Sustaining individuals and communities
 
                                        Given this, the assumption that anyone experiencing traumatic stress 
would automatically benefit from practising mindfulness is 
understandable. The relationship between mindfulness and traumatic 
stress, however, is not quite so straightforward.  Given
 that mindfulness can be an invaluable aspect of trauma recovery, how 
then can the potential pitfalls of mindfulness be minimised and the 
benefits of mindfulness maximised? Having tools inside your mindfulness 
practice that you can use if you start to feel overwhelmed or 
dysregulated is one of the ways we can do this - tools to support you to
 return to your ‘Window of Tolerance’. When we’re outside of our ‘Window of Tolerance’ there is either too 
much or too little physiological arousal in our system . We’re either 
hyper (i.e. over) aroused (e.g. highly anxious, hypervigilant, 
overwhelmed, stressed) or hypo (i.e. under) aroused (e.g. we’re feeling 
numb, spacey, dissociated, deeply disorganised). People who have 
experienced trauma often experience something known as ‘dysregulated 
arousal’, which is uncontrollably cycling back and forth between hyper 
and hypo-arousal and their ‘Window of Tolerance’ becomes narrower. These
 are some of the most painful aspects of traumatic stress.In
 the words of David Treleaven, an educator and psychotherapist whose 
work focuses on the intersection of trauma and mindfulness “placed 
beside one another, mindfulness and trauma can seem like natural, even 
inevitable, allies. While trauma creates stress, mindfulness has been 
shown to reduce it.” 
On the one 
hand, mindfulness can be an extremely valuable resource for people 
experiencing traumatic stress. Mindfulness enhances awareness of the 
present moment, strengthens the ability to self-regulate and increases 
self-compassion, each of which are important skills for trauma recovery.
 However, mindfulness can also exacerbate the symptoms of traumatic 
stress as paying close, sustained attention to one’s inner world can 
mean coming into contact with trauma related stimuli in the body (e.g. 
flashbacks, heightened emotional arousal) potentially leading to 
feelings overwhelm and dysregulation.
The ‘Window of Tolerance’ is a 
concept, coined by Dr. Daniel Siegel, a Clinical Professor of Psychiatry
 at UCLA, which proposes that we all have an optimal level of 
physiological arousal level. When we’re inside our ‘Window of Tolerance’
 we’re somewhat stable and regulated and able to handle the waves of 
stress that will inevitably happen in our day, it is our optimal zone of
 physiological arousal. 
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