Feeling Triggered Episode 92 No Nonsense Psychiatry
Gemini said
This is a powerful episode. You're tackling a major cultural pain point—the "dilution" of clinical terms—while providing actual, actionable relief for people who are genuinely suffering.
To make this SEO-friendly, I’ve focused on keywords like "trauma triggers," "PTSD vs. being offended," "Box Breathing," and "5-4-3-2-1 grounding technique."
Episode 92: Feeling Triggered – Clinical Reality vs. Cultural Buzzword
Are you actually "triggered," or just annoyed? In an era where being offended has become an identity, the word "triggered" is used to describe everything from bad traffic to spicy social media takes. But for those living with PTSD, a trigger isn't an inconvenience—it's a physiological "amygdala hijack" that makes the past feel like the present.
In Episode 92 of No Nonsense Psychiatry, we cut through the internet noise to reclaim the clinical definition of trauma. We trace the history of triggers from WWI "shell shock" to modern neuroscience, explaining why your brain reacts to sensory cues long after the danger has passed.
In this episode, we discuss:
*
The Dilution of Language: Why using "triggered" as a synonym for "offended" trivializes the experience of trauma survivors.
*
The Three Categories of Triggers: A deep dive into Interpersonal (criticism, rejection), Situational (loss of control, anniversaries), and Sensory (smells, sounds, textures) cues.
*
The Science of the Hijack: How the survival brain takes over the rational mind and why you can’t simply "logic" your way out of a flashback.
*
The History of the Term: From the formalization of PTSD in the 1970s to the early days of "trigger warnings" on the internet.
3 No-Nonsense Strategies to Regain Control:
If you find yourself in a state of physiological panic, we provide three evidence-based tools to bring your rational mind back online:
1.
Sensory Grounding (The 5-4-3-2-1 Technique): How to use your environment to signal safety to your brain.
2.
Physiological Regulation (Box Breathing): Using the Vagus Nerve to shut down the fight-or-flight response.
3.
Cognitive Distancing: The "Name it to Tame it" method for separating your current reality from past trauma.
Stop being a passenger to your nervous system. Learn the difference between a minor frustration and a clinical trigger, and gain the skills to navigate both.