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SinceAChildPTSD
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Right, @ghotiff, so I guess Complex PTSD would be more accurate for my speculation
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........Now there is growing awareness that PTSD can also result from an accumulation of many small, individually non-life-threatening incidents. To differentiate the cause, the term "Complex PTSD" is used. The reason that Complex PTSD is not in DSM-IV is that the definition of PTSD in DSM-IV was derived using only people who had suffered a single major life-threatening incident such as Vietnam veterans and survivors of disasters.
Actually, it is recognized that you can get PTSD from "low" trauma such as "normal" bullying.
While there is a diagnostic criteria for PTSD which shares some of the characteristics of C-PTSD( eg dissociation) to my knowledge complex PTSD wasn't included in the DSM-V.As someone correctly diagnosed with C-PTSD (which fortunately has been included in the DSM-V)
Nope.so I guess Complex PTSD would be more accurate for my speculation
Then why don't you believe your psychiatrist? You have been diagnosed. There is no point in trying to argue yourself into a diagnosis.I am already seeing a good psychiatrist. My official diagnoses are Generalized Anxiety and OCD
I think the clinical term for all this is "really shitty childhood". Many people have them, unfortunately. I can identify, my childhood (when I look back on it) was a really big mess, and I can see how events there shaped most of my beliefs about myself, all of which are negative. I want to commend you on recognizing that the treatment this child (you, I'm assuming) received was not justified, and caused damage. Being able to see that is a really important part of what some therapists call "re-parenting" - essentially, re-building your sense of self from childhood on up.Obviously, rebukes will keep on coming and this child will receive an increasingly negative reputation - some justified and some unjustified. Ultimately, the amount of unjustified rebukes add up and so does the shame. Negative memories bring extreme anger, stuttering and avoidance.
This quote has been picked apart already, I'd just like to add - big-T Trauma (the criterion A traumas) aren't scaled 'high' to 'low', because the neurological effect is the same on the brain regardless. And so, the very notion that there is such a thing as 'lesser' trauma that can lead to PTSD is the same as saying a badly sprained ankle should be treated like and will heal like a broken one. It's a good example because, in terms of pain, healing time, etc, bad sprains and breaks are actually each very difficult in their own way. one is not medically worse than the other - but they are altogether different physiologically.it is recognized that you can get PTSD from "low" trauma such as "normal" bullying.
Actually, no it is not. Those diagnosed with PTSD from bullying, you will actually find that the bullying was anything but "low" or "normal" and when you talk to those bullied and have PTSD from it, you will hear beaten repeatedly, threatened death, sexual assault, assault, torture and so forth, all within their details.Actually, it is recognized that you can get PTSD from "low" trauma such as "normal" bullying.
That information is far from accurate... anything but accurate, in actuality. It is personally biased towards an agenda and cause, and does not state what is stated within the texts themselves.From bully online...