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News Can Watching Violent/scary Movies Cause Ptsd?

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Can I just ask why you watched these movies?

Was it from self choice or did someone make you watch?

I would of presumed that having been terrified by one film of such a genre then most people would not watch more?

I would myself consider that if someone persisted in viewing things that terrified them by choice as opposed to having an experiance thrust upon them then any resuting "trauma" would therefore be self inflicted,would this then be more a case of self harm in some way?

Not knocking your distress,just curious and have a questioning mind.
 
Thanks Dr. Phill:

I feel much better now knowing all my problems come from Hollywood.

For me it was the flying monkeys on the Wizzard of Oz, and than i will never forget Jaws. I was 10 years old and my sister took me with her on a date. My Mom though having me along would make it safe for my sister.

<Font edited by Amethist>
 
Can I just ask why you watched these movies?

Was it from self choice or did someone make you watch?

I would of presumed that having been terrified by one film of such a genre then most people would not watch more?

I would myself consider that if someone persisted in viewing things that terrified them by choice as opposed to having an experiance thrust upon them then any resuting "trauma" would therefore be self inflicted,would this then be more a case of self harm in some way?

Not knocking your distress,just curious and have a questioning mind.

First it isn't just one genre. The genres of the TV shows and movies that bother me are: drama, sci fi, fantasy, and comedy. Nobody forced me to watch. The first movie that upset me that I saw(when I was 6) I was sat down and the TV was turned on to it. But I don't consider that forced. I kept watching it the first time because my mother had always told me that if something scared me I should be a big girl and stay around it until I'm not scared anymore. So that's what I did. As for the other TV shows(except one) I never watched them unless my mother had them on. With those I could have left the room, but I had the same attitude about the shows as I did with the movie I had seen. My mother took me to another movie that triggered me when I was 9, but I already was scared of the people that were in it. As for the last TV show, at first I only watched it when my mother had it on. But by the time I was older(11) I had learned through doing internet research what exposure therapy was. I had been researching fear trying to figure out what was wrong with me. So when my mom had to work and she had me tape "The Show" as I call it. I watched it, trying to get myself over my fear. I watched "The Show" new and repeats until it went off the air trying to make myself immune to the anxiety. Of course it didn't work. I had the same instant fear reaction happen to me with an actor in 2005, by then I knew my attempts at doing exposure therapy on myself were not working so I avoided her at all costs. Before I got help in 2008,(I was hugely triggered that year and I couldn't take it anymore) I had watched the first movie that upset me two more times(once in 1999,once in 2003) in a last ditch attempt to fix myself. When I did finally get help my psychologist tried exposure therapy on me, done the correct way. It still didn't work. I didn't know I was "hurting" myself as you put it. Before I knew what exposure therapy was I knew I wasn't normal and thought maybe if I stuck it out I wouldn't be afraid anymore.
 
H89, I do believe you are confusing the SOURCE of your PTSD with your TRIGGER.

Your source is abuse, your trigger is the media. The media did NOT cause your PTSD.

But in response to the OP, I no longer listen to the likes of Dr Phil, Dr Oz, etc... The latest being Oz's fear mongering over NATURALLY OCCURING arsenic in apple juice... Lmao.
 
H89, I do believe you are confusing the SOURCE of your PTSD with your TRIGGER.

Your source is abuse, your trigger is the media. The media did NOT cause your PTSD.

But in response to the OP, I no longer listen to the likes of Dr Phil, Dr Oz, etc... The latest being Oz's fear mongering over NATURALLY OCCURING arsenic in apple juice... Lmao.

I'm really not going to argue with you on this. My abuse has nothing to do with my PTSD. The media I was exposed to DID cause my flashbacks, intrusive thoughts, startle reflex, nightmares, and panic attacks. This has been verified by my psychologist and the social security doctor.
 
HI H89

Watching a TV program, what ever it is, cannot and will not cause anyone to be diagnosed with PTSD. They may and do bring the memories of your initial Trauma, this is the trigger, not a cause.

A TV program or film cannot put you in a physical position to be in fear of loosing your life.

Your initial Trauma, as from reading your posts so far, for you this must have been abuse as a child.

Maybe if you read the following link, you may just begin to understand what we are all trying to tell you, and that your mum forcing you to watch the show, was actually a form of abuse. So the show itself, was not the cause, but the abuse could have been, as you do not force a young child to watch something that is obviously too scary for their age. Hence the watershed in the UK today, and the warnings on films.

