To Heal Trauma, If Therapy and Meds Fall Short, Try Exercise

Empowering exercise – especially strength training – can help us heal old wounds.

Some years ago I was in a perfect storm of transition. I’d just graduated from college. Raised on can-do American ideals, I was shocked to learn that I couldn’t do what I loved (write) and still get what I needed (a living wage and health insurance). So I got a temp job to pay the rent and tried not to worry too much about my health.

Disinclined to wallow in real life, I took the edge off with booze, drugs, food, and any other fasting-acting coping strategies I could get my hands on.

I was slowly killing myself.

A few years later, in the wee-est hours of a morning in March, I realized I didn’t want to die. The next day, I began my recovery in the same town where I was known in many circles as “The Last Chick Standing.”

Sober and single in a falling-down dump of an apartment, I began the odd task of learning how to live in the world.[ref]As opposed to living in the cycle of addiction and viewing everything outside of that cycle as the alien reality where everyone but me lived.[/ref] Then, in arguably the weirdest and most vulnerable moment in my adulthood, someone I trusted did something bad. The specifics are inconsequential.

And so began a Very Dark Period.

Suddenly, every time I looked in the mirror, I saw a person who’d been hurt. Every time I shifted in my seat at work, or put on a jacket, or poured a cup of coffee, or lit a cigarette,[ref]Don’t pretend to be surprised that I used to smoke.[/ref] the motion was in some way related to, in response to, or in the context of, what had happened. Every breath I took was a reference to that night.

I was caged. Bars of hurt and embarrassment and anger and fear and sadness pressed in on me with every inhale.

I carried that cage everywhere.

Picking up[ref]Picking up means returning to a substance we’ve accepted we’re addicted to.[/ref] would have brought me some relief. But if I had picked up, any relief would’ve been brief, and I’d’ve come out of it in still more pain. Such is addiction.

Instead, I took people’s well-meaning suggestions on how to build a life. I went to the gym a few days a week. I tried to make friends. I went to thrift stores. I got a cat.[ref]I don’t even like cats.[/ref]

The atmosphere in my head did not improve.

I started with a therapist. At first, I walked into her office, told her the story, and cried. A year of weekly appointments later, I walked into her office, realized I still couldn’t breathe without the bars pressing in on me, and cried. Fifty-two 50-minute hours and I could tell you everything there was to know about the cage I was hauling around, but examination didn’t seem to be helping.

I tried medications. They obliterated my sex drive.

Medication was out.

I dropped the meds and started crushing on a jock. We saw each other at the gym every day. I wanted someone to be proud of me, so I started pushing myself harder and harder in my workouts. Everything – every lift, every movement – was impossible until I did it, and then I owned it.[ref]Remember learning how to ride a bike? See that – you can relate.[/ref]

[tweetthis]Everything feels impossible until we do it. Then we own it. #motivation #healthyliving[/tweetthis]

As an addict, I’d always experienced brief relief followed by deep and gripping discomfort. When I lifted weights, there was discomfort, but it was brief and had a purpose. Day by day, lift by lift, I got stronger and more comfortable in my body. Eventually, having an audience didn’t matter – I was doing it for me.

I still remember the first time I loaded weights on the bench press bar. Nothing crazy – just two 10-lb plates. I lay on the bench and pressed the bar off the rack. It felt heavy. I brought it to my chest, and I pushed it back up. I focused on the weight in my hands and the feeling of my shoulder blades pressing into the bench. I focused on the task, on the tension and the challenge. I was there, on that bench, in that moment.  Quite naturally, my breath became part of the motion.

Exhale, push it away.

Inhale, bring it in.

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Every part of me was focused on that weight – mind, body, and breath. I powered that bar up one more time, slammed it up onto the rack, and let my limbs go limp.

I was sweating. And I was breathing – deep. My chest stretched up and out as I pulled fresh air into every part of my body.

I was free.

I stayed on the bench for a long time, peaceful, and empowered. Today, every choice I make, I make with an eye toward feeling the way I felt in that moment.

I sat up and I looked in the mirror. I saw an independent New Yorker and a self-obsessed asshole, a desperate lover and a wannabe writer, all smirking back at me. All the things I had once been, and now could see I still was.

When it comes to trauma and what follows, talk therapy and medication work for some folks.[ref] Why else would all these insurance companies be paying through the nose for us to avail ourselves of such services?[/ref] Being in and pushing my body was necessary for me to get to the other side. Specifically, it was resistance training that brought me back to myself, a self that I was not able to access with therapy and medication alone.

I default to morbid obesity, addiction, and self-harming behaviors of all kinds. Today I’m a personal trainer, in part because I believe exercise can break us free of trauma’s cage when other efforts fail. If therapy and medications don’t seem to be cutting the mustard, it might be a good idea to move.[ref]Yoga’s lovely, but I’m talking about weights. Heavy ones. Deadlifts. Presses. Nom nom nom.[/ref]

[tweetthis]”Exercise can help us break free of trauma’s cage when other efforts fail” #motivation[/tweetthis]

Safely pushing our bodies to the edge of what they can do can help us break free, regardless of what – or who – made us feel trapped.

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