- Post starter
- #97
D
Deleted member 19804
So I've restarted EMDR and boy, did it have an effect on me. It really got to some things that I would otherwise have just repressed. I am too embarrassed to even describe them here. But the point is that I managed to tell my T and we confronted it.
At first I felt really upset, but now I'm getting back to earth. It turns out that some of my fears were completely unrealistic. I was feeling extremely ashamed of something I didn't even do wrong, thinking I had crossed boundaries that I shouldn't have. It's a huge relief to know that one of my worst fears - me being an abuser myself- has not come true. I would never hurt another person for my own gain. I couldn't enjoy said 'gain' for a second if I would. But I somehow get ideas put into my head and I blow them completely out of proportion. I no longer trust my own judgement, so the facts get twisted and misinterpreted very easily. It's freaking scary how strongly PTSD is still taking over my mind. I no longer know what is a real threat and what isn't. And with my amount of self-hate, it's an easy path to self-blame for anything. That is a very important realisation for me. Especially because it puts my feet back on the ground for a second. The world I experience isn't real, it's the PTSD version. I need EMDR to get back into the real world and to live life without the neverending, paralising fear.
At first I felt really upset, but now I'm getting back to earth. It turns out that some of my fears were completely unrealistic. I was feeling extremely ashamed of something I didn't even do wrong, thinking I had crossed boundaries that I shouldn't have. It's a huge relief to know that one of my worst fears - me being an abuser myself- has not come true. I would never hurt another person for my own gain. I couldn't enjoy said 'gain' for a second if I would. But I somehow get ideas put into my head and I blow them completely out of proportion. I no longer trust my own judgement, so the facts get twisted and misinterpreted very easily. It's freaking scary how strongly PTSD is still taking over my mind. I no longer know what is a real threat and what isn't. And with my amount of self-hate, it's an easy path to self-blame for anything. That is a very important realisation for me. Especially because it puts my feet back on the ground for a second. The world I experience isn't real, it's the PTSD version. I need EMDR to get back into the real world and to live life without the neverending, paralising fear.