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Poll When Did the Symptoms of PTSD First Appear, After the Initial Traumatic Event?

When Did The Symptoms of PTSD First Appear, After the Initial Traumatic Event?


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It's hard for me to figure out how long it took because I was very young when it started. Pretty much my entire childhood was a mess. A huge abusive mess. My parents split up when I was 2 and my mother was really abusive in the worst ways possible. I started having nightmares not long after my father moved out. No surprise there as my first clear memory is age 2 watching my mother throw things at my father as he's running out of the house and she wouldn't let him say goodbye to my brother and I.

Even as a toddler, the only time I really slept well, or at least consistently, was when I was with my dad or his family members. Until about first grade.

My dad was in and out of my life when I was really young because my mother was either keeping him from having his visitation or his economic situation took him to other cities to work.

When I was six I got molested by an older cousin. I've told maybe two people about that and none of them were family members or therapists. Just really close, trusted friends. I couldn't even admit that it happened until adulthood and no one in my family knows.

When I was 8 I was molested by a younger cousin who was stronger than I was. A few family members knew about it but instructed me to keep my mouth shut. I never told a therapist. My dad still doesn't know about it.

Until I was 9 and my dad was back in my life consistently, I was subject to my mother's abusive whims as well as those of her friends, her family, and whoever she happened to be sleeping with at the time. I would get pulled out of my bed in the middle of the night by my hair, stripped down, and beaten for sport. My mom and her friends thought this was fun. To beat up on a little kid. It was so sick and I felt so helpless.

When I was four, I remember climbing under the bunk bed I shared with my brother and wishing that it would fall on me and I would die. I also started getting migraines when I was four. I got the first one after we moved in with my youngest brother of my mom's kids (there are five of us all together but we don't have all of the same parents) and about a year after that, he molested me too. No one knows about that. Not even my little brother.

By the time I moved in with my dad when I was 10, I was damaged beyond repair. I was a child dealing with real life problems and I never got to be a kid. So I think I probably started getting the symptoms around the time it started, but as I said, I was very very young, so it's hard to say exactly how long it took. My dad tried to get me a lot of help and twice during middle school I was sent briefly to a psych ward for adolescents. In both of them I was sexually attacked by older children and verbally abused by staff.

Really, it's just been a huge roller coaster.

After I went off meds at age 15, by my own choice, I started improving on the night terrors and my insomnia subsided a bit. My dad and I didn't get along, but I knew he'd never actually hurt me, so I felt a lot safer. I got on this religious kick that kept me out of trouble and I think, for the time, was beneficial to me. No matter how ridiculous I think it was looking back.

But I was traumatized once more when I went to ministry school after graduation. No one ever hurt me physically, but we also weren't allowed to touch at all. It was really more of a huge mindfk and severe psychological and emotional abuse. Things that were seen as normal outside of this organization were abominable to god, or sinful, or just downright unnatural. Or however they decided to term it. When my semester was over I went home and I didn't go back and I cried most of the drive back to my hometown.

And the nightmares started back up again.

My most recent flare up is post-divorce. I was married to an horribly abusive man who pretty much treated me as though I were a pet/slave in a cage. I wasn't allowed anything. And at the beginning of this, just after I realized I was trapped, I got pregnant. And lost it. And that was a huge downward spiral.

So now, I'm an egg away from cracking and sought out this site to maybe find some moral support in all this. It's worse than it's ever been.

That was a lot. Sorry!
 
Oh yea, hypersensitivity, my watcher. I can't help but keep track of every person within sight or hearing. Now that I'm tired I don't keep as sharp track, but I used to have a photographic memory, and I'd keep obsessive tabs on everyone. I can still feel people if they are in the same room. Like, I don't know how to describe it, it's like a buzzing under my skin in their direction, and the closer they get, if I'm not comfortable, the more it spreads and prickles.
I do that too!!! It's almost impossible for anyone to sneak up on me because of the habits or instincts I developed as a child when I was being abused. As far as I know PTSD is the only thing that's wrong with me so I would guess that it would be under that. I'm not a professional, though, so of course it's just speculation.
 
18 months. My first memory is of a nightmare that dealt with my trauma. But most symptoms disappeared for 15 years after the abuse ended. So I could answer a couple different ways.
 
Childhood traumas caused me to be an adult child and some symptoms were there from as early as I recall.

Having dealt with other traumas throughout my life, I became numb to pain.

30 odd years later, my daughter was SA. I found pain unlike anything I have ever felt. Suicidal and broken.

