This morning, I am reflecting on a conversation I recently had with an undergraduate student who is on her journey toward becoming a therapist. Like many of my colleagues, I was glad to make time for this interview and feel a deep desire to support others entering the field of psychology.
The student, as I shared with her, held a thoughtful blend of intellect and intuition; qualities grounded in deep compassion and a genuine desire to understand. She is on her path toward becoming the therapist she hopes to be, and I have no doubt she will offer meaningful connection to those she will one day support.
As I considered her questions and wove in some of my own, I could see her eagerness, not only to do well on her assignment, but to truly learn. She later shared that she did well, which did not surprise me. After meeting and speaking with her, I had no doubt this would be the case. She asked thoughtful questions about why I chose this field, what I have learned along the way, advice for beginning therapists, and what continues to keep me in this work.
This experience naturally led me into deeper reflection, and to this writing. I often find myself returning to the idea of becoming, and to the experiences that shape the evolving story of self. In many ways, this is the work of therapy; the process of discovering who you are at your core. Not only what has impacted you, or the experiences you were fortunate or unfortunate to have had, but what you came to believe about yourself and others through those experiences (Rogers, 1961; McAdams, 2001).
Because, in truth, we are never only one facet of self. We are shaped by many experiences, and we carry more than any single story can hold.
Many of the individuals I sit with are survivors of trauma and have spent a lifetime navigating its impact. They are not their trauma, nor are they defined by the protective responses that helped them endure it. Multiple truths can exist at once. (You can be strong and still impacted. You can be capable and still carry pain).
A person may have experienced trauma and responded by fighting, fleeing, freezing, or striving to please (or some combination over time) as part of their survival (Herman, 1992; van der Kolk, 2014).
Others may not have experienced direct or acute trauma but have lived through something many of us feel in less overt ways; a pattern of experiences known as attachment wounding. These are the experiences of having need(s) consistently unmet over time. Needs for belonging, nurturing, autonomy, joy, curiosity, or accountability, among others. (Often, this doesn’t feel like something dramatic, it feels like something missing. Something that can’t always be named without support).
In those absences, beliefs begin to form about our worth, our rightful place, and what we can expect from others (Bowlby, 1988; Siegel, 2012).
Both attachment wounds and more direct experiences of trauma shape the way we see ourselves and the world around us. They influence our sense of safety and, in turn, how we show up in relationships with others and with ourselves.(As do our positive and protective experiences.)
Awareness itself can be a turning point. Sometimes it begins as a small noticing, something that doesn’t quite fit, or something that suddenly makes sense.
Not in a way that demands immediate change, but in a way that begins to create space. Space to notice. Space to question. Space to gently consider what has been carried forward, and whether it still needs to be held in the same way.
This is not only the work of being a therapist, but of being human. And it is work that often happens slowly, and without witness.
As you read this, you might pause and consider your own becoming. Not as a final version of yourself, but in the quiet, ongoing ways your life has shaped you. The experiences that have built you. The ones that have softened you. The ones that may still feel unresolved or tender. (What have they asked of you? What have they made possible within you?)
As you consider these questions, perhaps there is also space for compassion for the parts of you that learned, adapted, and responded in the only ways they knew how at the time (Neff, 2011).
Because so much of what we carry was not consciously chosen but formed in moments when we were simply trying to find our way, it becomes part of our human journey to gently come to understand ourselves. To look back, and to move forward, through the lens of compassion.
Not to excuse what has been painful, but to begin to understand how it came to be held. For ourselves, and, when appropriate and when the time is right, for others.
This process of becoming was what I was witnessing so beautifully in my conversation with the student; both her desire to be a therapist and her willingness to step into the deeper work of this overall process.
A process that is not reserved for this field alone, but one we are all, in our own ways, moving through.
Whatever your journey has been, and wherever you find yourself within it, there is something meaningful in the ways you have continued to show up, to adapt, and to become.
