Disconnecting Trauma: Energy Psychology
and the Resolution of Trauma
© 2005 Fred P. Gallo, Ph.D.
Presented at the 5th International
Congress for System Constellations, May 4, 2005 at Köln,
Germany
I am excited to speak with you today at
this 5th International Congress for System Constellations
and I’m also most happy to meet Mr. Bert Hellinger
here. Knowing that Mr. Hellinger will turn 80 on
December 16th, I would like to wish him an early happy 80th
birthday. Also I want to thank the chairman of the IAG,
Mr. Heinrich Breuer, for inviting me to this wonderful event.
TRAUMA
Although I shall discuss some history,
theory and methods of energy psychology, first I want to talk
about something of great importance to individuals, families
and the whole world. Of course, I’m referring
to traumatic events and trauma, which is far too prevalent
on our planet.
While I usually begin talks with a joke
or humorous metaphor, it is difficult to find anything hilarious
or even slightly humorous about trauma. Trauma is the
antithesis of humor and consists of distress and agony.
However, I can say with authority that while they are related,
the traumatic event, the memory and the trauma are distinct.
After a trauma has been resolved, meaning the distress is
removed, actually the trauma is gone and all that remains
is a memory. While it would be surreal and demonic to
look back on most traumatic events with a grin from ear-to-ear,
to experience relief, serenity and a degree of interest about
the event after the traumatic stress has been eliminated,
is not uncommon. Also, for those of us who have
gone through trauma, an experience like this can often lead
to deeper understanding and positive transformation.
GRIEF TRAUMA
I am no stranger to trauma and I am sure
that all of you are well acquainted with it. For me,
trauma began at a young age. While I do not remember
the proverbial birth trauma, I do recall many painful medical
treatments and some well-deserved spankings. However,
when I was eleven my mother was diagnosed with breast cancer,
and she died of lymphoma at forty-three; I was twelve.
The cancer spread throughout her body. I watched as
the mother that I loved and knew to be passionate and vibrant,
wither away. She suffered immensely and I suffered with
her. You see, in those days, cancer patients mostly
remained at home with insufficient pain medication to the
end, which meant intense pain. I saw and heard her suffering.
My father confided in me that she was going to die a year
before she did and he told me to keep it a secret. I recall
the strong electrical charge—the bolt of lightening—surge
through my body when he told me she was going to die.
Although she wasn’t supposed to know,
I’m sure that she did. But she kept the secret
too; we didn’t talk about it. As a child, I frequently
cried myself to sleep and prayed that she would be cured or
at least wouldn’t suffer so much. As a good Catholic
boy, I even tried to relieve her pain by placing a holy scapular
at various locations of her pain. She told me that it
helped, but the pain traveled throughout her body. There
was no keeping up with it. I felt dejected, helpless
and hopeless, and I was convinced that my effort was not helping,
even though in some ways it was. I believe that she
found some solace in my attempts and even some pain relief.
Of course, my three brothers and my sister were tormented
by her death and dying also. Our father’s heartbreak
was the greatest of all, although we couldn’t understand
that at the time.
For me, my mother’s illness and death
were both agonizing and numbing. And these traumas interfered
with my relationships for some time. I had complex grief
and I tried to cope by not thinking about it and sometimes
by emotional reliving, but ultimately none of this helped.
Really I don’t think it occurred to me that my grief
could be eliminated by anything other than the passage of
time. Yet time was not healing these wounds and I had
to wait three decades for relief through other means.
Amazingly, each resolution took only but a few minutes and
in some ways it was instantaneous. During this talk,
I intend to discuss how trauma sufferers can be helped quickly,
and in the workshop that follows we shall go into greater
detail about this approach that I call energy psychology.
PHYSICAL INJURY TRAUMA
Another significant trauma occurred when
I was twenty-one. I just graduated from Duquesne University
in Pittsburgh , Pennsylvania , where I majored in the three
P’s: philosophy, psychology and parties. The day
after graduation, I had an automobile accident that nearly
claimed my life. It was early June 1968, and I was driving
my red Volkswagen Bug to the university’s student union
to meet friends when a car much larger than mine—I believe
it was a Chevy—ripped off my driver’s door.
