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Trauma Response Quotes

Quotes tagged as "trauma-response" Showing 1-7 of 7
Emily Henry
“Maybe - you didn't have so much control over your life as a kid. So, to avoid disappointment, you learned never to ask yourself what you truly wanted.”
Emily Henry, Beach Read

“Children of borderlines may tune out by dissociating and disconnecting from their environment. They cannot feel embarrassed, humiliated, ridiculed, or hurt if they are no longer in their own bodies. Unfortunately, the sensation of depersonalization or dissociation makes them feel crazy.”
Christine Ann Lawson, Understanding the Borderline Mother

Holly  Jackson
“If that was the cause - all these ambiguities, these contradictions, these grey areas that spread and engulfed all sense - how could Pip rectify that? How could she cure herself from the after effects?”
Holly Jackson, As Good As Dead

“One of the greatest threats to the well-being of Black women is not recognizing behaviors as trauma responses, because it keeps us trapped in a dangerous cycle of self-harm. We are definitely susceptible to this when our trauma responses coincide with practices that we value and honor, and that we are praised and celebrated for in culture and music.”
Shanita Hubbard

Marie Mistry
“He’s still in shock, but sooner or later, his trauma will catch up to him, and the anger will surface. Better we allow him to purge it in a way that brings him closure, than let it simmer beneath the surface and poison him.”
Marie Mistry, Across an Endless Sea

K.L. Speer
“I didn't want to talk. I didn’t want to be here. I didn’t want to be.”
K.L. Speer, Bones

“These researchers found that trauma is a subjective, perceptive, and physiological response to a person, place, or thing that overwhelms the nervous system's natural capacity to cope. Practically, this means that trauma is in the eye of the beholder. What is traumatic for one person may not be traumatic for another, and thr body may experience trauma as a result of either a real threat or a perceived one.”
Laura E. Anderson, When Religion Hurts You: Healing from Religious Trauma and the Impact of High-Control Religion