There are a multitude of books on trauma, post-traumatic stress, and post-traumatic stress disorder. There are overviews (and underviews), workbooks, guides, pairings with meditation, mindfulness, yoga and an irksome panoply of theories. There are trauma memoirs and trauma fictions and navigations through specific trauma treatments. To put it in the vernacular of our cyber landscape, it could be said that trauma is trending. However, as with most fields of study, there are but a few works that constitute the backbone of solid scholarship on the subject. Judith Lewis Herman's seminal analysis, Trauma and Recovery, is one. Rothschild's The Body Remembers is another. Both books drive to the heart of the matter, Herman's from an external view with a primary focus on the most dramatic arenas in which traumatization manifests: combat, rape, torture, abuse, imprisonment (she touches on survival of the Holocaust). Rothschild's work takes a more internal approach and attempts (successfully) to integrate the terrain of the psyche's terror with the physical body's instinctive response to that distress.
Now you might imagine someone in the psychiatric field would have accomplished this long ago. Common sense would dictate we treat both mind and body in relation to trauma. Both are in trouble, after all, and are reacting in ways that derail a person's ability to function in everyday life. Rothschild herself points out, rather brilliantly, that much of what the body resorts to (headaches, numbness, nausea, hyperventilation, constriction, trembling) are tactile communications of jeopardy that have lingered on well past the catastrophic event. By helping a victim to understand what is stimulating these physical reactions (it could be, say, the color red, or the scent of smoke, the buzz of a machine; any sensory input that has been charged with alarm through the experience of that specific traumatic injury), we can help make sense of the nonsensical and bring much-needed meaning to fears that have elevated beyond comprehension and control.
Sounds smart, yes? But not so easily implemented in the treatment field. Psychologists and psychiatrists have grave reservations about addressing the physical front of emotional distress. And to be fair, it is a minefield. Much can be misconstrued as having a sexual overtone. Those with body issues, or issues with control (intimidation, intrusion), are prone to feeling threatened and/or overstimulated when the physical is introduced. An entire course of analysis, years of careful care, can jump the track in a heartbeat; a therapeutic bond abruptly broken; inadvertent damage done. And this is what makes Rothschild's book revolutionary. She's calling for a closer examination of that resistance on the professional's part; insisting he take another look. Work with the body's sense of danger, through discussion of the body's reactions, may in fact hold the key to healing trauma. It certainly holds the key to symptom relief.
This book is accessible, short and fascinating. Well worth the read.