Just thinking out loud and looking for opinions. I'm all for mental health recovery- or so I thought (bear with me if you can, some of this may be semantics). But something came to me; logically, 1. ptsd is not curable at this point (but manageable, if all goes well), 2. I have been physically ill, have chronic pain, but neither determines my happiness, and 3. I've helped many others by doing what is counter-intuitive, or counter-intuitively responding (compared to what experts say you 'should' do (with the caveat 'within reason'/ when I feel it a better/ best choice, eg forgiveness/ kindness ) ) .
Could it be, that the concept of 'recovery' could hold us back? Rather, (just speaking for myself), accepting the ptsd 'as is' (as I do my bad back/ shoulders etc, or eg a cancer diagnosis etc, if I get one), doing the best to manage it (but not looking for recovery- but peace, joy, productivity & being comfortable in my own skin & a being half-decent person being more my goals, personally).
Because before I accepted ptsd as the cause, & frankly even after, I've always loved a lot, etc. And worked on other things not specifically related to my mental health but felt better, stronger- happy- when I did.
Not just a question of my identity being influenced by ptsd, but rather, maybe it's better for myself to think, "OK so I'm a little 'crazy' (no offence meant- for me it kind of applies, lol), but it's just 'me'. Me who is also loving/ annoying/ stubborn/ patient/ kind/ big hearted (I've been told)/ introspective/ loves dancing & starlight/ & dogs & babies eats cookies & salads/ has a bad temper/ doesn't hold grudges/ melts down sometimes etc etc etc"?
Like @Recovery4Me said, paraphrasing, "we do have beautiful hearts & souls, despite pain?"
What do you think? What if we viewed it as we do our physical stuff? And carry on, & accommodate? (Leave some of the questions & baggage behind?)
Could it be, that the concept of 'recovery' could hold us back? Rather, (just speaking for myself), accepting the ptsd 'as is' (as I do my bad back/ shoulders etc, or eg a cancer diagnosis etc, if I get one), doing the best to manage it (but not looking for recovery- but peace, joy, productivity & being comfortable in my own skin & a being half-decent person being more my goals, personally).
Because before I accepted ptsd as the cause, & frankly even after, I've always loved a lot, etc. And worked on other things not specifically related to my mental health but felt better, stronger- happy- when I did.
Not just a question of my identity being influenced by ptsd, but rather, maybe it's better for myself to think, "OK so I'm a little 'crazy' (no offence meant- for me it kind of applies, lol), but it's just 'me'. Me who is also loving/ annoying/ stubborn/ patient/ kind/ big hearted (I've been told)/ introspective/ loves dancing & starlight/ & dogs & babies eats cookies & salads/ has a bad temper/ doesn't hold grudges/ melts down sometimes etc etc etc"?
Like @Recovery4Me said, paraphrasing, "we do have beautiful hearts & souls, despite pain?"
What do you think? What if we viewed it as we do our physical stuff? And carry on, & accommodate? (Leave some of the questions & baggage behind?)