- Post starter
- #13
Hi Solara, thank you very much for your comment. I take your point with regard to the alcohol. I won't make any excuse for her, but for me it's moderated a bit by her sincere apology, showing she understood that it was wrong, and by the fact that it didn't bring up any symptoms with it. (Of course, there's still the issue of my feeling unsafe, and betrayed; you're completely right about that).
Without wanting to pry into your life, may I ask about one thing you said?
I suppose in one sense it didn't go away 'suddenly' -- there was months of work before it did, and some lingering strange behaviour even after the episodes stopped. In another it did -- after one huge blowout, no more serious episodes, just healing. I've read various medical papers about CBT and PTSD, and have come across conclusions like this: '78.3% of clients showed full recovery from their PTSD symptoms and no longer met criteria for PTSD after 1–3 sessions of imagery rescripting and reprocessing therapy [and additional CBT work].' Are you saying this isn't the case?-- or that you can 'no longer meet the criteria for PTSD' but still 'have one symptom or another for life' (just below the threshold of PTSD)?
May I also ask about dissociation? Is it uncommon with PTSD? When you say it isn't *just* PTSD, what else are you referring to?-- not challenging you on this, just trying to remedy my own ignorance.
As for her drinking: if she got very drunk, she would often become confused, paranoid, and sometimes hostile. She had a problem knowing when she had become too drunk and needed to stop drinking. And if something triggered her, she would often begin to drink, I imagine as a way of trying to numb the extreme emotions she was feeling. One consequence was that if I ever found that she had been drinking (even a relatively small amount, a couple of pints of beer, or glasses of wine), it was a very clear sign that a serious episode was on the way. On the other hand -- she didn't drink while at work, or drink in the morning, etc. -- it wasn't that sort of problem drinking.
Without wanting to pry into your life, may I ask about one thing you said?
PTSD doesn't typically manifest in such a manor and then suddenly go away with a cessation of drinking and hours of CBT a day. I'd say that MOST of us with severe PTSD have one symptom or another for life. We don't suddenly revert to being normal again.
I suppose in one sense it didn't go away 'suddenly' -- there was months of work before it did, and some lingering strange behaviour even after the episodes stopped. In another it did -- after one huge blowout, no more serious episodes, just healing. I've read various medical papers about CBT and PTSD, and have come across conclusions like this: '78.3% of clients showed full recovery from their PTSD symptoms and no longer met criteria for PTSD after 1–3 sessions of imagery rescripting and reprocessing therapy [and additional CBT work].' Are you saying this isn't the case?-- or that you can 'no longer meet the criteria for PTSD' but still 'have one symptom or another for life' (just below the threshold of PTSD)?
May I also ask about dissociation? Is it uncommon with PTSD? When you say it isn't *just* PTSD, what else are you referring to?-- not challenging you on this, just trying to remedy my own ignorance.
As for her drinking: if she got very drunk, she would often become confused, paranoid, and sometimes hostile. She had a problem knowing when she had become too drunk and needed to stop drinking. And if something triggered her, she would often begin to drink, I imagine as a way of trying to numb the extreme emotions she was feeling. One consequence was that if I ever found that she had been drinking (even a relatively small amount, a couple of pints of beer, or glasses of wine), it was a very clear sign that a serious episode was on the way. On the other hand -- she didn't drink while at work, or drink in the morning, etc. -- it wasn't that sort of problem drinking.