I've been wondering about my daily shaking. It's been happening for years now, is distinctly uncomfortable and debilitating, and at times completely overwhelming. I've been using the Somatic Experiencing approach for a while now, and am improving my efficacy in it, but there is a question in my mind - how long do I have to do this? How much trauma is stored in me? How long do I have to be so disabled? I have heard that some people need 18 months and some 7 years in order to reach a state of cellular safety. Even then, some expierenced veterans in this approach still feel trauma release after 10 years. So I remind myself of all this when I get impatient and frustrated and feel like I don't want to live anymore. And of course, I make a practice of allowing the feelings, and surrounding them with love and all that.
But still, I wonder, sort of in line with Oxajil's question above, whether or not I am reinforcing neural circuitry - do the tremors originate from some form of physiological issue that is not associated with the trauma? I apparently have a genetic connective tissue disorder and my MRI showed brain lesions - can Levine's approach heal these? Neurons that fire together wire together. In chronic pain, focusing on the pain itself can sensitize the body and brain to the pain, which can cause it to be reinforced. Does sitting with the sensations in the way described by Lyon and Levine allow trauma to release in all cases? Does it sometimes 'wire in' the tremors or dystonia? Is there another therapeutic approach that could be used in conjunction with SE therapy to actively engage new circuitry in a more targeted way? Would this be a helpful addition to the somewhat more passive SE 'allowing/sensing' method?
On that note, I am reading a book by Dr.
Jaoquin Farias and it may present a more active approach. Not sure, it's above my neuroscience knowledge to compare the two approaches. He writes the story of using what seems to be both a passive (sensing/feeling) and active (movement) approach in his recovery from major surgery - an approach that has helped many of his patients heal from their shaking using the neuroplasticity of movement. I also found it to be a clear and concise refresher regarding what happens in the brain during shock. It may also be helpful to read for anyone who is undergoing major surgery, or who will have a loved on doing so. His story begins with his response to his diagnosis of cancer:
So there's something different here than allowing the body to move - active engagement with the moving centre, or the motor centre in the prefrontal cortex to wire new connections. Not sure if I'm making too much of the passive/active distinction, but that's how it seems to me at this time. FWIW.