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How a Partner's Past Personal Trauma Can Disrupt a Business Partnership

7. Recognize that this partner is different,
and ask for what you need.

Posted January 14, 2022


Many people have suffered emotional or physical trauma. Even when they have worked hard to heal, they will always be vulnerable to being triggered by an event that unearths those painful moments.

Those episodes of emerging trauma are often unpredictable, but more likely to occur if people continue to pick partners who are similar in some ways to those who caused those painful episodes. Yet, familiarity is a strong seducer, and the positives in a relationship can easily mask what may eventually emerge. 

Memories of previous traumas can surface in all relationships. Those reliving them may feel as if they are happening again in the present. They may mentally regress to the age they were when the trauma occurred. From that more powerless perspective, they are more likely to feel the original fear, immobilization, and hopelessness of the original trauma.

Many traumas feel too humiliating and vulnerable for people to share with their partners, especially if they were made to feel they deserved what happened to them. As a result, they cannot ask for the help they need from their partners. If they have never shared their past pain or what caused it, their partners may feel defensive and not be able to understand that it may have nothing to do with them.

Unexplored and untreated, recurring traumas can destroy even the best of relationships. Fortunately, there are ways to heal these interactions, if both partners are willing to participate.

Here are eight steps to help identify emerging trauma and how partners can work together to transform it:

  1. Is your trauma is not being triggered? 
    If your trauma is not being triggered, you will have typical interactions with your partner.  If, all of a sudden, you have an emotional reaction that is intense, unpredictable, and fear-based, you may consciously or unconsciously be experiencing emerging trauma. Pay attention to any emotional, physical, sexual, or intellectual thoughts or feelings that are surfacing at an intense rate and focused at your partner. These feelings are signaling to you that something is going on that feels out of your control. You suddenly don’t trust your partner and feel the need to protect yourself. You may begin crying, yelling, or wanting to run away.
     
  2. Ask your partner to give you a minute to reflect. How old do you feel? 
    Try to remember anything that was happening at that age. Who or what could have hurt you, and how? Was there anyone who tried to help you? Was the experience a one-time event or repeated? Were you blamed, made to feel guilty, told to never tell anyone, or felt shamed by your participation? Have these thoughts and feelings emerged in other relationships?
     
  3. What did your partner say or do that might have triggered your trauma?
    It could have been a facial expression, a certain verbal sound, a threatening posture. Did it feel intentional or accidental? Did those behaviors feel threatening in any way? Do you feel you are responding to someone who is also in the room or who your partner reminds you of? Have you experienced these painful, unpredictable, and intense eruptions in other relationships? 
     
  4. Have you trusted your partner in other situations but can’t right now?
    Try to think of the ways your current partner is different from those who hurt you in the past.
     
  5. Once you are aware that your reactions are out of proportion to the crisis at hand. Admit to your partner that you are aware that something deeper is happening to you and that you need to be still to try to understand what is driving you to atypically intense and painful behavior. If he or she has begun reacting defensively or getting angry at what feels like unfair treatment, ask for understanding and patience until you can separate your traumatic memories from what is happening in the moment.
     
  6. Can you trust your partner enough to share what happened?
    If you are able to remember what happened, then share what happened to you or, at least, tell him or her that something terrible happened and that you are reacting as if it is happening again?
    This is a critical question and a crucial moment. Unless you trust your partner to be supportive and consoling, it might not be the right time to reveal your trauma.
     
  7. Try to ask for what you need from your partner, if you can.
    Sometimes, just being held safely in those moments will calm you down and help you begin to heal, as you ask your partner to be the person whom you needed to care for you at the time of the original trauma. If they cannot do that for you, just tell them that you need to be by yourself for a while and then reach out to someone in your life who can. Don’t allow yourself to bury the trauma again.
     
  8. Recognize that your resurfacing trauma is a signal..
    A signal that you have not adequately healed from it, nor understood how it has interfered with your ability to trust or heal in intimate relationships. That pattern is likely to repeat itself in subsequent relationships, especially if you pick similar partners. If your partner is available, going to see a therapist trained in trauma together can bring you closer and strengthen your bond.

To find a therapist near you, visit the Psychology Today Therapy Directory.

 

Comments

Anonymous (not verified), Fri, 12/13/2024 - 16:07
You are plagiarizing this is not written by Kelly the wolf but by Randi Gunther Ph.D. from Psychology Today.

Read the article again and take that advice yourself, delusional fool. You need to read and absorb, it seem you post stuff and credit others to articles they haven't written.