What ACEs/PCEs do you have?
Trauma Tom North Trauma Tom North

What ACEs/PCEs do you have?

There are 10 types of childhood trauma measured in the CDC-Kaiser Permanente Adverse Childhood Experiences Study. (There are many others…see below.) Five are personal — physical abuse, verbal abuse, sexual abuse, physical neglect, and emotional neglect. Five are related to other family members: a parent who’s an alcoholic, a mother who’s a victim of domestic violence, a family member in jail, a family member diagnosed with a mental illness, and experiencing divorce of parents. Each type of trauma counts as one. So a person who’s been physically abused, with one alcoholic parent, and a mother who was beaten up has an ACE score of three.

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Lifelong impact of adverse childhood experiences is a message for us all - Sheila Wayman
Trauma Tom North Trauma Tom North

Lifelong impact of adverse childhood experiences is a message for us all - Sheila Wayman

Children are being misdiagnosed with personality or behavioural disorders when in fact they are suffering from the effects of trauma.

To wonder what happened to someone instead of what’s wrong with them can be a transformative shift in mindset not only for healthcare workers, teachers, social workers and policymakers but for anybody who considers themselves capable of compassion.

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How Going Through Trauma Can Change Your Brain - JR Thorpe
Trauma Tom North Trauma Tom North

How Going Through Trauma Can Change Your Brain - JR Thorpe

Traumatic events can do a number on all aspects of your health, from appetite to sleep to mental health. But it’s less well known that trauma can affect the brain. From the parts that regulate fear and anger to the sections that hold onto memories, traumatic events can leave scars in several key areas of the brain, with long-term effects for its health and functioning.

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It's More Than Just Fight or Flight - Mellissa Withers, Ph.D., M.H.S
Ego, Trauma Tom North Ego, Trauma Tom North

It's More Than Just Fight or Flight - Mellissa Withers, Ph.D., M.H.S

Most people are familiar with the term “fight or flight,” which describes two of the most common forms of stress responses—either retreating or sticking around to fight. Another stress response is the “freeze” response, which is the inability to move or act against the threat.

However, there is another stress response that people may not be familiar with called “fawn,” which can best be explained as appeasing or complying with an abuser as a way to survive.

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How to Know If You or a Loved One Is Suffering From Trauma - Jason N. Linder, PsyD
Trauma Tom North Trauma Tom North

How to Know If You or a Loved One Is Suffering From Trauma - Jason N. Linder, PsyD

Basic questions you can ask yourself or a loved one are, in the last month have you, from a past stressful event:

  1. Lost interest in activities you used to enjoy after (a) stressful event(s)?

  2. Avoided activities or situations because they remind you of what happened?

  3. Had disturbing repetitive dreams or nightmares about what happened?

  4. Had difficulty concentrating or sleeping or changes in your diet since what happened?

  5. Felt very upset when something reminds you of what happened?

  6. Had physical reactions when something reminds you of what happened (i.e., shortness of breath, racing heart, sweating, or muscle tension)?

  7. Had repeated disturbing thoughts, images, or memories of what happened?

  8. Avoided thinking or talking about what happened?

  9. Felt emotionally distant from others since what happened?

  10. Found yourself acting as of what happened just happened?

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