Read Mind-Body Workbook for PTSD Online
Authors: Stanley Block
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Some thoughts on this map may look like thoughts on the previous Fixer map. On this map, mind-body bridging practices removed the excess mental and physical pressure that came with the fixer. As previously mentioned, when your awareness prevents the fixer from impairing your activities by creating excess mind clutter, body tension, and mental pressure, it’s called befriending the fixer. This is when you are functioning naturally. The more you use your mind-body bridging practices in your daily life, the more you’ll do things because you
want
to, rather than
have
to. Without the I-System’s internal pressure (when your I-System is at rest), your daily activities will give you more pleasure and peace of mind. In this state, your PTSD heals.
Befriend Your Fixer
The only time you can recognize and befriend your fixer is in the moment during its activity when your I-System is on. This is when you can stop the cycle of the depressor and fixer and calm your I-System.
When your fixer is active, these steps will help:
Befriending the fixer is when your I-System is quiet, your body is calm, and your activities are being done by your true self and not the pressure-driven fixer. You witness, firsthand, that the damaged self is a false belief caused by your active I-System. You are not broken and don’t need fixing.
Day Three Date:____________
Russ was doing well with his mind-body bridging practices, and shared with his group that he was sleeping better and had less tension and fewer PTSD symptoms. Every part of his life was changing, including his relationship with his wife. Then, with clenched hands, he angrily said, “Mind-body bridging isn’t working anymore. I should have a job by now.” His I-System had captured the thoughts
I can’t let my family down
and
I should be more of a man
, and the body tension (pressure in his chest) that came with these thoughts meant his fixer was active. The depressor and fixer work together to keep the overactive I-System going. Everything he did to find a job increased his body tension. His mouth would go dry, making it hard to talk in job interviews, and his mind would clutter with thoughts like
Yes, I can do it
or
No, I can’t.
After mapping his thoughts, Russ recognized his storyline:
If I were more of a man, getting a job would be as easy as calling friends and networking… .
He recognized his requirement as
I should have a job by now
, and his depressor as
I’m not a man
. He realized his fixer had captured a thought that was from natural functioning,
I need to find a job
, adding pressure and extra tension to his misery. By recognizing and befriending his fixer in action (the only place you can recognize and befriend your fixer), Russ was able to stop the depressor and fixer’s merry-go-round and find a job.
1. Throughout the day, notice and write how often your fixer is active. Look for depressor-fixer interplay, which creates storylines, body tension, and mental pressure.
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2. Do a To-Do map, by jotting down all the things you need to get done over the next few days. Write for three to four minutes. Note any body tension that comes with the activities. It may help to see the sample map that follows.
Sample To Do Map
Day Four Date:____________
Remember Mary and her kids, from Day Two in this chapter? She had trouble telling the difference between thoughts the fixer produced and those from natural functioning until she remembered to use her bridging awareness practices. Now she comes out of the shower with a relatively calm mind and body. When she looks at the clock, thinks
The kids will be late for school
, and feels her shoulders tighten, she knows that her usual response of yelling, “You’ll be late for school! Hurry up!” is a fixer. She listens to the traffic sounds outside the window, feels her feet as she walks across the hall, feels her shoulders drop, and calmly gathers everyone up. She befriends her fixer and returns to natural functioning.
Now that you can identify the activity of the fixer on your maps, it’s time for you to befriend your fixer. Remember, the best time to befriend your fixer is right in the middle of an activity where you notice excess body tension, storylines, mental pressure, overwhelmed feelings, and so on. To befriend the fixer, you have to have a strong bridging awareness practice. Only when you know what it’s like to have a quiet I-System can you recognize when your fixer is active, because the I-System is so disruptive that it’s difficult to tell the difference between the fixer and natural functioning. The fixer is so persistent in our lives that most of us come to see its activity as “It’s just me.” How many times have you ignored your body tension and dismissed your mind clutter with an “it’s just me” attitude? Remember, when your I-System is at rest, you can befriend your fixer by simply being aware of its activity and then bringing your awareness back to what you were doing.
1. During the day, notice the difference between activities prompted by your fixer and those that come from natural functioning.
2. Do a map titled “What Will Happen to Me If I Give Up My Fixer.” Jot whatever comes to mind when you imagine giving up your fixer (for example,
I won’t have any motivation
,
I’ll lose my job
,
I’ll never accomplish anything
,
I won’t be successful
, or
I’ll never get well
). Write for three to four minutes. Describe your body tension at the bottom of the map.
Body Tension:
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