During a lifetime of suffering, I got closer and closer to understanding what was happening to my mind and body. Anxiety, panic attacks, and then after really being strung out on stress for years (3? 4? Memory from that time is poor due to constant fight or flight state) to an extreme beyond everything that came before , PTSD. While each possible diagnosis was loaded with baggage and a bit uncomfortable, they gave me access to better tools to work with in terms of managing my specific frightening experience with the world.
A few years later and after intensive focus on trying everything I could, and finding enough successes, I no longer have a "full cup" (the cup metaphor). In fact, my baseline is lower than it has ever been in my memory. I come down from bad stress spikes, and I mean I REALLY come down, not into the lesser-hell of constant hypervigilance, constant low-level adrenaline flow, and perpetual jumpiness in fear/terror that was my daily life for so long. I feel, for the most part, "normal". Someone can slam a door behind me and sometimes I don't jump out of my skin! If I do, by self goes right back into my skin. It is so nice and functional.
So...I started thinking maybe it wasn't really PTSD. Because people don't get better from PTSD, right? That's what I had come to understand. So, maybe it is something else that caused years of persistent terror and adrenaline and fight-or-flight and jumping at every loud noise. And I should find out what that thing is so I can learn more tools to getting myself even more grounded and in the flow of the world. So, I talked with a friend about this last night. She is a therapist who has worked with many, many PTSD cases. And she said that people with PTSD can have these calms period where things feel normal. That does happen. It doesn't mean it is not PTSD and it doesn't mean PTSD is gone. Things don't go away forever.
I just managed not to cry. I want it to either not be PTSD or for it to be cured because I feel so much more on level. I want it to be over. I don't want to have to go back into that experience again.
I remind myself that I survived an absolutely hellish experience for years that amounted to daily torture and it didn't kill me or destroy me. I am actually stronger today than ever. I tell myself I can survive it again if I have to. But, my god, I do not want to.
Is there anyone here who had a period where there cup wasn't full and it stayed that way seemingly forever (for years at least)? If it has happened for you, I want to hear about it. Also, any recommendations for tools/therapies. I want to ground more/make it harder for the terror to come back. I am always up for considering new ways to work on this thing in my brain.
A few years later and after intensive focus on trying everything I could, and finding enough successes, I no longer have a "full cup" (the cup metaphor). In fact, my baseline is lower than it has ever been in my memory. I come down from bad stress spikes, and I mean I REALLY come down, not into the lesser-hell of constant hypervigilance, constant low-level adrenaline flow, and perpetual jumpiness in fear/terror that was my daily life for so long. I feel, for the most part, "normal". Someone can slam a door behind me and sometimes I don't jump out of my skin! If I do, by self goes right back into my skin. It is so nice and functional.
So...I started thinking maybe it wasn't really PTSD. Because people don't get better from PTSD, right? That's what I had come to understand. So, maybe it is something else that caused years of persistent terror and adrenaline and fight-or-flight and jumping at every loud noise. And I should find out what that thing is so I can learn more tools to getting myself even more grounded and in the flow of the world. So, I talked with a friend about this last night. She is a therapist who has worked with many, many PTSD cases. And she said that people with PTSD can have these calms period where things feel normal. That does happen. It doesn't mean it is not PTSD and it doesn't mean PTSD is gone. Things don't go away forever.
I just managed not to cry. I want it to either not be PTSD or for it to be cured because I feel so much more on level. I want it to be over. I don't want to have to go back into that experience again.
I remind myself that I survived an absolutely hellish experience for years that amounted to daily torture and it didn't kill me or destroy me. I am actually stronger today than ever. I tell myself I can survive it again if I have to. But, my god, I do not want to.
Is there anyone here who had a period where there cup wasn't full and it stayed that way seemingly forever (for years at least)? If it has happened for you, I want to hear about it. Also, any recommendations for tools/therapies. I want to ground more/make it harder for the terror to come back. I am always up for considering new ways to work on this thing in my brain.