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- #37
Sweetpea76
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Did he have these behaviors before his Crit. A trauma?
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This ^^^^ is soooo me! The first time my t said I had PTSD I yelled at her. Actually yelled at her. Because no - I was not that weak. I was not that pitiful. I didn't hide under the desk every time there was a backfiring car. Because that was what I thought PTSD meant. That it somehow made me less than what I was before. That it meant I had to be violent and scared and unpredictable. It took her about six months to get it thru my head that it didn't mean I was weak. It meant I had lived through something horrible and found coping mechanisms that worked then, but not now.but then he had doubts and she did it again, but told him it was the last time she would discuss it with him because it wasn‘t good for him to keep discussing it...
You ask yourself why it is so imporant to know the difference. The treatments are relativly similar. Or are you really just looking for a different label because one is somehow better than the other?But how can one know if this is a ptsd negative idea about the world or an OCD negative idea about the world?
ahhhh! This may be the confusion bout the ptsd diagnosis -- the definition of "fight response".vets always have a “fight response“
ignore it - because you probably wont talk me out of it. My T sometimes can't talk me out of it - and she's got training! At this point hubby just rolls his eyes at me LOL. But. If I give you specific instructions based on what I'm thinking I expect you to follow them because chances are I am seeing something you aren't. Or I'm imagining I'm seeing something. So if I say - go in that door and turn left right now...just do it. We can sort it out later if it was true or not.What do you like others to do when you have those kind of thoughts like “they think I am deaf and crazy“ or “everybody is gonna die“
Not in my mind, no they are not.OCD and ptsd are very similar, aren‘t they?
I need them not to be validating those thoughts. The indecision is part of the symptomology.What do you like others to do when you have those kind of thoughts like “they think I am deaf and crazy“ or “everybody is gonna die“
this!!! ^^^^^ exactlyWhat does doubting the diagnoses do for a sufferer: It is usually a form of denial and minimising. Distancing from the reality of the trauma. It can be to do with shame about having the diagnoses and not being stronger, It can be a form of avoidance, it can be a result of unhelpful comments heard and internalised. etc etc etc