- Post starter
- #121
F
Fogej
I realised lately that I can actually get triggered if I feel like someone is faking mental illness, PTSD, depression etc. I actually kind of hate myself for it, but I also do think you can tell.
I get triggered as it just seems to add more weight to the invalidation of me.
i have a friend who I feel feigned mental illness.
The one main reason it felt unreal to me is that she never lost trust in others, and she could come out of "isolating" very quickly if it was something she wanted to do.
But who am I to judge another?
Still it's hard hearing someone talk of how they suffered what you have lived and you can see it hasn't really affected them on a deep level - and you know if they really had suffered it they would not have remained unchanged. And that can stir up so much grief at the changes in me and the losses in my life.
And then I wonder what's wrong with me that I have let this thing affect me so greatly
And then I feel angry that it feels somehow glamorous to claim PTSD when it is the furthest thing from glamorous I can imagine if you're actually living it.
And they would know that if they were living it.
But it's like everything; you don't know until you know. It's like calling sorrow depression - two very different things, but until you have depression you don't know that!
SoMe people want the attention - maybe that's a sign in itself! I think most people with PTSD kind of want to disappear, blend into the wallpaper.
I'm generalising I know...
I get triggered as it just seems to add more weight to the invalidation of me.
i have a friend who I feel feigned mental illness.
The one main reason it felt unreal to me is that she never lost trust in others, and she could come out of "isolating" very quickly if it was something she wanted to do.
But who am I to judge another?
Still it's hard hearing someone talk of how they suffered what you have lived and you can see it hasn't really affected them on a deep level - and you know if they really had suffered it they would not have remained unchanged. And that can stir up so much grief at the changes in me and the losses in my life.
And then I wonder what's wrong with me that I have let this thing affect me so greatly
And then I feel angry that it feels somehow glamorous to claim PTSD when it is the furthest thing from glamorous I can imagine if you're actually living it.
And they would know that if they were living it.
But it's like everything; you don't know until you know. It's like calling sorrow depression - two very different things, but until you have depression you don't know that!
SoMe people want the attention - maybe that's a sign in itself! I think most people with PTSD kind of want to disappear, blend into the wallpaper.
I'm generalising I know...