Post-traumatic growth — positive psychological change emerging from the struggle with challenging experiences — is documented in many people who have faced significant body-focused repetitive behaviors.
What Post-Traumatic Growth Looks Like with Body-Focused Repetitive Behaviors
PTG researchers (Tedeschi and Calhoun) identify five growth domains possible after body-focused repetitive behaviors:
- Personal strength: Discovering capacities you didn't know you had
- New possibilities: Reconsidering what life can look like
- Relating to others: Deepening appreciation for connection
- Appreciation for life: Heightened gratitude for what remains
- Spiritual/existential change: Revised understanding of life's meaning
Post-Traumatic Growth Is Not a Requirement
Not everyone who experiences body-focused repetitive behaviors will find growth in it — and the pressure to 'find the silver lining' can be harmful. PTG is a possible outcome of body-focused repetitive behaviors, not an obligation.
Conditions That Enable Growth Through Body-Focused Repetitive Behaviors
Support, meaning-making, the ability to tolerate and process the body-focused repetitive behaviors experience, and time — these are the conditions that allow growth to emerge.