Make Room For All Your Feelings: An Interview With Mark Epstein
Spirituality & Health|March/April 2017

When we attempt to escape from our disturbing feelings, we also block ourselves from love. There is a better way.

Sam Mowe
Make Room For All Your Feelings: An Interview With Mark Epstein

Psychiatrist Mark Epstein says that traumatic stress is the very texture of our lives. Accepting that fact, he says, allows us to lean in to our suffering and emerge as more complete people through that experience.

Epstein’s most recent book is The Trauma of Everyday Life. We spoke with him about the everyday nature of trauma, the strategies people use to avoid it, and how, if approached with an open heart and mind, trauma can be our greatest teacher.

Tell me about the “trauma of everyday life.”

The basic thing is that you can’t be in a human body without being confronted periodically with death, illness, tragedy, and chaotic things happening that you can’t control. For all of our best efforts to live a life that we do control—and we’ve made great strides over the past 1,000 years or so—it’s really not possible. Accidents continue to happen, pipes burst or leak, ticks carry Lyme disease, the airplane sits on the runway for an hour with the air conditioning turned off, and our children get teased in their schools. It’s nonstop. So there’s this constant element of trauma in life where it has already happened or it’s imminent. People are suffering either from posttraumatic stress or from what I like to call “pretraumatic stress.”

Even though trauma is unavoidable, most of us try our best to keep it at bay.

This story is from the March/April 2017 edition of Spirituality & Health.

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This story is from the March/April 2017 edition of Spirituality & Health.

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