Thank you
@joeylittle , somewhat better on e-mail but I am not one for journalling.
Yes
@Tanishq , thoughtfulness is important if it's serious. Though I understand it's more likely to feel more serious to the person trying to express it, rightfully or wrongfully (it's difficult for a reason!). I no longer have the capacity to accomplish such things on cue however. I suppose that's part of why therapy has always impressed me as having an inherently limiting or almost 'backwards'/ limiting structure; that is, to be able to do so on cue becomes the weather report delivery or perhaps just agreeing (even if one is not convinced) simply to get it over with. Even if it takes the same amount of time, the requirement to 'accomplish' it is impossible for me any more.
But it's ok, I don't see the need to talk about it now. It wasn't for that reason, but a larger one, but there's no point in talking about something I lack the ability to change anyway. I used to never understand how people could reconcile not doing that, kind of picking-and-choosing what they can do & what they can't, but now I understand I guess.
I think I've learned something about that. Often (myself included) you hear on the forums here about people feeling they don't belong and such, I actually think there is a (likely unbreechable) chasm of lack of understanding. Perhaps there are people too without ptsd that feel that, how am I to know? I have never lived a 'different' life so I can't say.
But I think I know now what a defining moment means. I used to think it must refer to big life events, for example the birth of a child. Then I thought it was moments of understanding- I think that's partially correct. What I think now, is that it is the understanding that meshes also with understanding of one's own self: their (my) history, 'stuff', limitations, feelings, and whatever is true to each of ourselves, our realities. No matter what other's think, or even feel, etc, about our decisions or choices (because of our realities), that comes from their lives & their understanding, not our (my) life nor my feelings nor my realities. Even if they don't or can't understand, or are against my decisions, or condemn me (for my choices). Understanding it within that light is different. I have always tried to honour others' choices or needs, or accommodate them, to the exclusion of acknowledging my limitations or nature or realities. But then, I end up expecting myself to be 'normal' & beating myself up for what I can't do or can't understand or can't reconcile within myself or simply can't accomplish. Always letting someone down, or letting myself down instead, in a way.
But really, it doesn't matter what choices I make, that (as it is with every person) is simply each person's own business, it needn't be shared or attempted to if it can't be expressed or understood or reconciled or 'fixed' or changed. Different people, different histories, different lives, different choices. Maybe not relatable at all.
Perhaps in future generations there will be more knowledge, or more understanding, or somewhat different perspectives, who knows.