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Ptsd and sensory overload

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Barberian

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Not sure how to write this. I want to ask if anybody else has sensory overload at any time. What do I mean? It's as if the normal mental filters most people have are missing or broken for me. Most people don't hear background noises after a short time. The normal sounds of a city, traffic, lawn equipment, airplanes overhead, a train going by in the distance... The mind dismisses them as inconsiquential and no longer actively tracks them. For me it's as if ALL noises have been turned up to 100% volume. Often I can't even open a bag of snacks because the noise is too loud. Eating crunchy snacks can be unbearable at times. The clicking of my keyboard is almost unbearable right now. when I watch tv, or play my computer game, I have to have the volume so low I can bearly hear it, or it's "too loud". Just about any loud, unexpected noise scares the hell out of me, I scream "like a little girl" and it takes me a while to recover.

Sensations on my skin can give me the creepy crawlies, and yes sex can be overwhelming in not such a good way.

Sometimes if what I am watching has too much motion, I become nausious(sp?). If I get an impression that something is coming towards me quickly, particulary my face, I freak out.

Your input is welcome.
 
ty for the reply. Since I wrote this I followed up on fibromyalgia forums (got the idea while here). It seems that at least the sound sensitivity part is a not too uncommon symptom of fibro. Others report that just about any repititious sensation can be overwhelming.

Yay, not only do I have to deal with mental health issues, my nervous system is in overdrive too...
 
Yeeeah it sucks doesn't it? I have to deal with Fibro as well...i tend not to wine too much about it but I am usually in a lot of pain...almost like I'm used to the pain. And I don't know if this applies but noises tend to get to me. But i haven't noticed it ever being as bad as you describe it. Sounds like a tun of fun :O_o:
 
Hi,

I was diagnosed with "Sensory Sensitivity" at a children's rehabilitation hospital and it is much like what you described. They said they could sell me these audio tapes that would help, but it amounts to a lot of money for what equals some meditation tapes with relaxing music on it. One can get that off of YouTube. lol ;)

I am disabled with PTSD, so I have lots of free time. One thing I do is stay up late at night because it is so much more peaceful. I listen to nature sounds, relaxing music etc. and I have found that this makes the sensitivity a little less active during the day following.:)

For me, it is not just sudden or loud sounds, as is common with PTSD, but also light sensitivity, sensitivity to temperatures, chemicals etc. So if you find anything that works for your condition, please let me know so that I can give it a try. Thanks.

best of luck,
LH
 
I'm another who can relate to the whole sensory hypersensitivity issue. Usually, and typically, it is sounds that are most overwhelming and distressing for me, and this can take the form of too much volume, or simply too many competing overlapping sounds and noises all of which feel as though they are ceaselessly clamouring for my attention, an attention I can't accurately divide well enough to cope with all of them.

Strangely, I also experience a different sort of sensory overstimulation, a sort of spatial invasion of my personal space where suddenly the world can feel too close, too full of "things", too intrusive of the basic space and oxygen I need around me in order to feel safe and functional. It's hard to describe, but can drive me to virtual panic, as it can feel impossible to even accurately identify, and therefore quite impossible to escape from.

I know to recognize extremely high and escalating levels of stress and anxiety when this "spatial overload" becomes a problem, they are usually the times I need to take active measures to remove myself from the world for a time if at all possible, because nothing good will happen if I persist.

Maddog
 
Sensory overload is a real issue when I am anxious. Sounds are disturbing because they all blend together into some type of deafening roar that just increases the anxiety. I am learning just to control it. If it is too many people, I leave or ask them to leave. I also ask people to talk one at a time. (This happens at work a lot.) Background noise I turn off or turn the volume down. Anything to reduce the stress and ultimately the anxiety.

When I am depressed it is the opposite. I could be in a room with a punk concert, a million conversation, flashing strobes and I could care less. I go so far into myself that nothing touches me and I just don't care.

The extremes are amazing sometimes. Not when I am experiencing them, but looking back at them. So basically, I have to learn to control the anxiety and depression. I can also control some of the external factors that exacerbate them. But the real control starts inside.
 
Yes, yes, yes! Auditory overload for me is pretty severe and almost constant. If a tv or radio is on, if someone else is having a separate conversation, if the water pipes start making noise or someone walks down the noisy stairs - my brain automatically turns to oatmeal. Can't think, can't talk. It's really debilitating. Forget being able to work in most normal work settings. Makes me look like an idiot, too. The book by Heller, Too Loud, Too Bright, Too Fast, Too Tight, fits me perfectly - sensory processing disorder, which I've read can be a fun side effect of PTSD. I wonder if anyone has been able to alleviate any of these symptoms by working with OT's specializing in sensory processing. This is the recommended way to deal with the sensory overload, but most of them work with kids.
 
