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Post Traumatic Stress Disorder - PTSD

Post-traumatic anger becomes maladaptive interfering with individuals’ ability to adapt and or cope. Anger is a fundamental and safe core emotion of a child or adult survivor’s response to trauma because of the betrayal and losing basic trust. Anger is a core feature of the trauma survival response in men and women. Therefore, the anger is a safe and a less vulnerable feeling that can be expressed as an emotion helping individual's cope with vulnerable and fearful situations.

WD recovery and Wellness Center explains how anger and trauma are connected to an individual's natural survival instinct. When an individual is initially confronted with a threat, anger is a normal response which covers over you. Childhood abuse is a terrorizing situation that often becomes a repeated situation. Anger is a normal response to situations of terror, situations that seem unfair, and the feelings of "feeling out of control".

Feelings become perceived as vulnerable. The vulnerable feelings need protection. Vulnerable situations can be perceived as "threats" becoming "fixed with automatic responses" in persons with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

Individuals, who have Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) often, describe feeling an increased internal activation. The anger can become “fixed or stuck” as the normal level of arousal can intensify the actual psychological, emotional and physical experience of anger. The arousal often can cause a men and women with PTSD to feel constantly on-edge, hyped-up, or irritable and can cause individuals to be more easily provoked. It is common for traumatized individuals to actually seek out situations that require them to stay alert and defend off actual or potential danger.

Again, individuals often use alcohol and drugs, food, exercise, sex, gambling, and self-harm to reduce and dispel overall internal tension and arousal – "to feel better". The physical or sexual traumatic event interferers with an individual’s ability to self-regulate emotions, which leads to frequent episodes of labile or out-of-control emotions of anger and rage.




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