[DLMURL]https://www.ptsdforum.org/c/wiki/posttraumatic-stress-disorder/#diagnostic-criteria-for-309-81-posttraumatic-stress-disorder[/DLMURL]
 
This is a very interesting debate. IMHO the answer is in the name; Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. I don't see how watching TV can be classified as trauma, however much you don't like or are upset by the program. I agree with above suggestions about media being a trigger to preexisting trauma issues.

H89 I note you say;
Since I was 6 years old(I'm now 22) I've suffered from PTSD and severe phobias.

and severe phobias. This does not make the phobias a part of the PTSD diagnosis. Of course none of us here is trying to belittle your situation, or question the diagnosis of your professionals. Just trying to make sense of it.

It is a shame that Dr Phil chose to mention PTSD, even though he does only say 'some qualities of'. Its a bit like saying if I cough and sneeze I have 'some qualities of TB', rather than the more likely 'some qualities of a common cold'. Not inaccurate but somewhat misleading.
 
Actually there are different kinds of trauma. Watching something as a child that is not true but scary and causes nightmares is a trauma as real to a child as any other. Until a certain stage of development children can't distinguish between reality and fantasy.

As for being a witness rather than a direct experiencer of a traumatic incident, it is even accepted by the U S Department of Veteran's Affairs that witnessing your friend's head get blown off is a traumatic enough incident to witness to cause PTSD. Strangely enough, you don't have to experience your own head being blown off, as you would be dead. Close proximity certainly heightens fear for most, however a sensitive person doesn't have to have the same proximity to experience a similar level of traumatization or shock. Therefore, witnessing something that causes you nightmares is a traumatic event. It may not cause you fullblown PTSD. Living in a dangerous neighborhood for a significant time can cause PTSD if you hear gunshots nearby frequently and fear that at any moment you could be shot or the people that care for you or you rely upon could be shot.

As for suing Hollywood, there is a rating system in place for content. If you are a very sensitive person, you better stick to G-rated fare otherwise you are assuming the risk. Imagine watching a snuff film. That could traumatic. The thing that makes it traumatic is it the visuals or the knowledge its real? The visuals of violent movies can be hyper-realistic. People get numbed to the level of violence and gore in movies. Believe it or not that numbing is a form of PTSD. However it is not problematic for most people except those who seek something that will continue to stimulate them beyond their current "jadedness" It's the same numbness to the horrors of war and killing. It's why people who play extremely violent games can murder other human beings and real think nothing of it (see the various murders by teens within the last 10 years that involved groups). Depersonalization is a very real symptom and can be an entire disorder in itself. As for movies, they can be very real such as "Se7en." When it came out in theaters, many found it quite disturbing to the point that they got sick or had to leave the theater before the movie was over. The scariest thing is that in reality things like this are done in reality. There really are people who kill innocents for pleasure, that enjoy causing pain to others and do so because they can get away with it. So its not so divorced from reality.
 
Really the difference between the PTSD-like symptoms and PTSD is more of duration rather than quality. So its less of a difference than the difference between TB and a common cold. You don't have to have preexisting trauma to experience trauma as a witness. People experienced trauma and were diagnosed with PTSD from watching two airplanes slam into a building over and over again over the period of one day on television.
 
Really the difference between the PTSD-like symptoms and PTSD is more of duration rather than quality. So its less of a difference than the difference between TB and a common cold. You don't have to have preexisting trauma to experience trauma as a witness. People experienced trauma and were diagnosed with PTSD from watching two airplanes slam into a building over and over again over the period of one day on television.

*Claps* Thank you! Someone finally gets what I'm saying, well sort of. I knew perfectly well what I was seeing wasn't real. That's not the issue. But me stupidly watching the TV and movies over and over trying to get myself over my phobias did do me damage that will last for the rest of my life. Let me make this 100% clear: I AM PHOBIC OF THE ACTORS PHYSICAL FACIAL APPEARANCES! I am also phobic of my great grandmother's physical facial appearance.
 