Trying to fix myself though, it took a breakdown to start to recover.

Healing is painful though...
 
I do that too!!! It's almost impossible for anyone to sneak up on me because of the habits or instincts I developed as a child when I was being abused. As far as I know PTSD is the only thing that's wrong with me so I would guess that it would be under that. I'm not a professional, though, so of course it's just speculation.

I get that too. Every time someone laughs/sighs/fidgits/shares a glance/moves in any way around me, I know it and I'm immediately trying to decipher their intentions.
 
Rainbow, how do you keep this from interfering with your social life? I have some fairly observant friends who have called me paranoid when they've noticed this. If I'm in a social situation and I'm not stoned, it's a bit obvious to them that I'm uncomfortable, no matter how I try to hide it.
 
Well, the few friends I have know I'm 'weird' and also know I have psychological issues. I don't think they realize that I'm constantly analyzing their every single move, since I don't mention it.

I analyze every move I make as if I were in a poker game, trying to balance everything I perceive from them with every little movement I make. Hence I have few friends because this is an exhausting activity.

I often worry that my anxiety (and sometimes outright panic) is visible, but when I mention it sometimes (in a carefully calculated offhanded 'we all get nervous sometimes' way) the people I ask seem genuinely surprised to find out I was stressed out at all.

The only people who can actually see my anxiety are the people I have actively informed (my mom, my dad (on some occasions)my grandma (now passed) and my best friend from high-school who I rarely speak to anymore) and the only other person I know who has PTSD (the mother of my best friend from high-school) who seemed to understand instantly. I started telling some people because I tend to appear somewhat rude and haughty, even accusational when I'm freaking out, and my dad has a push-button fuse.

I have no idea how I do it, but I think I developed it in elementary school as a way to appear strong to those who tried to break me.
 
I get that completely.

Out of my active friends now (I have a LOT of close friends who live in other states...it's kind of a thing lol) they know I'm "weird" too and some of them have known me long enough to know that I grew up really rough, but they don't know to what extent. My first boyfriend, even, is still a friend of mine and was my friend during some really hard parts. Even at almost 10 years of friendship he doesn't know all that much from before I met him.

Luckily, most of my friends group is nerds, who come with their own set of quirks and social anxieties. But some of them do point it out. Often, people will pack a bowl just because they notice I'm antsy. While that's appreciated, I feel really awkward that they even notice to begin with.

I cover mine up with humor. When I'm in a social setting, which is fairly often as I do like parties and bars and things (most of the time,) I am the token funny person. There are a few of these, thank goodness, because having all the attention would bother me, but if I can make people laugh, it makes me think they don't notice my nerves.

This isn't true, however, as a two of my friends have pointed out to me recently. Threw a wrench in my coping mechanism so now I'm reclusing. Bleh.
 
This isn't true, however, as a two of my friends have pointed out to me recently. Threw a wrench in my coping mechanism so now I'm reclusing. Bleh.

Yup! Since I got out of high-school I've been less and less functional which is the same as wearing a huge "I'm totally not coping well!" sign on my chest to my friends. They stop believing the facade because finally the facts are sitting right in front of them.

Also, the few times I've smoked up (and gotten much affect, for a while there nothing happened) or gotten drunk recently I've been in the presence of a particular person who makes me act as though my emotions were on a tilt-a-whirl (and with lowered inhibitions, BLAM! Sobbing, laughing, motor-mouth nutcase!). :cry::laugh::roflmao:

So now I'm freaked out to drink or smoke much anymore because it brings back the memories of those moments. Probably healthier in the one way, but having these extra triggers puts a major damper on my social lack-of-skills-to-start-with.
 
I was told I had ptsd 6 yrs ago, last week I found out its complex PTSD. Every day is a fight, a stuggle but everynight is the worst. After 10yrs of hell, I'm still going through it, 7yrs after escaping from it the fight just gets harder and harder.
 
I'm confused about when my PTSD symptoms first started. I've had multiple severe traumas. The first being as a child and I had insomnia since then, bad dreams about the trauma. I've always had depression and anxiety. Through my 20's these symptoms worsened but I still worked and functioned. But it's during the last 12 months that things have become severe with the flashbacks, memories returning after 20 years, vivid horrible dreams, and the intolerance to noise, social situations, unable to work, inability to cope, concentrate, difficulty holding conversations, inability to do things that were simple to me like scrapbooking and alot more. So, have I wonder if have always had PTSD, but it has only manifested in a severe way more recently...
 

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