- Take immediate action to ensure your physical safety and the safety
of others. If it's possible, remove yourself from the event/scene in
order to avoid further traumatic exposure.
- Address your acute medical needs (e.g., If you're having difficulty
breathing, experiencing chest pains or palpitations, seek immediate
medical attention).
- Find a safe place that offers shelter, water, food and
sanitation.
- Become aware of how the event is affecting you (i.e., your feelings,
thoughts, actions-and your physical and spiritual reactions).
- Know that your reactions are normal responses to an abnormal event.
You are not "losing it" or "going crazy."
- Speak with your physician or healthcare provider and make him/her
aware of what has happened to you.
- Be aware of how you're holding-up when there are children around
you. Children will take their cues from the adults around them.
- Try to obtain information. Knowing the facts about what has happened
will help you to keep functioning.
- If possible, surround yourself with family and loved ones. Realize
that the event is likely affecting them, too.
- Tell your story. And, allow yourself to feel. It's okay-not to be
okay during a traumatic experience.
- You may experience a desire to withdraw and isolate, causing a
strain on significant others. Resist the urge to shut down and retreat
into your own world.
- Traumatic stress may compromise your ability to think clearly. If
you find it difficult to concentrate when someone is speaking to you,
focus on the specific words they are saying-work to actively listen.
Slow down the conversation and try repeating what you have just heard.
- Don't make important decisions when you're feeling overwhelmed.
Allow trusted family members or friends to assist you with necessary
decision-making.
- If stress is causing you to react physically, use controlled
breathing techniques to stabilize yourself. Take a slow deep breath by
inhaling through your nose, hold your breath for 5 seconds and then
exhale through your mouth. Upon exhalation, think the words "relax,"
"let go," or "I'm handling this." Repeat this process several times.
- Realize that repetitive thinking and sleep difficulties are normal
reactions. Don't fight the sleep difficulty. Try the following:
Eliminate caffeine for 4 hours prior to your bedtime, create the best
sleep environment you can, consider taking a few moments before turning
out the lights to write down your thoughts-thus emptying your
mind.
- Give yourself permission to rest, relax and engage in
non-threatening activity. Read, listen to music, consider taking a warm
bath, etc.
- Physical exercise may help to dissipate the stress energy that has
been generated by your experience. Take a walk, ride a bike, or
swim.
- Create a journal. Writing about your experience may help to expose
yourself to painful thoughts and feelings and, ultimately, enable you to
assimilate your experience.
- If you find that your experience is too powerful, allow yourself the
advantage of professional and/or spiritual guidance, support and
education.
- Try to maintain your schedule. Traumatic events will disrupt the
sense of normalcy. We are all creatures of habit. By maintaining our
routines, we can maintain a sense of control at a time when
circumstances may lead us to feel a loss of control.
- Crises present opportunities. Cultivate a mission and purpose. Seize
the energy from your experience and use it to propel you to set
realistic goals, make decisions and take
action.
Return to Training Page
|