NOTE: this book is good for therapists, clients and people trying to help themselves and/or a loved one.
Don’t let the therpaist talk scare you off.
That being said.
This book is by a therapist, not a researcher, and therefore needs a bit of a disclaimer.
Read on if you’re so inclined......
Some therapists come to the work as somewhat ‘normal’ well adjusted folk.
They heal by sharing their stability, training, intelligence, evidence and good old ‘common sense’.
Others come to this work having gone through some terrible ordeal, and (hopefully) emerged from the recovery process with something uniquely personal, and powerfully inspirational to contribute.
They heal by sharing their hard earned experience, strength, hope and wise intuition.
Other therapists are both/and or somewhere in the middle.
They use their personal experiences of recovery as a foundation for the research and development of therapeutic techniques and modalities.
They heal by putting their personal insights and wisdom under the microscope of critical thinking and evidence based methods.
That’s the ‘research is me-search’ model. And Pete Walker (the author of this book) is somewhere in this camp.
He’s open about his own recovery process.
This book is clearly the product of personal experience.
And that’s a powerful and good thing.
Although, far from perfect, and somewhat home spun, this book represents the authors ‘good enough’ efforts at bringing clarity and precision to the still murky subject of developmental trauma and subsequent Complex PTSD.
And it’s good.
It’s really good.
Developmental trauma and Complex PTSD refer to the type of ‘small t’ (as opposed to CAPITAL T) trauma, and the resulting ‘symptoms’ that one can develop over a long period of exposure to chronic stressor(s).
Take for example: your standard ‘fucked up childhood’ where there may not have been (much or any) overt abuse or neglect, but rather a longer term exposure to unpredictability, or pervasive emotional dysregulation.
In other words, there isn’t any one thing you can recall as the thing that fucked you up.
There was just a fucked up (or very fucked up) situation that you adjusted to over the course of your development, and now you’re (somewhat or very) out of step, or miss-calibrated with the rest those lucky ‘normal’ (bastards) people.
This type of exposure commonly leads to a general sense of unease (mild to awful).
You know....
When you’re always waiting for the bottom to fall out?
Or you’re always ready for the other shoe to drop?
No matter how objectively good the present situation is, you’re always a little bit keyed up, on edge and suspicious.
That’s called chronic ‘hyper-vigilance’, and it’s no way to live.
Other symptoms include that nagging feeling of inferiority, or shame, or a sense that you’re broken, or unintegrated, or missing something that those other lucky ‘normie’ kids just seem to have without trying.
That’s called internalized abuse and neglect and it’s a common outcome of exposure to an afore mentioned fucked up childhood.
Or a fucked up adolescence.
Or a fucked up culture, society, job, relationship, etc.
And again.
Toxic shame is no way to live.
There’s great treatment for all of this.
And that’s what this book is about.
The reason the Complex PTSD thing is murky, is because it’s not officially recognized by the American Psychiatric Association (APA) and is thusly not in the APA’s diagnostic manual (the Bible of psychiatry) the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, 5th ed. (DSM5).
This means that the area is lacking the same level of discourse, evidence and research funding. All that important good stuff. In other words, it’s outside of the mainstream of psychiatry.
Not necessarily a bad thing.
Not necessarily a good thing.
But a thing none the less.
The fact that the APA is somewhat conservative about their inclusion of Complex PTSD as a thing, means that people can get a little whipped up about the subject.
This leads to a sort of cult like atmosphere in the trauma treatment community where every little thing is conceptualized in terms of trauma, even bi-polar and schizophrenic symptoms, and perhaps, most annoyingly, addiction.
News Flash: not every aspect of addiction is related to trauma. It’s a complicated syndrome with biological, psychological and social risk and protective factors.
People in the trauma cult think that (a) you can cure every case of addiction by treating the underlying trauma, and (b) if the client reports no history of trauma, they are in denial.
A: you can’t.
B: cut it out.
That being said.
Complex PTSD - whether you call it that, or by any other name, is clearly a real thing, and therapists need good ways to conceptualize, diagnose, educate and treat our clients that present with this very very real real real thing.
This book is a GREAT start.
It’s good for therpaist and clients alike.
That’s one of the major strengths of the text.
So get it.
Read it.
Take what is useful.
Pitch the rest.
And let’s all of us join together in the hope of making this world a better place for healing and being.
Five Stars ✨