For people who suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), one of the hardest symptoms to deal with is flashbacks. Not only can they cause dramatic physical reactions, but they can also make the sufferer believe that they are experiencing the cause of their PTSD all over again.
But how does this happen? And is there a way to learn how to cope with PTSD flashbacks?
What Happens During a Flashback?
When we think about flashbacks, many people will immediately think of a soldier reliving his time in battle. It is undoubtedly an excellent example and one that, due to its cinematic nature, is readily understood. However, PTSD can take affect anyone who has gone through a terrifying or life-threatening event. In fact, the National Institute of Mental Health estimates that nearly 7 percent of adults in the US will have PTSD in their lifetime.
When learning how to cope with flashbacks, it’s good to know something about how they work. Think of a flashback as a faulty memory. Our brains create memories using two sets of information. First, there’s the emotional content or how the event made you feel. Second is the context, such as where you were, what you were doing, with whom, and so forth.
With a healthy memory, you’re able to process both of these sets of information without a problem. With a flashback, there’s an overflow of emotional content and a lack of context. It causes the user to experience incredibly vivid, even life-like sensations without the ability to distinguish whether it’s something that happened in the past or is happening right now.
How to Cope with PTSD Flashbacks
We can divide the methods for coping with PTSD flashbacks into two parts. There’s long-term treatment, which is done throughout the disorder, and often continued to prevent relapse. There are also short-term coping skills that one can learn to employ at the moment one is suffering from a flashback.
Long-Term Treatment
Like many common mental disorders such as anxiety, depression, and bipolar disorder, PTSD is often treated by medication, therapy, or some combination of both.
Anti-depressant medications such as Zoloft or Paxil are often prescribed to help with the psychological effects of PTSD. Other drugs that treat the physical symptoms are also specified, such as propranolol, which lowers the heart rate. Medicines can also be prescribed to help with other effects of PTSD, such as panic attacks or trouble sleeping.
Health care professionals may use a variety of psychotherapy techniques to help PTSD patients. Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) can help sufferers to identify and correct faulty relationships between their thoughts and feelings and the behaviors that result. Eye-movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR), a treatment that involves discussing trauma while following stimulating eye movement, has been shown to help reduce the intensity of related memories. Other treatments include occupational therapy and the use of service animals.
Immediate Coping Strategies
During therapy, you will likely discuss how to cope with PTSD flashbacks as they occur. There are numerous strategies for alleviating some of the distress they can cause. These include:
- Deep breathing: The rapid heartbeat and shallow breathing that accompany flashbacks are part of the body’s natural “fight or flight” reaction to perceived threats. By focusing on deep, slow breaths, you’re combating the instinct to panic. In essence, you’re telling your body that there isn’t anything wrong.
- Familiar objects: Keep an item that reminds you of the here-and-now. It could be anything you can easily keep on your person, like a piece of jewelry or a coin or other small object. Looking at or touching this object during a flashback can help keep you grounded in the present when establishing proper context becomes difficult.
- Create a mantra: Repeating a word or phrase to remind yourself you’re safe and that the moment will pass is a simple and surprisingly effective strategy for riding out a flashback.
- Take notes: Try to be aware of what causes a flashback, when you first recognized it was coming, and any other details that might help you identify your triggers. This information can help you learn how to cope with PTSD flashbacks more effectively in the future.
Trauma Counseling
Are you or is someone you love trying to deal with the symptoms of PTSD? At the Trauma Counseling Center of Los Angeles, we can help you move past your trauma and anxiety and into a life of health and well-being. To learn more about our trauma therapy treatments and how you can start your journey toward recovery, please call us at 310.720.8200.