“The body keeps the score”

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I had heard A LOT about the book “The Body Keeps the Score” (2014) by Bessel van der Kolk, long before I picked it up. Perhaps it was all the hype around its potential life-changing ability that made my expectations VERY high… but I’m going to be potentially controversial and say I was really disappointed, and more than a little concerned, by this very long book. 

I don’t like to think that what I write might be upsetting for people, but this is one instance where I do think it could be tough reading my review if you have lived a life filled with trauma, so feel free to come back another day, and know that I’m trying to be protective not dismissive in my suggestion that you look away… I’m sending a mountain of love your way now and always.

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Disclaimer – I am not a therapist or medical doctor – please do NOT use the information on this blog for mental health guidance, but DO reach out and speak to a trained professional who is aware of your individual situation.

He worries that because there is still so much stigma around expressing when we feel weak or vulnerable, (we almost feel a “terror” of it) most of us will not accept that anything has ever happened to us, but that this denial has “consequences”.

Aside from the implication that being unwell probably means we were traumatized as youths without even knowing it, the introduction didn’t feel too triggering. But then, things took a turn which was dark and depressing, and… I’m going to say it: deeply off-putting.

He speaks of “Tom” a Vietnam Veteran who suffers flashbacks, for which I am deeply, whole-heartedly sorry. But Dr Kolk doesn’t seem to share my empathy and writes about how he was “trying to conceal my irritation” when Tom doesn’t take the medication he’s been prescribed. Then it gets even more uncomfortable.  Tom is suffering psychologically after his tour of duty, left feeling numb, unable to love his family or have a good time.  Dr Kolk says he ‘gets it’ when Tom talks about wanting to avenge his fallen friends with “brutal violations” as retaliation, and he completely understands why Tom did some REALLY bad things to people he crossed paths with in Vietnam (things which are described in the book, but I won’t be sharing here).

As I’m reading, I’m trying to ‘get it’ too… revenge for mates that were killed… makes sense… feeling bad about the revenge you acted out… I get that too. But Tom was introduced at the start of the chapter as a ‘chasing lots of Vietnamese girls in bars’ kind of dude… so the justifications Dr Kolk gives for what Tom did slip uncomfortably towards a ‘boys will be boys’ tone that I felt was cringey at first but actually became deeply disturbing the more I read.  Tom’s “brutal violations” were not just excused, but almost normalized with the flick of a pen and a casual reference to vengeance being as old as Homer…

When I re-read the introduction, the statistics about abuse on the opening pages suddenly seemed mechanistic not empathetic… life will be life… sh!t happens…

With this bad mood in my mind, everything that followed seemed to dehumanize patients, turning them into statistical numbers, guinea pigs… or worse…

Chapter two refers to the case of a “gorgeous 19 year old” with an eating disorder whose (mis)treatment by the medical profession is hard to read: “I was surprised and alarmed by the satisfaction I sometimes felt after I’d wrestled a patient to the floor so a nurse could give an injection”… surprised and alarmed, I stopped reading… then at the last minute, flipped to the last chapter wondering if the author had undergone some sort of redemptive character arc. 

Ahhh… no.

It was clear that Dr Kolk is a super-fan of repressed memories, supported yoga and somatic research for healing, but that he ended where he had begun, discussing the appalling statistics relating to violence enacted against vulnerable people.  It felt wrong for the victims of the violations, but also to the combat vets that he was pushing to the front of the abusers-line, painting them all with the same tainted-description-brush.

Perhaps it is an issue with “perception bias” – look for a red car and you’ll find them everywhere, look for medical-misogynistic red flags in someone’s writing style and yep, there they are… in abundance.

Worried that I might be reading the wrong things the wrong way, I jumped online to see what other people were saying.

The book was overwhelmingly “liked”, but several people expressed the same concerns that I did. Some went further, pointing to the fact that Dr Kolk was sacked from his workplace for bullying and harassing women, and that he breeched protocol when he married one of his patients.  A news article from late last year (here) said he was banned from returning as a guest speaker at a wellness center after he branched into personal ideology and offhandedly targeted and vilified members of the audience who had “trusted him with their nervous systems.”

Whilst you could adopt the ‘traditional’ self-help-book-reader’s approach of “take the best – ignore the rest” when it comes to this book, it doesn’t ring true for me.  Or for others.  Turns out there are plenty of online haters that call Dr Kolk and his ‘groupies’ “moody”, “glowering” “charlatans” who “gaslight” their patients and cause problems with “repressed” memories that were implanted by therapists and were never actually there in the first place…

I went back to do a word search for “migraine” on my digital copy of the book and only found a couple of casual references: he believes migraine is usually a response to trauma, and that is why the “reactions are irrational and largely outside people’s control” (57)… and yoga helps (82).

