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Deleted member 35429
This post is sort of adding on to the most recent thread about your experiences with dissociation. A common theme people mention is they zone out or lose time. My experience is so different that I wanted to start a new thread. I have very physical PTSD symptoms with dissociation and I'm curious if others can relate at all.
This all happens primarily in therapy. Discussion about a very specific violent trauma in adolescence is the only thing that can bring this on, but my experience starts with a feeling like I am suddenly going to faint, almost like a strong head rush. Feels like someone pulled my soul out of my body straight through the top of my head, which leads me to not be able to see well. I get sort of white or snowy looking vision. I have a hard time comprehending what is being said or finishing a thought as my mind is blank. There is literally nothing in my head - no thoughts. I have no emotions with this except at times I feel terrified. Mostly I feel nearly stoned and relaxed. I can almost watch myself talking and not feel like it's me talking. I also get a very deep body tremor and cold chill. The tremor is what alerts me to how far gone I am. I am also convinced I can't walk when this happens but I always can if pressed. Sometimes I get dizzy/double vision that is bad enough I can't work my phone or read for a while. I have had my heart rate go from 60bpm to sustaining at over 130bpm while this is happening(I actually use a pulse meter in therapy at times). I also swear my therapist looks different and seems to act different when I'm in this state. I've never read of others experiencing this... I used to be convinced he was suddenly a perpetrator but now I just see him as seeming awkward or distant. It's taken a while for me to realize it's me that sees him differently and he isn't actually different.
This experience is so physical. After reading other's experiences with dissociation being losing time and zoning out in conversations or experiencing amnesia, I truly don't think I'm having the same thing. I don't think I've ever lost time, that would be so terrifying, so sorry for those of you dealing with that.
Maybe I really am going to faint when discussing this trauma and this isn't dissociation but a physical near fainting experience. Any thoughts?
This all happens primarily in therapy. Discussion about a very specific violent trauma in adolescence is the only thing that can bring this on, but my experience starts with a feeling like I am suddenly going to faint, almost like a strong head rush. Feels like someone pulled my soul out of my body straight through the top of my head, which leads me to not be able to see well. I get sort of white or snowy looking vision. I have a hard time comprehending what is being said or finishing a thought as my mind is blank. There is literally nothing in my head - no thoughts. I have no emotions with this except at times I feel terrified. Mostly I feel nearly stoned and relaxed. I can almost watch myself talking and not feel like it's me talking. I also get a very deep body tremor and cold chill. The tremor is what alerts me to how far gone I am. I am also convinced I can't walk when this happens but I always can if pressed. Sometimes I get dizzy/double vision that is bad enough I can't work my phone or read for a while. I have had my heart rate go from 60bpm to sustaining at over 130bpm while this is happening(I actually use a pulse meter in therapy at times). I also swear my therapist looks different and seems to act different when I'm in this state. I've never read of others experiencing this... I used to be convinced he was suddenly a perpetrator but now I just see him as seeming awkward or distant. It's taken a while for me to realize it's me that sees him differently and he isn't actually different.
This experience is so physical. After reading other's experiences with dissociation being losing time and zoning out in conversations or experiencing amnesia, I truly don't think I'm having the same thing. I don't think I've ever lost time, that would be so terrifying, so sorry for those of you dealing with that.
Maybe I really am going to faint when discussing this trauma and this isn't dissociation but a physical near fainting experience. Any thoughts?