Not exact matches
These
memories are stored as emotions, sensations (sounds, images, smells) and body
memories (muscular tensions that can
trigger emotional reactions).
«As the initial shock and
emotional numbness slowly subsides, I'm experiencing more flashbacks of
memories from our 6.5 years of happiness, and for now these
memories tend to
trigger pain and intense longing.»
That
emotional excitement
triggers the
memory - enhancing cycle all over again, making the traumatic
memory even stronger, like a spinning tire deepening the muck hole it's stuck in with each jab on the accelerator.
While researching the biochemical action
triggered by the protein synthesis inhibitor anisomycin in the amygdala (involved in the formation of
emotional memories), neuroscientists at the University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign noted a strange occurrence in the midbrain region.
When they returned one day later and attempted to reactivate the
memory using an
emotional trigger, they could find no trace of it.
While it
triggers release of dopamine, the brain chemical of pleasure, satisfaction, and reward, sugar also harms the hippocampus, the part of the brain responsible for
memory consolidation and
emotional regulation.
The list of possible reactions is a varied as the
triggers and includes a flare up of your Hashimoto's hypothyroidism, asthma, migraines, depression, fibromyalgia, fatigue, Gulf War syndrome, brain fog,
memory loss, incontinence, neurological dysfunction, rashes, and such
emotional issues as depression, anxiety, and lethargy.
For me, health scares
trigger a cellular
memory of repeated, long journeys riddled with blood tests, tissue samples,
emotional agony, family distress, surgery and painful recovery processes that followed a moment just like the one I described above.
Instead you have to figure out what you are going to do when your
emotional memories are
triggered, especially immediately following a break - up.
Intensities can be characterized by: • Extreme feelings: positive or negative feelings; complex emotions; connection with the feelings of others; grand laughter and tears • Physical reaction to emotion: stomachaches and headaches; blushing; rise in body temperature • Strong affective
memory: re-living or re-feeling things long after the
triggering event; nightmares; elaborate daydreams connected to actual events • There are five areas of overexcitabilities: psychomotor, sensual, imaginational, intellectual, and
emotional.
Typefaces in all shapes and sizes can evoke an
emotional response and
trigger associated
memories before we've even read the words.
Symptoms of PTSD can include the following: nightmares, flashbacks,
emotional detachment or numbing of feelings (
emotional self - mortification or dissociation), insomnia, avoidance of reminders and extreme distress when exposed to the reminders («
triggers»), irritability, hypervigilance,
memory loss, and excessive startle response, clinical depression and anxiety, loss of appetite.
Michele has training in OEI (Observed Experiential Integration), which is a method that integrates traumatic
memories into our regular
memory, so they no longer
trigger intense
emotional responses.
Trauma produces fearful
emotional memory that can
trigger anger and cause us to withdraw.
In severe cases, people, places and actions can
trigger our painful
emotional memories.
Other couples want or need to sell, either for financial reasons or a desire to leave behind the
emotional memories that the house can
trigger.