Trauma is not what happens to us, but what happens inside of us. Check out this video with Dr. Gabor Maté as he talks about Addiction, Trauma and Spirituality.
FULL TRANSCRIPT
Now, I will not spend too much time on a socially accepted view, except to dismiss it. And it’s, by and large based on the idea that addiction is a choice that people are choosing behaviors that are inimical to their health and socially retrograde.
Addiction is not a choice, it is a disease
It’s not a matter of choice. It’s absolute nonsense to say so.
So, let’s just be done with the choice idea, except that the whole legal system is based on it, which immensely complicates our work, because our clients are forever taken to court, under the assumption that they’ve chosen behaviors that are against the law, and for which they should be punished and that whole punishment modality immensely complicates. In fact, undermines the therapeutic work so much for the choice idea.
Now, the medical perspective and addiction is that it’s a brain disease. So, the American Society of Addiction Medicine defines addiction as a chronic primary brain disorder, disease of brain reward, motivation, memory and related circuitry. And according to them, genetic factors account for about half of the likelihood that individual develop addiction is a fundamentally, it’s a largely genetically programmed propensity, that then develops into a chronic brain disease. So basically, what we’re talking about here is addiction is a neurological disease of the brain, largely potentiated by genetic factors.
Different layers of Addiction
One way to look at addictions then, and I’m looking at it from different layers. So, first of all, is an attempt to solve a life problem on a second level as actually self-medication of what we call concurrent conditions. So, if you deal with a population of stimulant addicts, and if you don’t screen them for lifelong ADHD, you’re just missing a big clue about the source of their addiction.
Trauma is not what happens to us, but what happens inside of us
Everything is said here the way at least if I don’t, if I’m not over interpreting it, the lack of a positive self-image, the lack of excitement, vitality, the presence of pain and threats, the lack of sufficient pleasure. These are trauma imprints.
Trauma is not what happens to us but what happens inside of us as a result of what happens to us, and that trauma is manifested in a disconnection from self, all of which these qualities that you folks brought up, represent as a disconnection from yourself.
Addiction is a response to trauma, and it’s an attempt to solve a life problem. It’s not the primary problem is the secondary problem. And ultimately, we have to address the primary problem to really help people recover from addiction.