The Body Keeps the Score – Bessel van der Kolk

Bessel Book bodykeepsscore “The Body Keeps the Score” by Bessel van der Kolk, MD, will “permanently change how psychologists and psychiatrists think about trauma and recovery,” as trauma scholar Dr. Ruth Lanius writes.  She was the first to call developmental trauma a “hidden epidemic,” source of my book’s subtitle “Silent Epidemic.” Dr. van der Kolk repeats this in his new book.  [FN1]

And it is about the body. “Infants are psycho-biological beings, as much of the body as of the brain,” writes Prof. Ed Tronick, author of the Still Face Experiment. “Without language or symbols, infants use every one of their biological systems to make meaning of their self in relation to the world.  Van der Kolk shows that those same systems continue to operate at every age, and that traumatic experiences, especially chronic toxic experience during early development, produce psychic devastation.”

I reported van der Kolk’s work on developmental trauma and on getting the military to recognize PTSD in March 2014.  When the New York Times damned van der Kolk’s insistence on body work in June 2014, I roasted them.  In this book, van der Kolk makes his case much better than anyone else could.

I’m having trouble reading the book; I keep starting to sob. That started on page 3 where Dr. van der Kolk describes his heart-breaking childhood experience in bombed-out post-war Holland, with his father prone to violent rages, and his mother acting out her childhood trauma on him. I could feel that little boy, what he’s been going through all these years, and see the depths of what he has accomplished by giving his life so passionately to heal himself and all the rest of us.

These are “good sobs;” they feel good, because once again van der Kolk has told the truth about reality where few dare. Half the human race has had significant childhood trauma, and most of them are in complete denial and live in a state of dissociation, aka freeze or numbness. People in trauma, he writes, feel “numb” to most of life. One patient felt “emotionally distant from everybody, as though his heart were frozen and he was living behind a glass wall. He could not feel anything except his momentary rages, and his shame.”

Dr. Stephen Porges calls van der Kolk’s book a “courageous journey into the parallel dissociative worlds of trauma victims and the medical and psychological disciplines.” As van der Kolk and Porges have said before, medical and psychological experts have been just as much in denial and dissociated regarding the serious nature of trauma as are the traumatees.  “As our minds desperately try to leave trauma behind, our bodies keep us trapped in the past with wordless emotions and feelings,” Porges says. “Van der Kolk offers hope by describing treatments and strategies that have.. helped his patients reconnect their thoughts with their bodies.”

Why all the denial?  “We don’t really want to know what soldiers go through in combat,” writes van der Kolk. “We do not really want to know howe many children are being molested and abused in our own society and how many couples – almost a third –engage in violence at some point…. We want to think… of our own country as enlightened civilized people. We prefer to believe that cruelty occurs only in faraway places like Dafur…”

Solutions for Recovery

Bessel van der KolkLet’s get right to what everyone wants to know.  Here are Dr. van der Kolk’s “Paths to Recovery,” which I think of as  “body solutions” :

— Healing starts with owning our “self,” 100% total acceptance of our self, exactly as we are today, no guilt, no self condemnation. It means developing pride in who we are; only by accepting ourselves as we are now, do we become free to change. We must respect our body for putting us into trauma freeze; it was the only way to defend us, as Stephen Porges says at the end of my blog last week.

– Recognize that language is a “miracle and tyranny,” van der Kolk says. “Telling the story doesn’t necessarily alter the automatic physical and hormonal responses of bodies that remain hypervigilant, prepared to be assaulted, or violated at any time. For real change, the body needs to learn that the danger has passed.” At some point we must let go of all the verbiage as yackety-yack largely in the conscious frontal cortex and logical left brain.

Instead, we must grasp that there is something more fundamental underneath all that, lead by our body sensations, non-verbal subconscious, and non-logical right brain. The body literally needs to have many, often thousands, of new, good physical experiences, such as being taught to physically move or defend itself, just where it could not during the original trauma. Only these can create a “visceral” certainty of safety, to race the old experiences of danger.

EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) is van der Kolk’s next step, to integrate the right and left sides of the brain. In trauma often neural pathways between them have been frozen; in developmental trauma from infancy, these pathways may not have developed well and must be developed now.  By moving the eyes back and forth, we simulate Rapid Eye Motion (REM) sleep, which the brain uses to take events of “now” (today) out of short-term memory, where feelings like fight-flight and trauma reside, and put them into long-term memory.  Instead of feeling as if our trauma is happening again now, it begins to feel like an old story that loses its sting.

Yoga then teaches us how to inhabit our bodies right here, right now; that’s why it’s been used as a path to enlightenment for thousands of years.  Easy to say, but the challenge is to actually practice it rigorously and regularly; only then comes the benefit.

