Many ACE survivors are incredibly accomplished. I speak regularly to Ph.Ds and professionals who have more than 7 ACEs that they can identify. Yet they have achieved through education and work. But on occasion I am reminded about the price we pay for not addressing the ACEs, and instead praising those who are succeeding for being “resilient” and “pulling themselves up by their bootstraps.” Carol Redding is one such example to go along with another example recently highlighted in ACEsConnection, Judge Mary Elizabeth Bullock.
Ms. Redding was a ACE Fellow with the CDC and worked, according to her bio, on the development of a highly successful marketing campaign. She has been working in the field ever since, and has been a sought-after speaker at many events. I came across her story in an article Can Family Secrets Make You Sick?, which appeared on NPR.org last year, and which I cited in my blog about conspiracies of silence.
“Today Redding lives in a tidy, peaceful house outside San Diego. The walls of her home office are lined with degrees and certificates — at age 58, she's working on a Ph.D. From the outside, she's a success.
But inside — in her body as well as her mind, Redding says — she has been battling all her life.
She was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder, as a result of those childhood experiences. "I had the flashbacks," she says, "the depression, the anxiety — Oh, my lord! Anxiety, like ... if it were a tangible thing living in the house with me, I'd need another room just to house that."
In childhood, she was diagnosed with high blood pressure. In adulthood, she had a thyroid condition and has survived three different types of cancer: leukemia, breast cancer and lymphoma.”
Judge Bullock had multiple types of different cancers. So did Ms. Redding. The impacts are real, and we achieve despite having a full basket of trauma. Why? I have answered that question in part, but I want to hear what others have to say about why traumatized adults have the success they do. Please think more deeply that because they are resilient or they faced up to what they need to do and did it. Why do incredibly successful people end up suffering for a lifetime with both emotional and physical problems and issues?
Comments (2)