This will remain true through time.
As always, thank you for reading. I look forward to connecting through your writing and mine.
Photo: Pixabay
Copyright Protected Material: © 2020 LaDonna Remy MSW, LICSW. All rights reserved. Written content on this blog (Perspective on Trauma) is the property of the author LaDonna Remy, MSW, LICSW. Any unauthorized use or duplication without written permission of the author/ owner of this web log is prohibited. Excerpts or quotes may be shared in the event the author is fully cited with reference and direction to this blog.
Professional Disclaimer: It is important to recognize that all information contained in the Perspective on Trauma Blog is informational. It is not intended to provide advice, assessment, treatment, or diagnosis. Content is not intended as a substitute for clinical care. It is not possible to provide informed care through web content, or to engage in an informed treatment relationship within this format. If you or a loved one need support; it is important that you access this care from your own (specifically assigned) health care provider.
Agreement of Use: In consideration for your use of and access to the Perspective on Trauma Blog, you agree that LaDonna Remy MSW, LICSW is not liable to you for any action or non-action you may take in reliance upon information from the Perspective on Trauma blog. As noted, it is not possible to provide informed (personalized care) through blog content. In the event, support is needed, it is your responsibility to seek care from your own health-care provider.
Resources and References:
Bowlby, J. (1988). A secure base: Parent-child attachment and healthy human development. Basic Books.
Herman, J. L. (1992). Trauma and recovery: The aftermath of violence—from domestic abuse to political terror. Basic Books.
McAdams, D. P. (2001). The psychology of life stories. Review of General Psychology, 5(2), 100–122. https://doi.org/10.1037/1089-2680.5.2.100
Neff, K. D. (2011). Self-compassion: The proven power of being kind to yourself. William Morrow.
Rogers, C. R. (1961). On becoming a person: A therapist’s view of psychotherapy. Houghton Mifflin.
Siegel, D. J. (2012). The developing mind: How relationships and the brain interact to shape who we are (2nd ed.). Guilford Press.
van der Kolk, B. A. (2014). The body keeps the score: Brain, mind, and body in the healing of trauma. Viking.
National Hotlines:
The National Domestic Violence Helpline: (1-800-799-SAFE 7233)
The National Domestic Violence Chatline. http://www.TheHotLine.org
Treatment Referral Helpline: (1-877-726-4727)
National Suicide Prevention Lifeline: (1-800-273-8255)
The Hotline. (n.d.). Abuse defined. National Domestic Violence Hotline. https://www.thehotline.org/identify-abuse/
Counseling Resources:
ALMA: https://helloalma.com/
Better Help: https://www.betterhelp.com/
Psychology Today: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us
Talk Space: https://www.talkspac
I love this concept of the “Process of Becoming.” It happens everyday if we but pay attention to the moment we are living in. It helps to deal with the trauma wemight have experienced and how to work with that in a meaningful way.
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Thank you, Micheal.❤️ I genuinely agree. Remaining mindful and aware helps us navigate our process of becoming.
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I find this to be helpful, “So much of what we carry was not consciously chosen but formed in moments when we were simply trying to find our way.” I know this to be true but letting these parts go is a difficult thing to do, and oddly enough, they can return in the midst of a stressful moment. I’m calling myself a work in progress. Hugs, C
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Thank you, Cheryl. We all really are works in progress. ❤️
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Truly Wonderful…
The care you show for people in their becoming and healing is clear, and it matters. There’s real hope in the way you hold space for growth and compassion. Keep going.
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Thank you, Willie. This is the loveliest comment to receive. ❤️
I appreciate you and hope all is well in your world.
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You are very welcome.
