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Covid-19 is a collective trauma – how we can protect ourselves from traumatisation

All of the current conditions that we find ourselves in are ripe conditions for us to feel traumatised. We have loss of safety, loss of predictability, loss of purpose, loss of connection, loss of sense of time, and loss of mobility. All of these can lead to us feeling traumatised, or even having our past unresolved trauma re-triggered. 

We might feel numb or spaced out. We might be “acting out” – eg. Eating more, or eating less, drinking more, smoking more. We might be hoarding food or house products – or obsessing about them – in the fear that we won’t have enough. We might feel childlike again as we are triggered back in time. We might feel scared. We might feel separated from our bodies. We might feel paralysed as though we can’t physically move, or we might feel we can’t think straight. We might not be sleeping as well as we used to, or we might be sleeping an awful lot more. We might have a feeling of being unsafe. We might become snappy and angry. We might become passive or apathetic. Past dependencies to substances of behaviours might be resurfacing. We might be feeling as if all of this will never end. In some cases – especially for those who are especially vulnerable to this virus – we could feel in such danger that we think we might die. 

These are all symptoms and signs that we are feeling traumatised.

Covid-19 collective trauma IS a collective trauma. Whilst on the one hand it can bring people and communities together, for some of us it will leave us feeling even more separate and vulnerable. 

There are a few steps we can consciously take in order to combat this:

With thanks to Bessel van der Kolk for his experience and timely insights.

Author: Lucinda Gordon Lennox

Trauma Specialist MSc (Reg MBACP, FDAP Accred)

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