our security, and our hopes are all projected onto other people.
Until we learn to focus on ourselves and develop our own strong identities, we'll probably continue trying to manage and direct the lives of others." (Talk, Trust, Feel, pp. 2-3)
Psychologists refer to this anxious traumatic state as "disintegration anxiety." Disintegration anxiety is the fear that one's self will fragment in response to an inadequately sustained and traumatized sense of self.
Adult children of dysfunctional families experience this state even into adulthood. "Normal" leaders experiencing post-conflict trauma can get an acute experience of the long-term chronic state of codependents and others living in the throes of unresolved childhood trauma. Unless this trauma is professionally addressed the disintegration anxiety can linger and destroy.
Though these behaviors have devastating moral implications on pastors and other church leaders, the desperate sense of psychological death that disintegration anxiety brings seeks some sort of instant, at least momentary relief. Thus, for the leader in post-conflict trauma, these actions are
Those Painful Feelings
- "Narcissism is the attempt to retreat from "Square One" [i.e. the place God wants us] back into the spiritual sovereignty of self. Forget infinity. Forget mystery. Cultivate the wonderful self. It might be a small world, but it is my world, totally mine.
- Prometheanism is the attempt to detour around "Square One" into the spirituality of infinity, get a handle on it, get control of it, and make something of it. All that spirituality sitting around idle needs managing. Prometheanism is practical. Prometheanism is entrepreneurial. Prometheanism is energetic and ambitious. Prometheans want to put all that power and beauty to good use.
- Most of us, most of the time, can be found to be practicing some variation of Narcissism or Prometheanism. It goes without saying, then, that most spirituality is a combination of Narcissism and Prometheanism, with the proportions carefully customized to suit our personal temperaments and circumstances" (p. 22).
- "we return so that our faith is God-initiated, our discipleship is Christ-defined, our obedience in Spirit-infused"
(Subversive Spirituality, p. 29).
For further discussion on the experience of suffering
in ministry see Ministry Health's Article #244,
"What Ever Happened To 'Habitus Practicus?'"
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This page was revised on: Tuesday, October 05, 2004 11:02:42 PM |