littleoc
VIP Member
Such as, you don’t behave like everyone else with PTSD, so you think you might be faking it?
My doctor, when I was 13, diagnosed me in under thirty seconds with PTSD, without really talking to me. They told me the symptoms and I followed suit. I felt like I was faking it and it bothers me now when people don’t have the exact same kinds of behavior as I do.
I think this goes back to my ex. She would tell me my life was too dramatic, so I needed to tone it down, otherwise she would know I was faking it.
But then she’d just call me insane.
I’ve been having thoughts like that since I was first diagnosed. Because the doctor didn’t really want to see me. I was in a hopistal setting for protection while I explained that my father was abusing us, which put me at risk for getting put into the foster care system. My chart says that I reacted by going into psychosis. My sister started saying I was the one kid who had to go to the “funny house” because she thought it was funny that I was crazy.
I’m sorry this is so childish, I’m supposing I’m just looking for validation. I’ve talked to therapists (over more than a ten-year-long period) about feeing like I’m faking it but they just tell me it’s “obvious with my history” even if they haven’t known me for more than a month, which is ridiculous because a history isn’t enough to diagnose someone. How do they know I’m not just lying like my dad does about everything? My ex told me I lied every single day, a psychopathic compulsive liar, and I really can’t shake it today. I feel like I’m supposed to be acting going to the grocery store scares me, when I know logically it doesn’t because it was a safe place as a child. But it feels like proof that I’m lying.
Does anyone else get this way? Should I just keep bothering therapists with it?
Thanks for reading, I appreciate it even if you have nothing to say
My doctor, when I was 13, diagnosed me in under thirty seconds with PTSD, without really talking to me. They told me the symptoms and I followed suit. I felt like I was faking it and it bothers me now when people don’t have the exact same kinds of behavior as I do.
I think this goes back to my ex. She would tell me my life was too dramatic, so I needed to tone it down, otherwise she would know I was faking it.
But then she’d just call me insane.
I’ve been having thoughts like that since I was first diagnosed. Because the doctor didn’t really want to see me. I was in a hopistal setting for protection while I explained that my father was abusing us, which put me at risk for getting put into the foster care system. My chart says that I reacted by going into psychosis. My sister started saying I was the one kid who had to go to the “funny house” because she thought it was funny that I was crazy.
I’m sorry this is so childish, I’m supposing I’m just looking for validation. I’ve talked to therapists (over more than a ten-year-long period) about feeing like I’m faking it but they just tell me it’s “obvious with my history” even if they haven’t known me for more than a month, which is ridiculous because a history isn’t enough to diagnose someone. How do they know I’m not just lying like my dad does about everything? My ex told me I lied every single day, a psychopathic compulsive liar, and I really can’t shake it today. I feel like I’m supposed to be acting going to the grocery store scares me, when I know logically it doesn’t because it was a safe place as a child. But it feels like proof that I’m lying.
Does anyone else get this way? Should I just keep bothering therapists with it?
Thanks for reading, I appreciate it even if you have nothing to say