I can't even begin, here. Just, three points:

1. Phobia is not equal to PTSD. My wife has entomophobia. That is not the same thing as having a post-traumatic stress reaction to insects or bugs. She has never had a primary traumatic experience with bugs. (And please keep in mind, that phobias can appear even with a primary occurrence, but a phobia is once again separate from PTSD). But, every single time she sees one (from a fruit fly to a bumblebee) she goes into what everybody here has experienced when they become triggered. Panicked, freaked out. When the bug leaves, or is killed, she will remain freaked out and upset for about an hour or so until she is sure it is gone. And yes, this does interfere with her life. But. She does not have PTSD. She has a phobia. A phobia is an irrational fear reaction to benign stimuli. H89 has had a phobia of actors/actresses since they were 6. They have never had a traumatic experience with those actors or actresses. They seem to have the same reaction in regards to common facial features. This is perfectly valid. But it is not PTSD.

2. Desensitization is not equal to PTSD. Desensitization is natural. Exposure therapy is a form of desensitization. Desensitization is not a symptom of PTSD. Desensitization has nothing to do with PTSD. Everybody experiences desensitization. It is a pre-programmed neurological normality. Desensitization is different than numbing in that numbing is a direct uncontrolled response to something perceived as harmful by the brain. Desensitization does not have to involve the element of harm, only happens with specific things, and occurs by way of slowly reducing the impact of the images/sounds/words/things/etc that you see over being slowly exposed to them again and again. Desensitization is not global. You cannot desensitize to everything. You can numb to everything.

3. And finally, I feel like I need to remind that video games, movies, television, the news, newspapers, books, comics, art, paintings, etc are not equal to real life. A person does not know what it was like to have been there on Sept 11 just because they watched it on the television. A person does not know what it is like to have experienced war just because they play a war videogame. A person does not know what it is like to see blood and gore just because they saw it in a painting. Insinuating that it is similar is a cognitive dissonance of the highest degree. That is why snuff films will produce a different response than a horror movie. That is why war produces a different result than a war video-game.

I am seriously confounded with all of this post. I find it ridiculous. Watching someone get shot on a television show, on the news, hearing about it - it is different than it is watching it in real life. Hearing it in real life. Experiencing that experience. It is just a completely separate thing. Watching it on a movie is like the difference between a drawing of a stick person on a piece of paper, versus a real 3D Human being. Do I find the phobia ridiculous? No. Do I find H89 ridiculous? No. Phobias are unrelated to trauma. They can be a result of trauma, but many phobias are irrational. I believe there are irrational phobias, I believe some people are more easily traumatized than others, but, the suggestion that movies and television are a form of primary trauma is completely devastatingly lost on me.

By the very nature of the DSM criteria for PTSD, watching a movie or a television show does not in any way fit with the first and most important criterion, meaning that one has to have experienced a threat to one's self. Television is not threatening. Not even to a child. On a very basic level, a child understands that what is seen on television is not reality. They may have nightmares, get upset, fear the monsters in their closet, etc. But, when their cognitive abilities develop enough for them to comprehend reality, that fear dissipates. They understand it isn't real. It isn't traumatizing. (I will concede that watching reports or photographs of real events can be more traumatizing and triggering than any other media, but again, not sufficient to cause PTSD).

That is why a fear of television is irrational, therefore classified as an irrational phobia. I have a friend who states she was triggered and traumatized by viewing a movie that closely mirrored her trauma in real life. But, once again, that real life trauma existed before she watched the movie that triggered her. Had it not existed, I sincerely doubt that the movie would have impacted her at all as an adult, unless she developed an irrational phobia toward it.

The first criterion for PTSD reads as follows (taken from Wikipedia once again):

This must have involved both (a) loss of "physical integrity", or risk of serious injury or death, to self or others, and (b) a response to the event that involved intense fear, horror or helplessness (or in children, the response must involve disorganized or agitated behavior). (The DSM-IV-TR criterion differs substantially from the previous DSM-III-R stressor criterion, which specified the traumatic event should be of a type that would cause "significant symptoms of distress in almost anyone," and that the event was "outside the range of usual human experience.")

I don't mean to attack anyone in any way. Obviously I'm a bit pissed. I just find all of this completely unreal. Maybe that is just me being triggered, I don't know. It comes off as very invalidating, that is all I have to say.
 
There is a difference between symptoms being 'triggered' by media vs. media giving you PTSD.

The first is factual, the second is nonsense. People should not try and confuse the two... as IntoTheLight answered... trigger is not cause, the prior abuse was the cause of PTSD, not the media act that is triggering the symptoms.

You cannot GET PTSD from media, you can only GET PTSD from an actual traumatic event that you personally experienced in real life via the defined diagnostic methods.

The DSM V has even gone as far to ensure people do not confuse this with second hand information, ie. confused with grief vs. experienced.
 
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