Writing things down is therapeutic… except when it’s not.
That’s the conclusion from new research into the therapeutic
benefit of writing.
It feels like a fair conclusion.
Time Magazine reports:
Talking
about difficult experiences can be a way of easing the emotional pain of
trauma, but the latest research shows that expressing emotions in words can
also speed physical healing.
The
study is the latest delving into the mind-body connection to suggest that
expressing emotions about a traumatic experience in a coherent way may be
important to not just mental but physical health as well. It showed that the
calming effect of writing can cut physical wound healing time nearly in
half.
I suppose that if you’re Time Magazine and you don’t employ editors you can open your article by suggesting that talking and expressing something in words are different things.
Be that as it may, previous research has shown that it might not be
such a good idea to talk about a trauma. Surely, it depends on how you are
talking about it, with whom, under what circumstances.
If your talk allows you to dissociate yourself from the
experience, it might be helpful. If you are talking to a therapist who wants
you to see the trauma as a meaningful experience, it will not.
Trauma victims suffer because their experience has made them
feel isolated from their friends and family. They fear that if they tell too
many people about their trauma they will be identified by it, and will be shunned by others.
In most cases a person who has suffered a trauma will profit
most from social outreach that helps get his mind off of the trauma. In some
cases it helps to talk about the trauma, but only if
that communication is strictly private and does not involve a therapist who
wants you to make the trauma a defining experience.
Time
explains what happens when different types of people write about painful
experiences:
It’s
also possible that emotional writing is not helpful for everyone. In one study
published last month, when people who typically are stoic wrote about their
worst trauma, their anxiety actually increased. Those who were accustomed
to being emotionally open, however, showed a drop in worry measures. That
suggests that different people may have different ways of coping with traumatic
events, and that writing may be an effective outlet for those who are normally
more expressive, while pushing people to express feelings when they are not
inclined to do so can actually increase risk for PTSD.
The experiment is interesting because they show a way to
measure the effects of writing on a physiological process. Psychological
effects of writing or talking cannot really be measured. The time it takes for
a wound to heal can.
Here’s how the research was conducted:
Researchers
led by Elizabeth Broadbent, a senior lecturer in health psychology at the
University of Auckland in New Zealand, studied 49 healthy senior citizens, aged
64 to 97. For three days, half were assigned to write for 20 minutes a
day about the most traumatic event they had experienced, and were encouraged to
be as open and candid as they could about exactly what they felt and thought at
the time. If possible, they were also asked to share thoughts or emotions that
they had never expressed to others about what they had undergone.
The
other participants wrote for the same duration about their plans for the next
day, avoiding mentioning their feelings, opinions or beliefs. Two weeks after
the first day of writing, researchers took small skin biopsies, under
local anesthesia, that left a wound on the arms of all participants. The
skin tissue was used for another study.
A week
later, Broadbent and her colleagues started photographing the wounds every
three to five days until they were completely healed. Eleven days after
the biopsy, 76% of the group that had written about trauma had fully healed
while only 42% of the other group had.
The results were striking and should be taken seriously.
Time does
not, however, tell us whether these writings were going to be read or evaluated
by another person.
Writing about a traumatic experience for yourself and
discarding the evidence is not the same as writing about it and having it distributed to a group of people.
If we think over a problem, we retain the option of keeping
our thoughts to ourselves. If we write them down we retain the same option. If
we speak them, we have obviously shared them.
Let’s imagine that you are writing things down, but only to
benefit yourself. At the least, writing distances you from your thoughts by
allowing you to look at them as though you were someone else. It also imposes a
structure and an organization on your thoughts.
If you have written down thoughts about a topic that
interests you, you will invariably discover that the process of writing allows
your thoughts to develop in unexpected ways.
Perhaps I am only speaking for myself, but what you think
you are going to say when you started writing will rarely be the conclusion
you arrive at when you have finished writing.
Writing about something that is puzzling you can be a learning
experience. It is highly recommended to students as a study technique. It allows you to think more clearly about the topic, to gain wisdom
and knowledge. Perhaps this makes you feel that you have gained control over
the problem. Then again, there might be a feeling of satisfaction that derives
from the process of acquiring wisdom.
Surely, if you are instructed to write down what you are
planning to do tomorrow, there will be no gain of knowledge or wisdom.
4 comments:
And of course, any thing you say or write may be used against you...
Or misinterpreted in your disfavor and misused against you.
Of all the young black shooting victims in this country, you can name 1. Because you've been trained like a circus seal to bark on command.
"Write On" Anon 7:43
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