Hmmm…

Maybe it’s just me and I was being irrational, but I did not find this book as helpful as the title, which sounded so believable, and hyped me up.

Curious if anyone thinks I’m way off base because they loved this book and it saved their life… I’m happy as always to be proved wrong.

In my opinion, encouraging people to intentionally dredge up the problems of their childhood (with a book as your guide), does not seem like a universally helpful or safe healing approach.

If you’re struggling with your mental health – I’m sorry you’re doing it tough – please, don’t ignore it – reach out and ask for help from a trained professional.

You deserve happiness and healing.

Please take care taking care of yourself, Linda xx


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13 responses to ““The body keeps the score””

  1. indianeskitchen Avatar

    It’s hard for people to understand each of our medical issues whether mentally or physically. It is so frustrating when they think they have all the answers and they don’t. Thank you for your honesty about this book.

    Like

  2. singlikewildflowers Avatar

    Thank you for your honest feedback and thorough summary! Very well written.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Oh thank you – it wasn’t an easy book to get through. xx

      Like

  3. Ephemeral Encounters Avatar

    Thank you for sharing Linda !❤️

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      You’re so welcome (I was about to write “my pleasure” but it wasn’t that pleasing to read at all!) 🙃

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  4. thingsihavethoughtof Avatar

    hmm, interesting, I normally wouldn’t reply to something like this, but I’ll give you an honest opinion of what this looks like to me, because it is just so obvious.

    Just some of the details… You have sympathy for Tom, but so much sympathy you think it’s okay for him not to take his medication, that is ‘suicidal empathy’. And if your job was to murder as many people as you can while others try to murder you (a war), then I hope you can imagine it can mess up your societal norms. However, it seems to me that ‘chasing lots of Vietnamese girls in bars’ seems to have turned your empathy into hatred for him.

    I’ve noticed before you insert ‘mysogyny’ into many things. Maybe you have an underlying issue with men that you need to investigate. Really. This book was probably something you should have read with an open mind, it is standard psychology, investigating your past to understand how it affects you now.

    Hopefully you can use this to understand your own situation, I’m not doing it to hurt you, you asked for opinions and I’m sticking my neck out doing this for you.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      No problem, thanks for taking the time to give your feedback.

      For what it’s worth though, I want to say that I absolutely went into this reading with an open mind – more than that, as I mentioned in the post, I was really looking forward to hearing what it had to say. I have done my fair share of therapy over the years and understand how the past shapes your present, and how you need to turn to face it honestly if you have any hope of getting out from under its shadow. It’s why I picked the book up in the first place.

      It’s hard to summarize several hours of reading into a short post, so perhaps the shortcuts I’ve taken here imply I’m anti-men… that’s not the case at all. I have nothing but sympathy for Tom, (and certainly not hatred as you say). I can’t imagine the horrors that he saw or was required to do to save his own life and serve his country. It is the author who made me feel frosty. Apologies if that wasn’t clear in my writing.

      In terms of having an issue with misogyny in general – I guess that I do – I will always strive to make the world a safer place for women – but – that absolutely does not mean that I have an issue with all men as you suggest. I don’t. Never have, never will. My life is filled with positive male role models who I adore and admire, and it would be lazy thinking to tar half the population with a dirty brush because some men are unpleasant.

      Thanks again for the feedback, I’ll take it onboard – perhaps I jumped to unfair conclusions, or am a poor communicator. There are plenty of other books with similar themes and content out there that felt grounded in science, professionally written and well researched… this just wasn’t one of those from my personal perspective… but plenty of others like it, so I’m happy it helped them heal!

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  5. John Avatar

    If I understand this correctly, it is always good to listen to what your body tells you, mine speaks to me daily…

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Exactly – what I have learnt is that your body is always whispering to you, and if you ignore the whispers, then it has to wail – and by then, the problem is so much harder to address. Good on you for being a body-whisperer too! (sounds a bit creepy… but you know what I mean!)

      Liked by 1 person

      1. John Avatar

        Thanks! And oh yes, I have been tuned into this old body for a long time, Linda. Even something as small as an itch has the potential to be something more than an itch. Stay tuned!

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          Stay safe – itches are the worst (we get bad mozzies here in the Aussie summer and there’s something about my sweet blood that makes me the primary target!)

          Liked by 1 person

          1. John Avatar

            They carry diseases! I call them Skeeters…

            Liked by 1 person

            1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

              Skeeters is a fab name! Love it!

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