What's the most traumatic thing that ever happened to you?

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I went through something very traumatic years ago and have never fully recovered. I have faith in God & the Church, do everything i can to deal with the after-effects of what i went through… but have had to accept that, in many ways, no matter how much i pray, try 2 change, etc., i will never be the same, really (tho i am 'better").
My prayers don’t seem to get answered… which makes things worse.

Just wondering if anyone out there can relate to this, share their insights, etc…
 
I realize that many people have suffered greatly compared to me. But I’ll share a little of my experience and hope it helps you.

The most traumatic thing that ever happened to me was being kicked out of my Protestant church.

I was born and raised evangelical Protestant, and learned to serve in church at an early age. I was playing the piano for church by the time I was twelve.

For most of my life (along with my husband and children), I was in church at least 5-6 days/nights a week. I was a super-involved Christian, mainly in children’s and youth ministries.

A Protestant minister once extolled me to the church as “the most loyal Christian he’s ever known.”

My whole life was my faith, and most of it was lived in the church. My friends were church friends. If I wasn’t in church, I was preparing a lesson or a song for one of my ministries. I loved it all.

We had been members of an Evangelical Free church for several years, and I was very active with children’s ministries.

I’m still not sure how everything fell apart, but as near as we can figure it out, a woman pastor in the church started spreading lies about me. Her lies led to a “tribunal,” headed by several pastors and deacons that I had never even met. They ended up asking us to leave the church.

From then on, we were shunned by the church, except for a few people.

A year later, that woman pastor was fired from the church after she was caught in a lie. Apparently she was a pathological liar.

The ousting and shunning was traumatic, to say the least. I couldn’t stop crying for days. I just cried constantly, even at work. My hands shook. I had terrible persecution nightmares in which me or my family was getting pursued, condemned, and executed by the people in that church. I actually dreamed that they cut my husband’s legs off.

I didn’t open a Bible for a year. I was afraid of it. After all, those people had used the Bible to justify their treatment of me and my family.

What got me through it? Trusting Jesus only. My life verse became John 2:24-25–“But Jesus, on His part, was not entrusting Himself to them, for He knew all men, and because He did not need anyone to bear witness concerning man for He Himself know what was in man.”

I just hung onto Jesus. I knew He cared. There was no one else that I trusted, except for my husband and two daughters. Everyone else was not trustworthy. Only Jesus.

I also tried to obey Jesus. I didn’t read the Bible, but I did attend mass at the Catholic Church, even though I didn’t trust the people. But I knew that the Word of God said that we shouldn’t forsake assembling ourselves with other believers. So I went to mass, purely out of obedience to Jesus.

So basically how I got through it was the old song, “Trust and Obey.”

It worked. My husband and I were led into the Catholic Church and we’re happy. I have forgiven those who hurt me, although I still tell the story because I know others are being hurt by their churches. (There are entire websites of people hurt by churches, and not just the sexually-abused.)

You say you will never be the same. I agree. To this day, even though I have forgiven those people, I don’t trust people. I prefer to be alone. I spend hours writing (fiction). I used to step up and volunteer to do various children’s theater projects in my city, but I no longer have the confidence. I’ll play piano for children’s groups and choirs, but I won’t lead a children’s group anymore. I get the shakes thinking about it.

Jesus is there for you. Even if you can’t see, feel, hear, touch Him. He’s there. Even if your prayers aren’t answered. Actually, they are answered, you just can’t see the answers right now.

Corrie Ten Boom used to talk about the weaving–the back side of the weaving is a tangled mess of yarn and knots. That’s what we see on this earth. But the other side of the weaving is a beautiful picture, and that’s what we will see when we get to heaven.

Just keep trusting Him. Don’t give up on Jesus, because He doesn’t give up on you.
 
How to watch your life flash between your eyes. … I had a virtually new 1992 Chevy S-10 truck (a small pick-up). In 1998 on a bridge over a river in rush hour traffic, traffic came to a complete halt. The person in front of me braked I braked. I did not hit the person in front of me. And then… The person behind me was a pick-up truck who was hit by an 18 wheeler who could not stop… All of us stopped and did not hit the person in front of us.

And then, BAM! I got a carnival ride which took my poor little truck and threw it over and above the railing of the interstate bridge for a couple of hundred yards. Being hit from behind by another pick-up which has been hit by an 18 wheeler and then, the next thing you know, you are hurtling down the railing of an interstate bridge is pretty traumatic.
 
