All Memories Are Not The Same

An ordinary memory sits like a photograph in a family album. It’s always available to visit by thumbing through the album. A trauma memory is not pasted in the photo album. Like getting lost in the attics of our mind, it goes to the unconscious.
By: Jeanne McElvaney
 
April 29, 2011 - PRLog -- CONTACT:
Jeanne McElvaney
Tel: 509-393-2921
Email: jeanne@gotospirit.com
Website: http://www.gotospirit.com

All Memories Are Not The Same

SEBASTOPOL, CA  –  We would like to think childhood sexual abuse happens to a few unfortunate people outside our circle of family, friends, and acquaintances, but statistics tell a different story. One in three girls is sexually abused. One in six boys is molested. In families from every neighborhood across the nation, children keep this secret so they can survive. About half of them will leave home unable to recall their trauma because all memories are not the same.

An ordinary memory sits like a photograph in a family album. It’s always available to visit by thumbing through the album. A trauma memory is not pasted in the photo album. Like getting lost in the attics of our mind, it goes to the unconscious. Dissociation happens when a trauma memory becomes a photo ripped into pieces and scattered across the attic floor.

Ordinary memories enter our brain through our five senses. Signals move along pathways as these sensations seek similar moments from our past. Memories become associated like letters being sorted into the mail boxes with similar addresses. If a person places a significance on the experience being processed, our brain translates the new information into words so the moment can be shared with others. This happens with stressful memories we would rather not recall as well as with positive or neutral events.

Yesterday’s trip to the grocery store would be neatly placed near the memories of a young girl’s other shopping experiences. This memory might be attached to the glorious warm weather or the ice cream cone her dad bought her on the way home. If, a month or year from now, she wanted to remember this trip to the store, her brain would be able to provide the information by tracking associations with the ice cream cone, her dad, the weather, or grocery stores. It would give her the words she needed to talk about the moment.

Trauma memories are not attached to other memories by association. Extreme emotion interferes in normal memory function, and these memories go to the unconscious. They are stored in the area of the brain that processes only emotion and sensation but not the words that would help describe the incident. Feelings associated with these memories are present, but the memories themselves cannot be recalled at will. Survivors of trauma live with memories that affect their choices, reactions, and view of the world, but they are unaware of them. It’s like loosing a letter in “lost and found” because the address was written with invisible ink.

If a child went to the grocery store on that warm, sunny day with her dad, and, while eating her ice cream cone on the way home, she experienced something that made her feel absolutely powerless and shocked, an ordinary memory would not form. She would arrive home and not be able to remember or talk about what happened while she was gone, but she might have a vivid, recurring impression of cold ice cream on her tongue.

Dissociation is a biological response that separates awareness from consciousness. It is a natural, protective occurrence that happens without will. In the process, information separates from our normal, autobiographical memory. It creates a series of holes in memory like a letter being shredded.

In the history of childhood sexual abuse, survivors have only recently been supported by research and understanding about the different kinds of memory. Those facing the challenge of acknowledging their own abuse are pioneers of the best kind.

Jeanne McElvaney is a personal spirit fiction author. Her novels are based on personal experience and a wealth of research. Spirit Unbroken takes you to the very core of dissociated memories and leaves you with a glowing sense of resilient spirit. In Harrietta’s Happenstance, the reader witnesses a young woman held hostage to a memory she feels compelled to keep secret.

More information about the author and her writing can be found at GoToSpirit.com and through her Radio Interview with Tony Kay. You may write to Jeanne at jeanne@gotospirit.com

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Jeanne McElvaney's books are dedicated to the wonder and resiliency of personal spirit. If that is your journey, you're invited to explore her books at amazon.com. While some of her fiction will expand your world, others may change your life.
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Source:Jeanne McElvaney
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Tags:Insight, Psychology, Women, Sexual Abuse, Memories
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