It sent me flying through the air, in what seemed to be slow
motion, into some wooden steps that my body broke, bounced
over a banister, slid along a side walk and rolled over before
I came to an abrupt stop. Immediately, I tried to get
up, and at that moment I could feel that I was bleeding inside.
I rolled over and looked up at the sky, terrified that I was
going to die. I shouted, “No! I’m
not going to die! I refuse! I’m not ready.”
I believe that affirmation and determination was a key to
my survival.
I had many injuries, including a ruptured
spleen. I underwent surgery, received 6 pints of blood
(that’s 2.84 liters), and my life hung in the balance
for several days. I was in the Intensive Care Unit for
the first four days and in the hospital for ten days altogether.
Over the next two months, I recovered at home. During
that time, I also had surgery for thyroid cancer. Even
though my physical condition improved quickly after the surgeries,
I continued to experience psychological trauma for many years:
fear when I was driving, anxiety, flashbacks and frequent
episodes of panic with the feeling that I was going to die.
[Do you get a sense that family loyalty might have been involved?]
I resolved that trauma over a period of
time by learning to relax my hold on the steering wheel while
driving and by riding out a severe panic attack one evening
about ten years after the accident. Back then, I had
many panic attacks and I became especially disgusted with
this one, since it continued for over two hours. For
some highly rational and defiant reason, I tried to intensify
it. I closed my eyes and tried to go into the panic—into
the abyss so to speak. With defiance, I spoke to the
panic, “Come on and get me!”
The curious result was the opposite; the
panic instantly vanished. I had come face-to-face with
my fear, stared it straight in the eye, did not waver, and
the panic fled. I think I might have scared it away.
About a week later, another panic attack started and again
I tried to go into it. And again, it disappeared.
I searched for any inkling of it in my body, but it was gone.
I’m pretty sure that I scared that one away too.
The satisfaction I felt about this serendipitous discovery!
From then on, I no longer lived in dread of panic. If
a twinge of anxiety occurred, I faced it, observed it, and
it would vanish. I also knew that I could not use this
approach to outwit panic, since the panic would surely know.
I had to truly want to immerse myself in it, no matter what.
I had to be for real. With this, my confidence grew
and I came to understand the sources of my panic. Partly
it was about a blind spot in my consciousness—something
that I concluded while I was flying out of my car in June
1968. I had forgotten this. As I hit the sidewalk,
I had the rather detached thought, “Am I going to die
now or after I stop sliding?” It was not a matter
of IF I was going to die; dying was assumed. It was
just a matter of how soon. When I stopped sliding along
the sidewalk, my demise was inevitable at any moment.
The panic always carried with it the sense that I was going
to die now and I had to fight to
stay alive. While it was good to decide not to die at
the time of the accident, somehow I took this out of context.
In a sense the accident and dying were ever present,
or nearly so. Traumatic stress is created the moment
we say “no” to the present moment and the flow
of life energy is blocked. The ancient Chinese called
it stagnant chi. Eventually I understood
that panic—that strong electrical charge—was also
connected to my mother’s death and dying. [Again,
do you get a sense that family loyalty might have been involved?]
To some, resolution of a trauma can be a long drawn
out process, but when an effective method is applied, very
little time is needed. We shall discuss more about effective
methods, but first some reflections on the phenomenon of trauma.
WHAT IS TRAUMA?
Trauma is so prevalent that we might revise
Buddha’s dictum about life being suffering and say that
life is suffering because of trauma. Trauma, however,
is not only about awful events, but about the attachment in
the aftermath of the events. It is attachment at many levels
that accounts for trauma.
While there is a conscious attachment
to the memory and its meaning, trauma is also an
unconscious attachment so that what fuels
trauma is not so much what we remember as what we have misplaced
in consciousness. In this view, trauma is about being
blind to information and not coming to terms with it.
Another way of understanding “coming to terms with”
is to thoroughly process the event—recover the lost
information and understand it from a wider perspective, a
higher level of consciousness about it. Given this understanding,
one approach involves an archeological expedition to uncover
the lost data so that the unfinished business can be finished.
As powerful as such an approach may be, many become people
traumatized during the attempt to uncover and review.
So trauma can build on trauma. This emotional upset
has been described as abreaction in some circles, which is
distinct from the original term. However, I have come
to learn that reprocessing is not always sufficient and not
always necessary if we address the fundamental cause of trauma.
