Laying bare the consequences of trauma

images  I find it a struggle to engage with the plight of asylum-seeker children held in detention. Of no help to me, the wide acknowledgement that such incarceration is detrimental to their mental health with long-lasting if not permanent consequences. Trauma, we hear, leads to problems with anxiety and depression, at times even to suicide. The term PTSD floats about as some sort of embarrassment. So I thought I would provide a portrait of the consequences of trauma, one that reaches far beyond a overly generalised binary description of anxiety on the one hand and depression on the other. Before I continue I will disclaim any professional psychological knowledge or training.


I am providing here what may happen to the mind of a child through the lens of the mind of the adult.


Sustained trauma is a slow bomb that fragments the mind, sending sub-selves scattering off in all directions. Leaving at the core where once there existed the wellbeing and the joy the bomb obliterated, a knot of ugly fear. A state of permanent alert, poised for flight should fight get too hard, always on guard, startled by the smallest flash or flutter. With alert comes stress, that sense of pressure, weight and effort. This alert stressed state becomes the norm, colouring reality with endless tension and negative thoughts that at times verge on paranoia. Suspicious, wary, drained, you retreat within your life and within yourself. Sometimes you may stare for hours at walls. You have no idea you are in a trance, any more than you are aware that you zone out or go numb from time to time, respite from the vigilance of your ordinary waking state. Memories intrude, lodging themselves in the front room of your mind, haunting you, dragging you back.  Inside your new boxed up self, you can see you are not alone. That there are other selves in the box with you but you scarcely know who they are. And there are times, other times, when one of these selves crashes the scene, takes over the psyche and interprets the world without and the world within. One scene-crasher may be absurdly optimistic, filled with inflated hopes and unattainable plans. Another may be pessimistic, filling the box you inhabit with black.


Over time and with much effort a little co-consciousness may be achieved and you might foster some coherence. But you know you are faulty. You are never sure who is driving you. And so you lose the ability to self-trust. So unpredictable and so draining is this relentless flux that you retreat from the world, preferring a life of little stimulation, avoiding the triggers that launch the extremes.


Here is an extract from a piece I wrote  in 2009. A piece that was cast aside dismissively by someone who had no idea how cruel he was being. I post here to illuminate, not entertain. I am not a poet and I would not claim this as poetry. It is simply a portrait.


 


Queen of the Shit Pile


 


No not funny, I’m not laughing,


Shall I cry instead?


But  I can’t.


I can’t sleep


I can’t concentrate


I can’t relax real well


I can’t remember


I can’t cope


I get confused


I get tired


I get panicked


I’m edgy on edge


I fear, I shock


I don’t want to go outside


I don’t want to be inside


I don’t want company


I don’t want to be alone


I don’t want the fear


I don’t want the stress


I don’t want to keep crying


And bleeding inside.


 


I want to get past this


I want to be well for once


For once free


Of uncertainty


Of insecurity


But then who will save me


From bullies and thugs and fat controllers and evil deniers of truth?


 


Most of all I want to be free


Of my inability to cope


With being in the world


With the world


With all its rough and tumble.


 


I want to feel normal, whatever that might be


And not like a pin cushion,


A tiny advising word


An ambiguity


A rejection of me in my entirety.


A needle prick


A knife stab


And I’m pricked and stabbed all over


Crucified by the crushing


The loneliness of trauma


That severance of belonging


An isolation so painful


It is like dying every day.


 


Unable to cope:-


With public spaces


With queues and waiting


With crowds and audiences


With bureacracies and bosses


With supermarket aisles and driving


Especially with driving.


 


I get so far, and then I have to stop


There is so much I cannot do


So much that confronts me


With myself.


 


I know I hold my breath


I tell myself to breathe


I calm down


It will be all right.


Keep me waiting long


And I feel trapped


Suffocated


Overwhelmed


And I need to get away.


Mouth dry


Vision blurred


Confusion


I tremble and sweat.


 


I try not to sound hysterical


In public where all can hear.


But  I am angry


And I want the world to know


The inside of my prison.


 


Yes it’s time to leave the box


Time to lift the veil


Time to expose to the world


One damaged life in raw relief.


 


No, I haven’t been to war


I have never seen the carnage


And I do not have the luxury


Of a memory


Of before.


 


But isn’t she lovely


So soft and sweet


Caring, compassionate and giving


Understanding and insightful


An inspiration, truly.


Ha! A self-composed veneer


Beneath I am an animal


A timid fawn


With huge eyes cautious


Cunning like a rat


With the survival skills of a cockroach


An adept at gutter-living


Safe in the underworld


Where the rejects live.


 


I know the alcoholics


And the drug addicts in every form


I know the schitzophrenics, the paranoid


The manics and depressives


The socio and psycho paths


The victims and abusers


The oppressors and oppressed


The criminals


The ex-cons


The losers, the dejected.


I know them on the inside


I see inside their souls


I feel their wounds, their pain, their grief


I understand their anguished anger


I feel safe and recognised beside them


At home in the hardship


Protected and secure.


 


A reject on the shit pile I belong


Soiled goods on the sale rack


A marked-down marked-down going cheap.


 


We didn’t know!


We thought she would get fixed


We had no idea she was not fixable


That the damage was that deep.


We thought a little rationalising


A touch of thought control


Some relaxation exercises


Would do the trick for her.


 


Alas it is an illness


For which there is no cure


Her human right to wholeness


Shredded at her core


A wound that rents asunder


Scattered chips and bits in pieces


The matrix of a human.


 


Wierdly, I am psychic


I can read the Book of Life


It is my cross, my burden


That I can penetrate beneath the veil


That I can read you like a script


That I sense the evil in the living dead


And see fractured hearts alive.


 


Hope and ambition have willed me on my way


And a love I see so far from goodness


A love intensely magnifying


If ever I can touch it.


 


Yes I’m lucky I’m so nervous


So strung out highly strung


It keeps me wily


And I’m told that I am strong


But they know not of my addictions


Modest, I agree


It’s fortunate I’m now so sensitive


Or I’d binge like I did wretchedly,


 


Now I live each day, pleasantly


Moderate in my indulgences


That replace the love


I can’t receive.


I bereft my self of need.


Instead I have compulsions


Bizarre little rituals of must


Fulfilling a fatiguing need for order


To create chaos.


Insisting things are done this way


Then forgetting what I’ve said.


And I despair


Of the wasted time I spend staring into nothing


Haunted.


 


Yes, I display myself wide open


For all to hear and stare


But don’t ask any questions


And please


Don’t come too near.


 


Today I am shameless


I tell it as it is


Blunt, direct and candid.


And if I shake


So be it


And if I cry


Hand me a tissue


And if I run away, say


‘God, she’s brave to have been here


We’ll keep an open door for her return.’


 


I am my major life work


My crowning glory


Of achievement and success


Currently at work still


On that project of the self.


It began as a paragraph


A vignette, a cartoon strip


And it grew into an epic


Of encyclopedic length.


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Published on August 22, 2014 17:00
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