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Ideas
for coping with flashbacks
1. Tell yourself you are having a flashback and that this is okay and
very normal in people who were traumatised as children (or as adults).
2. Remind yourself that the worst is over - it happened in the past, but
it is not happening now. The 'child' inside you who was abused is giving
you these memories to use in your healing and, however terrible you feel,
you survived the awfulness then, which means you can survive and get through
what you are remembering now.
3. Call on the 'adult' part of yourself to tell your 'child' that she
is not alone, not in any danger now and that you will help her to get
through this. Let your child self know it's okay to remember and to feel
what she feels and that this will help her in healing from what has happened
to her. However hard it is for you, she is communicating in the only way
she can.
4. Try some of these ways of 'grounding' yourself and becoming more aware
of the present:
- stamp your feet,
grind them around on the floor to remind yourself where you are now
- look around the
room, noticing the colours, the people, the shapes of things
- listen to the sounds
around you: the traffic, voices, the washing machine, etc.
- feel your body,
the boundary of your skin, your clothes, the chair or floor supporting
you
- have an elastic
band to hand - you can 'ping' it against your wrist and feel it on your
skin
- tell yourself
that feeling is in the now, the things you are re-experiencing were
in the past
5. Take care of your breathing: breathe deeply down to your diaphragm;
put your hand there (just above your navel) and breathe so that your hand
gets pushed up and down. Count slowly to 5 as you breathe. When we get
scared we breathe too quickly and shallowly and our body panics. This
causes dizziness, shakiness and more panic. Breathing slowly and deeply
will stop the panic.
6. If you have lost a sense of where you end and the rest of the world
begins, rub your body so you can feel its edges, the boundary of you.
Wrap yourself in a blanket, feel it round you.
7. Get support if you would like it. Let people close to you know about
flashbacks so they can help if you want them to. That might mean holding
you, talking to you, helping you to reconnect with the present, to remember
you are safe and cared for now.
8. Flashbacks are powerful experiences which drain your energy. Take time
to look after yourself when you have had a flashback. You could have a
warm, relaxing bath or a sleep, a warm drink, play some soothing music
or just take some quiet time for yourself. Your 'child' and you deserve
being taken care of, given all you went through in the past.
9. When you feel ready, write down all you can remember about the flashback
and how you got through it. This will help you to remember information
for your healing and to remind you that you did get through it (and can
again).
10. Remember you are not crazy - flashbacks are normal and you are healing.
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Bristol
Crisis Service for Women
PO Box 654
Bristol BS99 1XH
Helpline 0117 925 1119
www.users.zetnet.co.uk/bcsw/
Registered
charity 1092299
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