While reprocessing can often lead us to the fundamental cause,
going directly to the fundamental cause is frequently more
efficient. Nonetheless, there is value in many methods
and as a psychologist who also practices couples therapy;
I would recommend a wedding rather than a divorce.
CHARACTERISTICS OF TRAUMA
Surely, memory is involved with trauma,
although it is implicate rather than explicate
memory that matters most. There are
many aspects to consider when we examine trauma. Let’s
take a brief excursion.
Trauma has many highly visible features.
We can paint its landscape with a fine brush or a broad one.
With a fine brush, we can talk about Post-Traumatic Stress
Disorder (PTSD), dissociative disorders and many other diagnoses
described in ICD-10 and DSM IV. PTSD is trauma in its
most obvious form. There’s the traumatic event,
the fear, and the helplessness. The event, itself, is
bad enough; although the aftermath, what we rightly call traumatic
stress, is what torments. That torment includes any
number of symptoms such as intrusive recollections,
distressing dreams, flashbacks, avoidance, emotional numbing,
splitting, and much more.
These are the conditions and the symptoms
of obvious trauma and it can be singular
or complex. However, when we use a
broad brush, there are less obvious traumas that can have
a major impact. Most psychological, societal and even
physical problems are rooted in trauma. Also, the individual’s
resources and perception are essential to the impact of the
event. Some obvious traumatic events are tolerated well
by some people and other seemingly inconsequential events
are highly damaging to others.
THEORIES AND TREATMENT OF TRAUMA
There are many theories about trauma, each
looking at a different slice. To the cognitive
therapist, trauma is attachment to distressing memories
and thoughts. The goal is to reframe one’s thoughts
in a more rational direction or at least to become aware of
one’s ability to dismiss thought. Consistent with
this is the knowledge that you are the thinker.
To the behaviorist, trauma
is conditioning attachment and extinction is the goal.
Treatments have involved exposure, either flooding or gradual
exposure. Frequently, this process itself can be traumatizing
if the therapist or client is uncomfortable with strong emotion.
This brings us to the systemic
aspects of trauma and treatment. Trauma is often intertwined
with relationships that cause, perpetuate or enable the person
to remain a trauma victim. The solution becomes one
of shifting the relationship in a healthy direction, away
from an unhealthy attachment or entanglement. Of course,
the therapist’s interaction with the client is imperative
also.
The neuroscientist sees
trauma as attachment involving sympathetic nervous system
activation, including hypervigilance of the amygdala in the
limbic system. And there is also the disabling of the
hippocampus, the brain structure implicated in our knowing
that an event is past. Thus, trauma becomes ever present,
not completed in time. The goal is to calm the amygdala
and allow the hippocampus to record the event as finished.
To the chemist, trauma
is chemical attachment and traumatic stress correlates with
elevated levels of cortisol, glutamate, adrenalin; lower levels
of GABA and serotonin. The goal is chemical balance,
maybe via medication.
To the body worker, trauma
may be attached to the muscles, and the goal becomes one of
awareness and release through massage and movement.
Trauma is also an ego attachment
that interferes with one’s spiritual connection and
true Self.
The shaman says that the soul leaves the
body during a traumatic event and soul retrieval
is needed. The shaman reportedly travels to under or
upper worlds to escort the soul back to the body.
ENERGY AND BIOENERGY
And consistent with all of this, trauma
it is an energetic attachment—an energetic
block or imbalance, a disturbed and perturbed vibration of
energy, a resonating energy field that goes on and on within
the traumatized person and resonated outward to others.
If we consider Albert Einstein’s formula
E=mc², we find that matter and energy
are interconvertible—that matter is fundamentally frozen
energy. Quantum physics has suggested that energy and
consciousness are interrelated and that energy behaves in
ways that are consistent with choice. Also, taking measurements
of subatomic particles—observing them that is—affects
what we can measure, such that subject and object cease to
be valid distinctions. Several experimental tests of
Bell ’s Theorem have compellingly demonstrated that
related photons traveling away from each other are able to
communicate in an instant, regardless of distance. They
remain non-locally connected. Since photons travel at
great speed, this finding is astronomical. It has been
estimated that two related photons could be separated by half
the distance of the universe, and still communication would
be instantaneous. Connection and communication exceed
the limits imposed by speed, distance and time. While
the cosmos is local, it is also imbued with a heavy dose of
nonlocality. Since everything was compressed into the
cosmic fireball big bang, everything remains connected.
