joeylittle
Sponsor
@Scarface - I'm going to try again, here.
Why are committing to finding a truly excellent surgeon and finding a proficient trauma therapist mutually exclusive?
I'm not going to tell you to accept your face. I'm not going to tell you that other people have it worse, or that your pain isn't valid, or that your suffering is less deserving of support.
But why can't you do both?
When you look in the mirror and see the gaping hole that your wound was - well, I don't think that's actually going to go away even after a surgeon does a perfect reconstruction. Your mind - your PTSD mind - will still see that gaping wound.
I know you've tried therapy - but you don't seem to have actually done any of the recognized treatments for PTSD.
Seeing a therapist isn't the key - doing trauma processing is. Kind of like how microdermabrasion wasn't the key - you need a reconstruction.
Does that make sense? And if I'm missing it, could you help me see?
I just don't think it's an either-or. I think you need both.
Why are committing to finding a truly excellent surgeon and finding a proficient trauma therapist mutually exclusive?
I'm not going to tell you to accept your face. I'm not going to tell you that other people have it worse, or that your pain isn't valid, or that your suffering is less deserving of support.
But why can't you do both?
When you look in the mirror and see the gaping hole that your wound was - well, I don't think that's actually going to go away even after a surgeon does a perfect reconstruction. Your mind - your PTSD mind - will still see that gaping wound.
I know you've tried therapy - but you don't seem to have actually done any of the recognized treatments for PTSD.
Seeing a therapist isn't the key - doing trauma processing is. Kind of like how microdermabrasion wasn't the key - you need a reconstruction.
Does that make sense? And if I'm missing it, could you help me see?
I just don't think it's an either-or. I think you need both.