- Post starter
- #97
I
Izac
Honestly, it's usually not hard to spot. They tag themselves as 'sufferer'. They go to great lengths to explain how their specific experience has caused PTSD, and also generally admit that they are missing some 'typical' (i.e. required) elements/symptoms. They have not been to a doctor.Who are these "PTSD malingering types"???
They are here looking for confirmation or validation that they have PTSD.
It's easy to tell them what a criterion A trauma is, and ask if they've got any of that in their past - because it might be a reason for PTSD being activated by whatever recent event set things off. And many of them confirm that, yes, they do - even though they weren't thinking of it as being involved in what was happening to them, now.
So, that's a good thing. No-one is being invalidated, there. And yes, of course they need to go to a doctor, but I never see anyone here telling someone overtly that they don't have PTSD, when they do meet the criteria as to possibly having PTSD.
Or, it all goes down a different road. The person believes they should have PTSD because they experienced a trauma, but aren't really having the symptoms - so they are scratching to justify PTSD, where the proper diagnosis might be depression, anxiety, bi-polar, or one of many others.
These people don't want to hear that they probably don't have PTSD, because they believe that PTSD happens for a reason, and those other mental illnesses are somehow worse, or carry more stigma. They would rather have PTSD as an explanation for their depression, anxiety, mood swings, etc.
Personally - I'd rather see them get the right help. They can get some help here on specific symptoms, absolutely. But not all the right kinds of help. That's the generous side.
And, the selfish side? I'd rather not read long, strong, prescriptive advice from someone who does not have PTSD. It ends up being invalidating at least half the time. Because the non-PTSD person can say, 'I ate better and it all went away', or 'I understand because that's exactly what happened to me, except I wasn't in combat, I was battling my ex'.
Really? one or two or ten posts, OK. A hundred, a thousand, and it's frustrating.
So: I'd rather ask, 'Have you been formally diagnosed'? and at minimum, know who I'm dealing with.
This place is only as useful as what gets put into it. So, I'd prefer it if MyPTSD had mostly PTSD experience put into it. I don't think there's anything wrong with that.