Matter and energy are not so different;
they are only different forms of the same reality. Thus,
the unconscious, conscious cognitions, chemistry, brain, muscles,
etc. are energy in distinct forms. Superstring theory
holds that even quarks, the fundamental particles that constitute
electrons and protons, are really vibrating strings of energy.
And I believe that consciousness and spirit are intimately
involved with energy.
Of course, even our bodies are composed
of vibrating little strings of energy. Fritz-Albert
Popp found that cells emit photons and that there is a difference
between the frequencies of healthy and unhealthy cells.
Perhaps this is the biological equivalent of a fiber optic
communication network carrying subtle energies and information
throughout our cells and outward to others. Will humans
eventually learn to communicate great distances without having
to pay Internet servers and telephone companies? And
what will be the economic implications?
Once an energetic configuration or field
is established, it has a proclivity to replicate itself.
This is essentially about memory and form. In this respect,
Carl Jung discussed archetypes, which are informational and
influential fields not limited by space and time. In
similar and distinct ways, Rupert Sheldrake discusses formative
causation, morphic resonance and morphogenetic fields, this
accounting for the forms of the inanimate, animate and even
behavior. In the 1970’s, Harold Saxon Burr discussed
Life fields (L-Fields), which he detected around rocks, trees,
salamanders and humans. Life fields account for form.
And this is perhaps why our bodies maintain their forms even
though all of the atoms are recycled every four to seven years.
It is suggested here that what holds the material body together
is an energy field. Of course, as the years go on gravity
does take its toll.
These findings have a 7,000-year history
that goes back to India, where it was believed or discovered
that the body has a life force, prana, and
this energy is evident in chakras and auras. Five thousand
years ago in China , a meridians system of chi
(equivalent to prana) was described and acupuncture was developed
as a way of regulating chi and thus health. Incidentally,
chi can be translated as energy, influence, power, mind and
spirit. Also in the 1970’s, research by Robert
O. Becker and Maria Reichmanis revealed a lower electrical
resistance at many acupoints, suggesting that meridians and
acupoints are electrical. And in the 1980’s, researchers
Pierre de Vernejoul and Jacques Darras injected radioactive
technetium in specific kidney meridian acupoints
on 330 patients and observed how the isotopes traveled the
meridian. This and other research offers support for
a bodily energy system that has electromagnetic qualities,
including light, sound and subtle electrical current.
Concerning the value of such a finding, the world’s
largest study on acupuncture (GerAc), which is being conducted
here in Germany, found that acupuncture at acupoints and acupoint
locations was superior to standard medical treatment for certain
pain conditions.
ENERGY PSYCHOLOGY
Trauma involves traumatic events, perception,
neurology, chemistry, information, energy, consciousness,
and spirit. If the structure of the trauma energy
field can be substantially altered or collapsed,
the trauma can be eliminated. And this appears to be exactly
what we do when applying energy psychology.
Energy psychology’s more recent history
dates back to the early 1960s, when Dr. George Goodheart,
a chiropractor from Detroit , Michigan founded applied kinesiology.
This approach employs manual muscle testing and holistic concepts
to address physical problems. Goodheart pioneered therapy
loca liz ation, which involves touching specific bodily locations
(reflexes and such) while applying manual muscle testing.
To the satisfaction of him and his patients, this approach
provides the needed information to correct some otherwise
intractable problems. Goodheart has explored a variety
of therapeutic options including spinal and cranial adjustments,
encouraging lymphatic flow, nutrition, herbs, homeopathy,
flower essences, stimulating acupoints, and more.
Following Goodheart, others explored applied
kinesiology to treat psychological problems. Goodheart discovered
a connection among specific muscles, reflexes, and meridians;
while, psychiatrist John Diamond and others found correlations
with emotions. Along these lines psychologist Roger
J. Callahan developed a treatment method, which involves attuning
psychological problems such as phobias and traumas and then
physically tapping on specific acupoints. Besides many
psychotherapeutic approaches, I had the opportunity to study
the work of Goodheart, John Thie (founder of Touch for Health),
Callahan, Diamond, and others. Like many of you, I explored
many approaches to find better ways to help myself and others.