Neurofeedback programs done by trained neurofeedback specialists really help.  Dr. van der Kolk also recommends the computer (and smart phone) -based electronic feedback system EmWave by HeartMath, which trains users to synchronize breathing and heart rates, known as heart rate variability (HRV). In good HRV, heartrate speeds up when we breathe in and slows when we breathe out.  But in trauma we lose HRV coherence; breathing is very rapid and shallow, and heart rate de-synchronizes from the breath, also hazardous to physical health.

Finding Your Voice:  As Bruce Perry says, “Patterned, repeated rhythmic activity”  can re-tune a traumatized brain stem.   Dr. van der Kolk likes  “communal rhythms” such as drum circles and dance.  He particularly likes theater work because it gives the players a substantial voice and a character they can use to express all their feelings in a way everyone can accept.

Trauma Experts Praise “Body Keeps the Score”

“This is an absolutely fascinating and clearly written book by one of the nation’s most experienced physicians in the field of emotional trauma. Equally suitable for primary care doctors and psychotherapists wishing to broaden their range of helpfulness, or for those trapped in their memories, ‘The Body Keeps the Score’  helps us understand how life experiences play out in the function and the malfunction of our bodies, years later.
– Vincent J. Felitti, MD
Chief of Preventative Medicine Emeritus, Kaiser Permanente San Diego;  Co-Principal Investigator, ACE study

“Breathtaking in its scope and breadth, ‘The Body Keeps the Score’ is a seminal work by one of the preeminent pioneers in trauma research and treatment. This essential book unites the evolving neuroscience of trauma research with an emergent wave of body-oriented therapies and traditional mind/body practices. These new approaches and ancient disciplines build resilience and enhance the capacity to have new empowered bodily (interoceptive) experiences that contradict the previous traumatic ones of fear, overwhelm and helplessness. They go beyond symptom relief, and connect us with our vital energy and here-and-now presence. A must read for all therapists and for those interested in a scholarly, thoughtful, tome about the powerful forces that affect us as human beings in meeting the many challenges of life including accidents, loss and abuse.
– Peter A. Levine, PhD, Author, In an Unspoken Voice: How the Body Releases Trauma and Restores Goodness.

“This book is a tour de force. Its deeply empathic, insightful, and compassionate perspective promises to further humanize the treatment of trauma victims, dramatically expand their repertoire of self-regulatory healing practices and therapeutic options, and also stimulate greater creative thinking and research on trauma and its effective treatment. The body does keep the score, and Van der Kolk’s ability to demonstrate this through compelling descriptions of the work of others, his own pioneering trajectory and experience as the field evolved and him along with it, and above all, his discovery of ways to work skillfully with people by bringing mindfulness to the body (as well as to their thoughts and emotions) through yoga, movement, and theater are a wonderful and welcome breath of fresh air and possibility in the therapy world.”
– Jon Kabat-Zinn, Professor of Medicine emeritus, UMass Medical School, Author of “Full Catastrophe Living.”

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Kathy’s news blogs expand on her book “DON’T TRY THIS AT HOME: The Silent Epidemic of Attachment Disorder—How I accidentally regressed myself back to infancy and healed it all.” Watch for the continuing series each Friday, as she explores her journey of recovery by learning the hard way about Attachment Disorder in adults, adult Attachment Theory, and the Adult Attachment Interview.

Footnotes

FN  Van der Kolk, Bessel, MD., “The Body keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma,” Peguin Press Viking, New York, 2014  http://www.amazon.com/The-Body-Keeps-Score-Healing/dp/0670785938#reader_0670785938

Bessel van der Kolk, M.D. is the founder and medical director of the Trauma Center in Brookline, Massachusetts. He is also Professor of Psychiatry at Boston University School of Medicine and Director of the National Complex Trauma Treatment Network. When he is not teaching around the world, Dr. van der Kolk works and lives Boston, Massachusetts.

