Breaking Out and Breaking Free to Live AGAIN!!!
Interpersonal Trauma is defined as harm being done to a person by another person that develops and sustains a negative effect on a person’s life for a duration of period. Most common examples of interpersonal trauma are neglect, domestic and sexual, loss of loved ones, and etc. This can be prompted by childhood or adulthood experiences or relationships. When these types of repeated pains occur, it make it difficult to overcome.
Historical Trauma is defined as harm being done to a person as a result of their culture, race, creed, descendants, or even the very community that they live in. Often times this is related directly to a discriminatory act.
Developmental Trauma is defined as harm being done to a person as a result of an event that occurred in their childhood or developing stages of life. You find this commonly referred to in diagnosis of PTSD. Emotional defaults, Rejection, Betrayal, Death, and even forms of Neglect and Abandonments can transfer from one stage of a person’s life to another if left untreated.
As a part of self-awareness, a 2021 study was performed to understand mental health issues in the state of Georgia compared to the national average. The findings are astonishing:
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