I have one that is shareable, but I admit it is not the most traumatic thing that ever happened to me.

Watching a person you love drowning in the ocean, trying to save them, getting pulled under yourself, realizing you will both drown, and then turning your back to swim in…

I found two strong young men to help, and no one died. But I have never forgotten, the incident, myself, the awfulness.
 
My house burned down and I was unable to get my almost two year girl out.
Even though this happened twenty four years ago there are times that it feels like yesterday. I still cry at times. Of course everyone thinks because it happened so long ago that I should be over it. I will never be over it. One thing that helped me was that she was named after me. One day I thought most people are named after saints. I have a saint named after me.
Through the years some days have been worst than others. I don’t get as depressed on her death date or her birthday.
I have had people tell me how they prayed for us and then I know how I survived.
 
The most traumatic thing for me was discovering my ex husband was not the man I thought he was, and that he was engaged in unrepentent behavior that caused the death of our marriage. I think I will always have trust issues because of this, and don’t think I will ever fully trust anyone ever again.

QUOTE=smolderingwick;2152808]I went through something very traumatic years ago and have never fully recovered. I have faith in God & the Church, do everything i can to deal with the after-effects of what i went through… but have had to accept that, in many ways, no matter how much i pray, try 2 change, etc., i will never be the same, really (tho i am 'better").
My prayers don’t seem to get answered… which makes things worse.

Just wondering if anyone out there can relate to this, share their insights, etc…
 
I was heading home from a coffee shop and exiting the highway. As I turned onto the city street when the arrow turned green, somebody drove through the red light at high speed, without even slowing down. I was sideswiped and forced head-on into a telephone pole. The front end of my Ford Mustang was pushed in about 18". The car was totalled, but I walked out without a scratch. At the time, I was a fallen-away Catholic, not practicing any religion. Shortly after, a friend of mine took me to a Christian music festival. There were representatives of several churches (Catholic, Baptist, Lutheran and Methodist) at the festival. Somebody from the Baptist Church gave me a KJV Bible. I had never read the Bible before, but I was prompted to read it (Now I know it was the Holy Spirit who is responsible). After I read the Bible, I finally understood everything I had been taught in CCD, Catholic high school and Catholic college. I repented of my sins, first directly to God and then to my priest and came back to the Catholic Church. Since then, I have joined a Catholic Bible study at my parish, volunteered at an ecumenical mission meal for the poor, joined my parish’s evangelization committee and become an EMHC. I recently found out about another Catholic Bible study held at the home of a fellow parishoner while volunteering on 26 April. So I will be starting another Church activity very soon.
 
When I was in 10th grade, I was supposed to go with a group of other students over spring break to France and Spain. However, the week before I became ill and the doctor thought it was just a virus. It turned out that I needed major surgery and I ended up spending five weeks in the hospital.
 
My house burned down and I was unable to get my almost two year girl out.
Even though this happened twenty four years ago there are times that it feels like yesterday. I still cry at times. Of course everyone thinks because it happened so long ago that I should be over it. I will never be over it. One thing that helped me was that she was named after me. One day I thought most people are named after saints. I have a saint named after me.
Through the years some days have been worst than others. I don’t get as depressed on her death date or her birthday.
I have had people tell me how they prayed for us and then I know how I survived.
i cried when i read this… I am so sorry… And i understand about you not getting over it. You never will…
I have to go, but thank you for Posting… God bless…
 
Although I’ve had several very traumatic events in my life, the most traumatic was by far something that happened to me within the past year. It is too fresh for me to speak about in length without reliving it, but to be brief, it was being publicly arrested for a major crime which I was falsely accused of.
 
Don’t have an experience that’s “shareable”, but I do want to share something about your comment that your prayers are not answered.

I’ve been through times like that when it seemed that I must have offended God terribly because my prayers just were not being answered. People would try to comfort me by saying it was just “testing” and that God had big things in store for me but none of their explanations made any sense, especially since my experiences made me feel so different from anyone else I’d known.

I still have no explanations for the spiritual and other turmoils but praying the Rosary daily has helped, and praying it in a group especially helps. When you see what peace God can give in the midst of trials, you accept everything you can’t understand or fix because that very peace is a miracle.

Things don’t necessarily get noticeably better in the real world and past hurts may still resurface, but you get to where God’s grace strengthens you against any and all things. In a spiritual kind of way that’s difficult to explain, you truly learn the meaning of “when I am weak, then am I strong.”
 
