S2 E5: Healing While Being Shot At- A Survival Guide

S2 E5: Healing While Being Shot At- A Survival Guide

Healing While Being Shot At: A Survival Guide

Episode Description:

In this episode of Relational Trauma SOS, Jeni Brockbank explores what it means to try to heal while still “being shot at”—navigating crisis after crisis. Using the powerful quote, “We don’t expect soldiers to heal from PTSD while they’re being shot at,” Jeni shares pieces of her own story and a survival guide for those who feel like life won’t slow down enough to breathe.

You’ll hear personal examples, practical tools rooted in TS-12 Anon Step 3, and the Shield of Light Meditation—a trauma-sensitive visualization to help you feel safe in your body.

Episode Highlights:
  • Why shame and minimizing don’t help in crisis

  • How to practice self-compassion and “lower the bar” when surviving

  • How to create at least one safe space for yourself, even when life is chaotic

  • The Shield of Light Meditation (with options for those who struggle with visualization)

  • Free downloadable What Does Safety Look Like, Sound Like, and Feel Like? Worksheet

Resources & Links from This Episode: Key Takeaway:

You are not failing if you’re not thriving right now. Surviving something incredibly painful takes strength and courage. These resources and tools are here to help you feel less alone and build safety—one small step at a time.

Chapters
  • (00:00:00) - Healing While Being Shot At
  • (00:01:32) - Give a Woman Her Wings
  • (00:02:51) - Healing While Being Shot At
  • (00:05:16) - The Pain of Living With an Addictions Partner
  • (00:07:10) - Exhaustion and Gaslighting
  • (00:10:16) - Post-Separation Abuse: How I Survived
  • (00:16:03) - Six Steps to Soul Care
  • (00:22:43) - A Meditation for Rest and Safeness
  • (00:24:47) - A Shield of Light for Trauma Survivors

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Episode 9: How To Shine Your Light So That Others Can See

Episode 9: How To Shine Your Light So That Others Can See

Do you want to learn to communicate more effectively, and don't know where to begin. All who are seeking to learn communication skills will likely find things of worth in today’s episode. While this Betrayal Trauma SOS podcast episode is geared towards helping those who are struggling with betrayal trauma learn better ways to communicate, most things can be applied to many different scenarios.  Sometimes we have a message to convey that is very important to us, but it's as if we hit a wall when we try to communicate it.   Have you ever felt highly elevated when faced with a hard conversation?  I know that I sure have.  Hard things are going on with our bodies, and this can happen to anyone.  The basis of this episode stems from a talk given by Bonnie H. Cordon in the April 2020 General Conference for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.  She talked about a time when her family hosted an apostle named Elder L. Tom Perry when she was 10 years old.  Late that night her mother asked if she had fed the chickens, and her cute response was that maybe the chickens should fast that night.  She didn’t want to leave the company of the apostle.  Of course that wasn’t acceptable, but Elder Perry had heard the exchange and offered to accompany her, along with his son to feed the chickens.   She ran ahead and after jumping over the irrigation ditch that she was use to encountering. Elder Perry hadn't been able to follow her light. He stepped right into the irrigation ditch. She says, "I was shining my light but not in a way that would help Elder Perry. Now, knowing that he needed my light to safely navigate the path, I focused the flashlight just ahead of his steps and we were able to return home with confidence.”  I am learning that I can do my best to show up to hard conversations and can navigate them better when I employ communication skills.  I’m still a work in progress, and what I share today is from my own experiences and studies to improve my own communication skills.  These 8 communication tools are what I am personally working on. More detail is provided in the podcast. Let's learn to communicate: Understanding what we hope to accomplish with our conversation. When we are crystal clear with what we are hoping to accomplish, we can better stay on track in our conversations. Organizing thoughts goes a long way.  When I take the time to organize my thinking before holding conversations, they tend to go much better. Knowing I am of worth and that the other person is also of worth.  It is not humility to be less or more than what we were created to be.  It’s important to know that in God’s eyes we are on equal ground.  No matter our station, we are all important.  Internalizing this concept helps us to value not just our own thoughts, but those of others as well.   Learning to be aware of our emotional state and use tools to stay grounded.  Whether we are highly elevated due to stress or trauma, becoming grounded can be a wonderful tool for being able to gain emotional stability and be able to re-engage in conversation from a more neutral place. Consider your emotional safety and the emotional safety of those you are communicating with. Consider that their response is about them. Of course, this takes practice and is easier said than done. It’s ok to be a work in progress. Consider boundaries in conversations. I’m planning a boundaries episode soon, so stay tuned for that. 8. Taking drama out of communication.  The goal is to stay out of drama as best as possible.  This is likely a lifelong pursuit and the more I dig, the more evidence I find regarding my role in drama.  It’s often very subtle and difficult...

28 Apr 202026min

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