Naming the invisible legacy: Intergenerational trauma and the journey toward expanded consciousness
The following article outlines insights gleaned from my own journey into the depths of intergenerational trauma healing. Each phase represents what I now view as a milepost along the way, imbued with unique challenges and discoveries. I extend my infinite gratitude for the compassionate support and heartfelt wisdom that has
Pandemic Wall or Traumatic Stress?: A look at our psychological landscape
A beloved Supreme Court Justice and feminist icon, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, has died, leaving many of us grief stricken and anxious at a time when our basic human rights are already in the balance. Simultaneously, fires continue to sear large swaths of the west coast with accompanying smoke that is
Disrupted Family Bonds: An Extremely Adverse Type of Childhood Experience, by Yael Gold, Ph.D.
My last entries have focused on reviewing and defining various types of Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs). As a psychologist and as a humanitarian I feel compelled to write about the crisis that is unfolding right now before our very eyes, on our own soil, in the United States of America.
Adverse Childhood Experiences: What is my Score? (Part 2) By Yael Gold, Ph.D.
In my previous post I discussed the “ACE Study”, which looked at the occurrence of Adverse Childhood Experiences in a group of 17,337 adults. It was the largest and most comprehensive study of this type to date and looked at people’s experiences across ten different types of child sexual abuse.
Adverse Childhood Experiences: Why the past won’t just go away (Part 1).
As a psychologist who provides therapy to adults, I am often struck by how often it becomes clear to me, early on in therapy, that so many of the individuals I treat have survived one or more adverse experiences from childhood. Sometimes these are extreme and fall into the category