I think she is very much missing or misunderstanding the situational uncertainty trigger
@recoveringfromptsd said, as you said
@Stephernovas about your brain and body's response.
Because 'life' constantly involves situational uncertainty constantly. Much anxiety, including social anxiety, etc, comes from that. But it doesn't involve lived experience of uncertain situations and where will it go from there, wherein (you) are 1) discarded, and help or care or protection is absent, withheld or removed (including, but not limited to, abandonment and neglect as a child) 2 ) you are required to perform or accomplish without regard to symptoms/ reality/ limitations or adjustments (we hide most everything everyday as is; in it's extreme it's denial; equally if without resources we are accustomed to having to do it ourself, prehaps since a child, and we know how we felt and how well that turned out (sic) ) , and 3) are faced with violence or trauma introduced with the situational uncertainty (adult and child abuse, of all forms; stalking; threats; coercion; etc), and the consequences/ backlash/ punishment and risk, and no protection or sufficient resources for defense.
If you've lived those things, and more, the meaning of it, the reactions to it, and what it signifies for you, are very different. If that makes sense. To the average person uncertainty brings anxiety, maybe disappointment, discomfort or maybe a low level of dread; with ptsd it's a 5-alarm fire. It's what is believed, felt, perceived, and feared, that will follow the uncertainty, that is the experential reality, far and beyond what someone without it experiences; as
@Abstract said, this is 'now'.
Most of the time when the conclusion is, it's just 'try harder', something critical has been missed. JMHO.
Hugs to you. :hug: