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Cesarean section trauma?

So im just thinking out loud here, and inviting discussion.

Having been introduced to isps works many years ago, and reading volume 1, the basic premise bact then was that traumas at key developmental events prevent or cause us to lose certain peakstates. I know that work has evolved and the theory has gotten exponentially more detailed much of which goes beyond my comprehension, but it just struck me today just how many babies are delivered by ceasarian section. Presumably this is a gross interruption of the normal order of events. Anesthetic and being "untimely ripped from his mothers womb" to quote shakespeare , has got to be a little bit traumatic right?

I was delivered CS, i was curious if there are specific life effects/patterns/ themes that effect CS delivered babies? Has there been much work done on this?

Unfortunately i dont get good visuals, or the ability to regress to specific moments so i cant go and check, but i was curious, is it worth specifically healing this moment or is that a case of random cherry picking an event, and it better to work on issues in the present?

Im currently aware of an issue/pattern in me that is fearful of being taken contol of, or having my autonomy taken over. I guess it would be better just to tackle this as a trauma than hypothesising where it may have orginated, however, my geneal curiosity surrounding ceasarian deliveries remain. Just interests me i guess!

Comments

  • edited 10:42PM
    Hi,
    maybe someone here has some experience on the subject of cesarean section (traumas) and how it can/has affected someone life. 

    My own hypothesis is that having a birth by C-section will cause traumas to the baby (maybe some babies will be more resilient than others).

    Imagine you are a baby relaxing in the womb, feeling safe and nurtured and suddenly someone rip you out of it, cut open the placenta and cut the umbilical cord.
    This doesn't seem like the best condition for a peaceful birth...
    The surgeon can sometimes inflict cut/physical damage to the baby when cutting the mom's belly/womb.

    The Placenta has its own awareness, who is supposed to go back inside the baby at birth.
    So by doing a C-section, it alters the natural order of things (the baby going through the contractions phases, the birth canal, etc.).

    But maybe there is some positive aspect of a birth by C-section: not going through the birth contractions can avoid triggering some strong traumas there and blocks to some of the baby peak states.


    "It would be better just to tackle this as a trauma than hypothesizing where it may have originated,"

    Exactly, I personally don't suggest regressing at your birth moment by yourself and without a specific reason, because it can be very dangerous and trigger issues, including suicidal feelings.

    If a regression at birth is needed, then do it with an experienced certified trauma therapist.
    But there is no point going back there, especially by yourself, except if you are willing to accept the safety risks and possibly triggering new issues/traumas within yourself. And without the proper training and experience, you are at risk to be stuck with those new symptoms or even damage yourself.


    It's better to start from your current symptoms as you have described above, and then to regress to where they originate from.
    But first diagnose which symptoms you have, and heal the subcellular cases ones first before doing a regression (a regression is not always needed to heal symptoms).
    And yes, it's possible that your current symptoms could originate from your birth moment, who knows...



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