Hope you are doing well and Hope you had a Wonderful Mother’s Day weekend
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❤️❤️
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It must’ve felt rewarding to share your experiences and perspectives with the student – as it also surely brought back memories of when you were a student too. What a nice full circle moment and also so generous of you to give your time. 🙂
There’s something wonderful about the concept of becoming. It resonates with me in a few ways. One, we are always growing and we’re never fixed so long as there is the desire to learn, experience and become a better version of ourselves. Two, we should be kind and graceful with ourselves in the moments where perhaps we were not the best version of ourselves. Finally, our past experiences and trauma certainly shape us but with the right supports, they also don’t define us and we can reshape the mould.
A thoughtful post, as always, LaDonna. Hope you’re doing well!
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Thank you for your thoughtful reflection, Ab.❤️ I agree and appreciated your thoughts that we are never truly static so long as there remains openness to learning, experiencing, and growing.
I also deeply agree with your reflection around grace; that part of becoming often involves learning to hold compassion for the versions of ourselves that were simply trying to find their way with the tools and understanding they had at the time.
And yes, there really was something meaningful and “full circle” in the conversation with the student. It was meaningful to both witness her process and share in connection.
Thank you, as always, for reading so thoughtfully and engaging with such care. I hope you’re doing well too.
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I always appreciate your posts and our conversations about them. I learn a lot from your reflections. Enjoy the weekend!
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Thank you, Ab. I feel this same way about your posts. I also hope you and yours have enjoyed your weekend and the rest of Sunday.
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A beautifully grounded reflection on becoming, LaDonna. One thing I think we all struggle with is trying to understand ourselves, our own becoming. As you eloquently write: not a finished product but as an evolving story… How you hold trauma and attachment wounds as part of the story, but never the whole of a person, is helpful to all. It’s also nice to hear how you reflected on your conversation with an undergraduate student who is working to become a therapist… another insight into your instinctive sharing and helping.
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Thank you, Randall, for this thoughtful reflection. ❤️ I appreciate your words around becoming as an evolving story rather than a finished product. I think so much of being human involves trying to understand ourselves with greater clarity and compassion as we continue moving through life and relationships.
I also appreciated and very much agree with your reflection around trauma and attachment wounds being part of the story, but never the entirety of who someone is. Holding onto that truth is such an important part of healing process.
And yes, there truly was something meaningful in the conversation with the student. It reminded me how powerful encouragement, curiosity, and human connection can be in shaping not only therapists, but all of us along our own paths of becoming.
Thank you, as always, for reading with such care and thoughtfulness.
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Being human. I was just listening to a recording I made last year, as part of the material put together to pitch as idea I was trying to develop… maybe gather support for…
It was a simple idea, based on my wandering from place to place, stopping at each destination along the way, staying somewhere, and maybe doing a gig in a cafe or a pub or somewhere. I guess it was meant to sound elegant, given the poetic writing I do…
but truth be told, like many poetic writers, I tend to sound slow and awkward when talking as myself. It’s like a piece of writing before the edits, the reworkings, the revisions. And actually, when I talk like this… so that in order to hear me, you have to show some patience, bear with me, wait for me to find the thoughts I am reaching for…
Magic happens sometimes, when you allow me this space.
When I try to write an elegant summary that I think will appeal to those who I know will not give me this leeway, it always feels somehow flat. Unreal. False.And it occurs to me that the thing I am looking to do is more beautiful because of the stuttering voice with which it speaks.
A human voice.
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John, I genuinely appreciate you and this reflection. You have such a beautiful style in your sharing of self. What you describe feels deeply human. ❤️
I find deep resonance in the contrast you highlight between the polished version we think others may prefer and the quieter, less edited voice that often carries the most truth about who we authentically are.
I especially appreciated your thoughts around “magic” happening when someone is given space to find their thoughts. I believe this is often where truly listening can take us; beyond performance and toward genuine connection.
As always, thank you for sharing so openly and beautifully.
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Hi, LaDonna, I so appreciate your reflections and how they prompt me to reflect on similar ideas!☀️
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I appreciate this and feel the same way about your reflections. Have a wonderful Sunday.
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