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About Kathy

My new book is "Don't Try This at Home - The Silent Epidemic of Attachment Disorder" at http://attachmentdisorderhealing.com/book/
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12 Responses to The Body Keeps the Score – Bessel van der Kolk

  1. Pingback: Children Ripped from Parents

  2. Kathy says:

    Dear YB
    These below and more are listed on my page Find an Attachment Therapist at http://attachmentdisorderhealing.com/resources/attachment-therapists-directory/
    I’ve heard Dr. van der Kolk may only give referrals within Boston, but maybe try his office: Trauma Center, Boston: http://www.traumacenter.org – personal assistant Angela Lin
    Dr. Peter A. Levine, Somatic Experiencing, Boulder CO, has a national Body Work Trauma Provider Directory – enter your zip: http://sepractitioner.membergrove.com/index.php
    Dr. Pat Ogden’s Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Institute does, too. See “Find a sensorimotor therapist” (read the intro first) at https://www.sensorimotorpsychotherapy.org/referral.html
    Attachment and Trauma Network (ATN) is “action central” for adopted children and related childhood attachment trauma, if that was your child’s situation. I’m not sure if they have a directory: http://www.attachmenttraumanetwork.com/
    Kathy

  3. YB says:

    Hello!
    Can you recommend a good therapist who uses Dr. Van Der Kolk’s methods as described in his excellent book, “The Body Keeps the Score,” in the Metro DC area or near Goldsboro, NC? This is for one of my adult children, whom I believe is at a crucial point in life to finally begin to heal childhood traumas or have those pains cause serious problems down the line. Any insight, recommendations, referrals greatly appreciated!

  4. Pingback: Understanding ourselves after infant surgery trauma | Stories from the Survivors of early Surgery

  5. I too am enjoying The Body Keeps the Score. Every page has something — at least one something!
    Example: I took a quote and put it in a blog post in which I advocate that the county’s planned research and evaluation effort on criminal justice programs be broad enough to include the really important factors such as the quality of relationship between program providers and the individuals being served. I already had a couple of articles (by sociologists/criminologists) on that, but a quote I’d just read in “The Body. . .” was ready-made.
    The book was used as the basic reference last month in a webinar conducted by an employee assistance program for which I do crisis interventions. So it’s getting around.
    My site is http://criminaljusticeincontext.net
    Human culture hasn’t waited for the scholars/researchers/clinicians to discover what they are teaching. Try a search for the 1950’s song “Shaking the Blues Away” and watch Doris Day sing it accompanied by dancers!
    Regards, Joe

  6. Carrie O'Toole says:

    Kathy,
    This book looks really good! Thanks for passing on the info!
    Carrie O’Toole, M.A.
    Board Certified Christian Life Coach
    http://www.carrieotoole.com
    FB: Carrie O’Toole Ministries

  7. OC Fan says:

    I recently heard a good talk about trauma by a longtime psychiatric pioneer in the field from Brookline, Mass. It was last Sunday really early on NPR; must have been Dr. vd Kolk?

  8. Barbara Findeisen says:

    Thanks, I already bought it and read it. Great!
    I am a big fan of his.
    Barbara R. Findeisen, MFCC, PhD
    President Pocket Sanctuary Foundation

  9. Kathy says:

    Dear Bob,
    Thank you so much! I keep using Dr. Peter Levine’s book “Healing Trauma.” Levine says trauma can be reversed, sometimes surprisingly rapidly, if we get in touch with bodily sensations, which is how mammals get out of trauma in the wild – otherwise mammals would never have survived evolution. “Trauma is a fact of life,” says Levine, “but it doesn’t have to be a life sentence.”
    Levine, Bessel van der Kolk and other “somatic” therapy experts like Pat Ogden warn that “just talk” about trauma sometimes helps, but can hurt. Talk is “merely cognitive;” it only engages the thinking cortex, rarely or never engaging the places where traumatic memories really live: the lower parts of the brain like the mammalian limbic lobe or the reptilian survival brain stem – or the body.
    Dr. Dan Siegel says many traumatic memories are just not in the thinking part of the brain — the memories are stuck in our body parts, as this blog explains: http://attachmentdisorderhealing.com/daniel-siegel-2/
    It’s a matter of figuring out where the things being done to us, like surgical procedures, people coming at us with strange instruments, etc, are affecting our bodies. And then just becoming very very “present” with our bodily reactions and our emotions about the situation — without letting the good doctors know what we’re thinking, of course, since they do not get it.
    Kathy

  10. ACEs Bob says:

    Kathy,
    In spite of my momentary weeping, during my reading of this article, I must commend you for an extremely well-written, comprehensive, fitting tribute to Bessel van der Kolk, and human understanding of how trauma effects us as unique individual persons, and at least its statistical impact on society.
    Dealing with the bodily changes anesthesia creates prior to surgery, the body’s responses-during and after surgery, especially those of us who have experienced “freeze mode”, or at least “fight/flight” mode, may be a “bit challenging”, but if this article is any indication of your recovery and healing, from “the three recent surgeries” you noted in the first paragraph, I’d say you seem to be doing well. I certainly hope so! –

  11. Laura K Kerr says:

    Thank you, Kathy, for your coverage of this important work — I’m about to ‘click and buy’ my copy now!

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