Wounded people tend to wound people. If this is true, then healed people heal people. When we focus on healing, we are able to face the trauma caused by murder loss. When someone chooses to end our loved one's life in violence, there is little control we have over how this makes us feel. Let's discuss trauma and its great impact on our world. The greek word for trauma is wound. Like a physical wound, we must nurture and take care of our emotional wounds. This includes cleaning it, acknowledging changes that it has caused, and more. Consider the following:
· Just like physical wounds, emotional wounds come in all shapes and sizes.
· Some wounds are easily visible to others while others remain hidden or develop slowly over time.
· Emotional wounds, just like physical wounds, can affect people in different ways.
· Although wounds can happen quickly, they take a long time to heal, and no two people heal at the same rate.
· Both physical and emotional wounds heal from the inside out.
· For healing to begin, initial first aid steps must be taken to stop the bleeding.
· Proper treatment (therapy and support groups) is essential for the healing process.
· Even when a wound heals and is no longer painful, scars can remain.
· The scar that remains is tougher the surrounding skin.
· Even when the cause of injury is similar, the resulting wounds can be vastly different (we all grieve so differently).
Reflect on these truths and journal what comes to mind for your own personal journey.
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