Feel that one!
I’ve come to learn it’s largely a function of geography, with professionals targeting their practices towards the most common traumas for the area/region.
It took me
years to find a T who specialized in my trauma history… when you can’t swing a cat without hitting T’s in spades in other regions, who do.
can't see a new therapist for insurance reasons but also because its too mentally draining. no support groups in my area. atp I literally have no idea what to do anymore
My first go-round with PTSD I didn’t see a therapist, at all. I “just” didn’t like my life, or who I was, so I set about changing both.
It worked.
Took me some time, and I was reinventing the wheel an awful lot, and falling into what -come to find- are easily avoided problems, because I didn’t know they existed, much less how to side step them, but? It still worked.
Having sites like this, with all of the resources of collected knowledge (first hand experience, articles, books, etc.), at our disposal? Is a helluva step up from winging it / reinventing the wheel… until / if you find a pro to work with you one on one… and these resources become ancillary to individualized focus.
A couple good places to start?
Nearly a decade ago (2006) I wrote The PTSD Cup Explanation, a simple view of how PTSD causes symptoms in day-to-day life. This article is an update to that original piece. Regardless of the type of trauma endured, the PTSD Cup does not change, deviate or apply differently to your circumstance...
www.myptsd.com
& the entire articles section (below) to read/work on whatever strikes your fancy!
www.myptsd.com