I have been through some physical traumas, accidents of nature (if I never live through another tornado or hurricane it will be too soon), but by far the worst things that happen are seeing someone you love being hurt–by their own actions, by someone else, as victims of a crime, or from illness–and being totally unable to help them in any way. nothing traumatic that could happen to me would compare with losing a child, so I am praying in a special way for those who have done so, and the worst way of losing a child is through suicide, so I pray intensely for all who have experienced this tragedy.

The worst trauma felt by the individual I think is not the physical accidents or ailments, but the betrayals, especially betrayal by those we trust and love the most, because this shakes our faith and trust in God himself, and so is the hardest trauma to overcome. Jesus, I trust in you. I never heard any other better answer than recourse to the sacraments, rosary and the Divine Mercy, because human help in these situations is to fruitless.
 
I have also had many traumas in my life, and it’s difficult to pick anything out as being “the worst” - I’ve survived two fires, being hit by a bus, my parents’ divorce, my parents’ dating relationships, dog bites, bad falls with broken bones, the deaths of loved ones, job losses, business catastrophes, being robbed, having my car vandalized - but all these things are part of life in a fallen world.

Every time I’m tempted to throw myself a pity party, Christ reminds me of His crucifixion and death - and the fact that the Resurrection would not have been possible without it. So, I just give Him all the hard times, and trust that He will make everything work out for the best.

So far, He has never failed me. 👍
 
I went through something very traumatic years ago and have never fully recovered. I have faith in God & the Church, do everything i can to deal with the after-effects of what i went through… but have had to accept that, in many ways, no matter how much i pray, try 2 change, etc., i will never be the same, really (tho i am 'better").
My prayers don’t seem to get answered… which makes things worse.

Just wondering if anyone out there can relate to this, share their insights, etc…
My apologies for what happened to you and for not really answering with any insights before… I think it just had me a little emotional that I was admitting what I had for so long not told anyone except for a few close people in my life, and in the process I neglected to really answer what you had written. The particulars of what and how I experienced what I did are not important, but I will share what I can of what I learned in hopes that it may somehow help.

Traumatic events, no matter what they are, do take a long time to go away. They frequently shake our lives to the very core, and make us question the goodness in others, who we are and even our own faith in God. But if we are really lucky, they teach us something. About others, about ourselves, and about God and his plan for us.

You may not yet know the reason why you went through what you did, but for me it has helped to think about how it has changed me, and in that, I have to wonder if those changes are at least in part why it occurred.

My latest traumatic experience taught me the value of not letting others get the best of me in anger, as my defending myself with words of anger resulted in another’s retaliation in a far worse way. It made me more careful, as I frequently think others will not harm me so horribly just for expressing anger out loud. It taught me gentleness, as my seemingly small verbal reaction to someone so inwardly vengeful brought about a major chain of events I could have never predicted under normal circumstances. It made me realize that not all who are accused are guilty, and in my suffering has opened up a compassion for others which may not have been so strong before. I see others differently, and it has taught me that you can never truly know what another person is living with inside, regardless of how the appear on the outside.

It broke me in so many ways, and humbled me in so many others. I cried, I pleaded, begged for His Mercy, and it brought to my knees. In that, it brought me true humility.

But through it all, arrest and humiliation, being jailed and having to defend myself, He granted me miracles. It showed me his mercy and justice, and led me through a very, very dark time. In that, it brought me gratitude. True gratitude and a stronger faith I may never have gained otherwise.

What I had to learn, and still need to learn, is patience. For not all things will come when you need them to come, and just because you don’t think your prayers are being answered, doesn’t mean they aren’t. What it does mean, is they are answered in His way, in His own time. And when they are, you will be so truly amazed at how it falls into place. You will see, that through the anguish and the heartache, he was molding you, guiding you, and bringing you to a place and time where you may not have been ready to be taken or appreciate as much had it happened a moment sooner or in any other way.

I know it is hard, living so long and not feeling as if you have healed at all, I truly feel for you and have felt this way before. But please, do not lose hope, do not lose faith, and do not resign yourself to the belief that you are not being heard or answered by him. You will never be the same, no, that is true. But it is frequently in the changes from what you were that He shows you what he wants you to be.

I truly believe you will be rewarded if only you continue to have faith and know, in your heart and soul, he has not abandoned you.

I wish you nothing but love, grace and the healing only Our Lord can bring…
and please know, we are here for you 🙂
 
My apologies for what happened to you and for not really answering with any insights before… I think it just had me a little emotional that I was admitting what I had for so long not told anyone except for a few close people in my life, and in the process I neglected to really answer what you had written. The particulars of what and how I experienced what I did are not important, but I will share what I can of what I learned in hopes that it may somehow help.

Traumatic events, no matter what they are, do take a long time to go away. They frequently shake our lives to the very core, and make us question the goodness in others, who we are and even our own faith in God. But if we are really lucky, they teach us something. About others, about ourselves, and about God and his plan for us.

You may not yet know the reason why you went through what you did, but for me it has helped to think about how it has changed me, and in that, I have to wonder if those changes are at least in part why it occurred.

My latest traumatic experience taught me the value of not letting others get the best of me in anger, as my defending myself with words of anger resulted in another’s retaliation in a far worse way. It made me more careful, as I frequently think others will not harm me so horribly just for expressing anger out loud. It taught me gentleness, as my seemingly small verbal reaction to someone so inwardly vengeful brought about a major chain of events I could have never predicted under normal circumstances. It made me realize that not all who are accused are guilty, and in my suffering has opened up a compassion for others which may not have been so strong before. I see others differently, and it has taught me that you can never truly know what another person is living with inside, regardless of how the appear on the outside.

It broke me in so many ways, and humbled me in so many others. I cried, I pleaded, begged for His Mercy, and it brought to my knees. In that, it brought me true humility.

But through it all, arrest and humiliation, being jailed and having to defend myself, He granted me miracles. It showed me his mercy and justice, and led me through a very, very dark time. In that, it brought me gratitude. True gratitude and a stronger faith I may never have gained otherwise.

What I had to learn, and still need to learn, is patience. For not all things will come when you need them to come, and just because you don’t think your prayers are being answered, doesn’t mean they aren’t. What it does mean, is they are answered in His way, in His own time. And when they are, you will be so truly amazed at how it falls into place. You will see, that through the anguish and the heartache, he was molding you, guiding you, and bringing you to a place and time where you may not have been ready to be taken or appreciate as much had it happened a moment sooner or in any other way.

I know it is hard, living so long and not feeling as if you have healed at all, I truly feel for you and have felt this way before. But please, do not lose hope, do not lose faith, and do not resign yourself to the belief that you are not being heard or answered by him. You will never be the same, no, that is true. But it is frequently in the changes from what you were that He shows you what he wants you to be.

I truly believe you will be rewarded if only you continue to have faith and know, in your heart and soul, he has not abandoned you.

I wish you nothing but love, grace and the healing only Our Lord can bring…
and please know, we are here for you 🙂
Beautiful post. God bless you. :blessyou: ❤️ :signofcross: :heaven:
 
I’m not sure where to begin as there are several things that have happened to me. first of all my mother left my Father when I was about 2 years old and my sister was 9months to be with another man she moved out of state with him as she was pregant with his child. so growing up all these years knowing that she didn’t want me left me with a since that there must be something wrong with me . My dad then left to drive truck over the road we saw him maybe 3 times a year, he left us with his mother who always told me that I was worthless and would never amount to anything and if I stepped out of line she was going to put me in a childrens home. She truly loved my sister but she hated me as she always told me that i looked just like my mother. I guess that is why she hated me so much. ( she has since passed away) To this day I still fill as though I will never measure up. I always try to over do everything so I will be accepted and Loved …There is so much more but not enough room or time my life has been one trial after another…I just continue to pray and hope for the best in all I say and do … The one true blessing I have in my life is my husband and children and grandchildren…I always tell them that I love them…I hope that they never feel that they aren’t wanted or loved…I have broken the chain of hate through my love for them and for The holy father…God Bless all:wave:
 
Hi everyone. This is my first post. When I saw this question
about the most traumatic thing that ever happened to us, I had
to tell you mine. How about having one of your breast cut off
and having to leave the hospital the next day. I absolutely
went thru hell for 2 weeks. My doctor said I would have to go
or would have to pay for the extra day of two because that
is all our insurance would pay, 2 days. It nearly took an act
of congress to make the insurance companies change their
policies about paying only 2 days for certain surgeries.
I have enjoyed the Catholic Forums tremendously. Thank
you all for your (name removed by moderator)ut. YSIC
 
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