The Secret to Mind-Body Healing

Detecting depression caused by untreated childhood trauma may be challenging, as untreated childhood trauma memories can be blocked for many years, even decades. This sort of trauma may well be the secret behind depression and PTSD for many people, and it comes in many forms. It may also be the secret to mind-body healing. It may be a one-time traumatic event that occurred in the past in childhood, or an ongoing series of traumatic events that cause depression and/or PTSD even into adulthood. Untreated childhood trauma may also stem from growing up in a neglectful, abusive home, or from various forms of physical, sexual, mental or emotional abuse endured in one's youth. When depression continues for 3 weeks or longer, it is considered clinical depression, generally requiring professional intervention for healing. The untoward effects of underlying, untreated childhood trauma may be difficult to diagnose and treat, as even the person living with it may not be aware of the fact it is...

'We Interpreted The Game Very Well' - Zidane

Real Madrid coach Zinedine Zidane said his side “will suffer” in the return leg against Atletico Madrid after last night’s 3-0 first-leg deficit. 
Despite Madrid being thinking of how the return leg would be, the Real boss praised vociferously the “unique” talents of Cristiano Ronaldo after the Portugal international scored a hat-trick in the comprehensive Champions League semi-final win over their neighbor at the Bernabeu.
Ronaldo moved onto 100 European goals in the quarter-final win over Bayern Munich, when he scored five times including a treble in the second leg.
The Madrid forward again proved the man for the big occasion as holders Real moved within touching distance of another Champions League final appearance.
After heading the hosts into an early lead, albeit having looked offside in the beginning of the build-up, Ronaldo striked a second past Jan Oblak on 73 minutes and then knocked in a late third following another fleet counter.
It was a great performance which left Zidane full of praise for his men. 
“Cristiano is a goalscorer. He is unique. All the players were brilliant,” the Real Madrid coach said at his post-match press conefercne, as quoted by the official UEFA website.
“I am lucky to have these players. We try to play our football and enjoy ourselves. It works because we have great players with great attitudes.
“We knew what we had to do from the off and we played the game we wanted to. Today Isco played as a number 10 and was fantastic. We then had width with (substitutes) (Lucas) Vazquez and (Marco) Asensio. In a defensive sense we were brilliant too.”
Zidane continued: “I am happy with what I am doing here and with the players, we played a great game. We can hurt any side with our weapons.
“We started well, the first half-hour was fantastic, and we were clinical with our chances.

“We interpreted the game very well. It is not easy to score three times against such a difficult side and keep a clean sheet.”
Atletico, beaten in last season’s final by Real, rarely threatened and now all they have to do is be is try to recover from the three goals deficit at the Vicente Calderon next Wednesday night against their rivals, who defeated them in both the 2014 and 2016 Champions League finals.
Zidane, though, warned against any complacency.
“We have won nothing yet and need to continue in the way we are going,” the Real Madrid coach said.
“We still have the second leg. We will have to work hard and fight for it. We will suffer at their place for sure.
“There’s no such thing as an easy game and we need to play a perfect game at their place in order to go through.”
Zidane added: “We are content, very happy and we can enjoy it but we still have a long way to go in the Champions League and La Liga.
“I don’t think that we are euphoric and imagining ourselves in the final.”
Despite facing seemingly insurmountable disadvantage, Atletico coach Diego Simeone insists his side will never give up hope.
Atletico beat Real 4-0 at Vicente Calderon in a LaLiga match during February 2015, a result which if repeated at the return leg would see them progress against all odds.
“They won the first leg of the qualifier, but the second one still remains,” Simeone said, quoted on the official Atletico website.
“It is very complicated, but it is football. Football has unexpected things. We will play until the last drop of possibility we have.
“Now we have to try to do something impossible, but since we are called Atletico Madrid, it may be possible for us to do it.”

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