I'm another who can relate to the whole sensory hypersensitivity issue. Usually, and typically, it is sounds that are most overwhelming and distressing for me, and this can take the form of too much volume, or simply too many competing overlapping sounds and noises all of which feel as though they are ceaselessly clamouring for my attention, an attention I can't accurately divide well enough to cope with all of them.

Is it possible that the "spatial invasion" with "the world too full of things" could also be sensory overload - visual overload? I experience this less often - I have to be pretty well stressed already, but I know it well. I told one counselor in an intake interview that there was no way that I could do therapy or anything else in his office because there were WAY too many pictures and quotes and doo dads wallpapering his office. For me, the visual effect of his office was way too loud.

I have paid a lot of attention in my work and personal life to whether a person is more visual or more auditory. In my observation, if you are more visual (learn better visually, are artistic, tend to use visual language, etc), you are more likely to become auditorily overwhelmed and just unable to process auditory information. That's me.

I just went upstairs, in fact, and offered the staff person at this "crisis house" a compromise - I would take my Clonazepam early to help me calm down if she would shut the f*ck up. No, no, actually I said, "if we could lower the noise level in the house." Blank stare. "... if you could try to be aware of the volume of your voice and the fact that you're going on and on and on and I can't even escape it in the basement with the door shut." Luckily she complied and didn't seem to take too much offense.

So for me, it's only at more stressful times that visual overload kicks in, because my brain is wired to process visual stuff easily. At those times, though, I love nothing better than staring at a blank wall or ceiling - no patterns, no texture, ahh... calm. I.e, the homeless shelter director "scolded" me (yeah - I won't even go there) for not attending a mandatory house meeting. "There was a notice up about the meeting," she informed me. "There are a thousand notices about various rules and schedules and directions and procedures posted all over this building," I tried to explain. "There is no way that I could possibly take all that in and have picked up on one notice about the meeting." I think she thought I was making an excuse and didn't really believe me, but that's hers to deal with.

I've only met a very few people who are wired to take in stimuli primarily through auditory means, but they do seem more likely to crumble (in my experience) when faced with a visual task that is overwhelming for them at that moment. One primarily auditory friend would get frustrated if someone talked with her while she was performing the fun chore of picking up dog poop in the yard. The actual visual hunting was stressful because visual is not her forte and took all her mental resources to handle.

I don't know if any of this helps, but just thought I'd toss in my 2 cents.

Sensory overload is a real issue when I am anxious. Sounds are disturbing because they all blend together into some type of deafening roar that just increases the anxiety. I am learning just to control it.

Have you had any luck with "real control starting inside," and if so what methods have you utilized to achieve that control? I would love to know and be able to replicate it.

Assertiveness does help a lot in certain situations and I'm trying to practice it more and more - places and people who you can ask to slow down when they're talking or talk one at a time. I wear earplugs (which make me look like a dweeb) on the bus because of the radio and in stores because of the Musak and in-store commercials.

I've learned that, when someone is giving me directions to get somewhere, to tell them once that I cannot take in auditory directions and I'll need to write them down or draw a map. I've learned to only tell them once, and that only about half of people believe me. So many others say, "No, no, it's easy. You just go...." And I inwardly sigh and let them ramble on and on while I am able to retain none of it, because they're going to anyway. Then I go ask someone else to draw me a map.

I know this Sensory Overload or Sensory Processing Disorder is commonly treated by specialized Occupational Therapists in children. More and more I'm reading and being validated that SPD can be a by-product of PTSD, but so far I haven't found reference to OT's treating adults with Sensory Processing Disorder caused by PTSD. I'd really like to hear from anyone who knows anything about this, with either positive or negative results.

Not sure how to write this. I want to ask if anybody else has sensory overload at any time.

I'm sorry. This oversensitivity is awful. And, like PTSD in general, it's an "invisible disability." It's not like you have a cast on your arm or are in a wheelchair, so strangers and probably even people close to you have a harder time understanding why you respond the way you do. Yes?
 
~ even people close to you have a harder time understanding why you respond the way you do. Yes?

Yes. I've been having difficulty with this for over 2 years now. I used to work in the navy, with and around jet aircraft. Lots of noise, motion etc. My wife still has trouble understanding at times why I used to be able to do all that, and have such a low threashold at times now.
 
I imagine it would be, Barberian. My heart goes out to you. I am fortunate that my husband actually met me already in the deep throes of massive overload, however, I remember when I could handle so much more so my frustration level rises with each event and this part might be more crippling to our relationship than anything.

Understanding what it is help, knowing where it stems from then working on managing it before it is impossible to contain my reaction is helping. I would like to think I'm getting a bit better at it. I hope so.

Like Intothelight said, it begins inside us.
 
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