In time I developed an integrative energy psychology approach,
which I call energy diagnostic and treatment methods (EDxTM).
When I first encountered energetic approaches,
I was skeptical. The idea of treating a psychological
problem by tapping on the body was foreign to me. Of
course, I knew about Reichian therapy and Rolfing, since one
of my graduate professors used to undergo Rolfing sessions
regularly and return to class after the weekend black and
blue, rather beaten up. At the time that seemed odd
to me. Also, I heard about a group therapy approach
in the early 1970’s, which involved tickling group members
who were not being honest. That seemed hilariously odd
to me too. Also I knew about acupuncture, but I thought
that was only relevant to physical problems.
Nonetheless, I decided to give it a try.
I used to have fear of heights and I eliminated this problem
within a few minutes. The same applied to trauma.
All I had to do was physically tap on specific acupoints while
recalling the memory or being in a situation that caused emotional
distress. Of course, at first I thought this was simply
distraction. However, when the fear of heights did not
return and when the memories forever ceased to be distressing,
the distraction theory was immediately disqualified.
A better explanation was needed, and we’ve touched on
that somewhat already.
The essential features involve attuning
the problem—thinking about it—and then stimulating
the body in specific ways, such as by tapping on acupoints.
Although I overcame panic by staying present, observing the
panic and trying to intensify it, for some odd reason most
of my clients were unable or reluctant to do that. But
tapping somehow makes it easier and clients usually report
that they feel calm and relaxed. Yet the results are
not limited to relaxation; there is also a shift in understanding
and consciousness. After treating trauma in this way,
people often shift out of ego attachment and became more philosophical
and spiritual about what happened to them. “It
doesn’t bother me any more. Oh, it’s just
something that happened. I don’t know why it bothered
me for so long. I feel more relaxed now, more at peace.
The anger and resentment are gone.” These are
the comments we hear regularly from people who were previously
tormented by trauma.
ENERGY PSYCHOLOGY TREATMENT FOR TRAUMA
We have treated thousands of trauma suffers
successfully with energy psychology. Let me tell you
briefly about one patient that I treated in this way.
Amanda, a 19-year-old female university student, was referred
to me because of PTSD after an automobile accident in 1999.
The driver in the other car crossed over the medial strip
and struck her vehicle head-on, killing both of his passengers
and himself. Amanda was pinned under the dashboard for
several hours while a rescue team struggled to cut her out
of the crushed car. She had multiple injuries and was
in the hospital and then a rehabilitation center for several
months. I saw her a year after the accident. She
was having frequent nightmares, flashbacks, panic, anxiety,
guilt feelings and she was also abusing alcohol.
Initially, we focused on her memory of being
pinned under the dashboard. After she thought about
it and rated the distress as a 9 on a 0-10 scale, I asked
her to dismiss the memory from mind while following the Negative
Affect Erasing Method (NAEM), a technique I developed many
years ago. NAEM involves physically tapping on four
points on the head and chest (related to acupoints and chakras):
third eye point, under nose, under bottom lip, and on the
upper chest. After about five rounds of tapping, she
was able to vividly recall the event without distress.
Several times throughout the treatment she laughed and asked
me, “How does that work?” Follow-up sessions
at one week, two weeks and two months revealed that after
the initial session, distress about the event, nightmares
and flashbacks no longer occurred.
During the course of treatment, other aspects
of the trauma were treated, including feelings of guilt about
the people who died. That distress was also resolved
in one session by using NAEM and a couple related treatments.
Later in therapy, she reported that a relative
molested her from age five to twelve . Using a more
specifically focused treatment that includes manual muscle
testing, we were able to determine which meridians were involved
in order to efficiently eliminate this abuse trauma.
After we treated upset connected to various memories, she
reported a lingering feeling of worthlessness, including a
“dirty and disgusting” feeling in the lower abdomen.
We were able to eliminate this sensation and her belief about
not being worthwhile as well. A follow-up, several months’
later revealed ongoing relief on all aspects treated.
A couple months ago, I contacted her in regards to this
talk and she told me to tell you all ‘hello.’
I’m happy to report that she is doing quite well.
THEORETICAL MUSINGS
Extensive clinical experience and experimental
studies have convinced me and others that energy psychology
works. The current research is covered in my 2005 edition
of Energy Psychology and at my home
page www.energypsych.com.
A 5-year preliminary clinical trial in Uruguay
, South America compared energy psychology and cognitive-behavioral
therapy plus medication (standard care) with 5,000 patients
having various clinical problems. With energy psychology
there was a 90% positive clinical response and a 76% complete
remission of symptoms. With standard care there was
a 63% positive clinical response and a 51% complete remission
of symptoms. Furthermore, the average number of sessions
with energy psychology was 3; with standard care it was 15.
How can we account for the therapeutic results
of stimulating acupoints while attuning a psychological problem,
such as trauma? What does the tapping really do?
There are many possible explanations. Placebo
effectis one suggested mechanism. However,
since acupoint stimulation produces highly consistent results,
it would seem that placebo has little to do with it.
Around 30 percent of people show improvement after given placebos
and the results with energy tapping are significantly higher
than that.
Another explanation is that tapping simply
distracts the patient. While
it is difficult to maintain complete focus on the problem
while tapping, this explanation is insufficient since relief
continues after the treatment has been completed.
Cognitive restructuring
is also an explanation, since changes in thought and perception
regularly occur with these treatments. However, it seems
that the cognitive shifts occur after the negative emotion
has been relieved. While a positive shift in cognition
can serve to support healthy psychological functioning, energetic
treatments do not directly address cognition as the lever
for change.
Since acupoints are used in energy psychology,
possibly neurotransmitters and endorphins
play a role in the treatment effects, similar to what has
been proposed with acupuncture. While it is likely that
acupoint stimulation activates the central nervous system
to release neurotransmitters and endorphins, this does not
preclude the involvement of energetic effects. There
appears to be a signaling mechanism associated with the acupuncture
meridians that figures into such action.
My preferred explanation is that many aspects
are involved in this treatment. While the brain, neurochemistry,
unconscious and cognition are implicated in trauma and other
psychological problems, these conditions are also energetic.
After all, everything in our physical reality is fundamentally
energy.
Trauma is energetic information, similar
to the electromagnetic information adhering to audiotapes
and computer hard drives. I imagine a traumatic event is like
throwing stones into a pond and a trauma being the resultant
splashing and ripples. Of course ponds are highly proficient
at getting over trauma quickly, while humans are proficient
at capturing and maintaining trauma. It is as if we
are ponds that freeze at the moment of impact and the informational
ripples become frozen in time. Our nervous system, cells,
and energy system capture and store the trauma information.
Since nature constructs complex structures from simple fractals,
at the most basic level trauma, like everything else, is a
field. By disrupting the field, the system smoothes
out and then leaps to a higher order.
This informational field is also called
a thought field and it is a physical reality. It is
composed of subtle energetic markers or perturbations
that are the basic cause of negative emotions. Perturbations
are similar to what theoretical physicist David Bohm called
active information. When the trauma thought field is
attuned, these perturbations are available for treatment.
Simultaneously, all of the aspects involved in trauma are
activated. This includes brain structures, neurochemistry,
unconscious, cognition, behaviors, energy, etc. Through energy
psychology it is possible to elicit the thought field, analyze
its structure, and collapse the perturbations.
Thought fields, similar to other systems,
are maintained within a range of energy balance—too
much or too little energy causes a loss of order. A
loss of order is a loss of information. Physically tapping
on acupoints disrupts the system by overloading the adhesive
energetic field. The system looses its order and collapses.
The pond with its informational ripples begins to thaw.
The traumatic event can now be viewed calmly and the calmness
is incorporated into one’s life. The memory is
the same; the emotional experience and meaning has changed.
You view the event from a higher perspective, with neutrality
or deeper positive feelings. Mindfulness prevails.
The shaman declares that the soul has returned home.
Thank you for the opportunity of speaking
with you today, and especially for your listening. I
hope that you will find energy psychology a welcomed addition
to what you already know and do. And I look forward
to offering many of you additional practical information in
the 3-hour workshop that follows.
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