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An Explanation Of Ptsd I Wrote To A Friend Several Years Ago

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Lost Pup

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I wrote this a few years ago when a friend suspected I was manic depressive after seeing me in the midst of a PTSD episode. I was trying to give her a sense of what it was like to go through a PTSD episode and I thought someone here might find it useful in some way, so I am posting it below:

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For what it is worth, bipolar and other mental disorders are common differential diagnoses when Complex PTSD is identified. I've been evaluated by multiple PHD-level psychologists and psychiatrists in the past few years and I have never been diagnosed with anything else, other than, of course, accompanying depression and anxiety. As you know I've also periodically struggled with substance abuse.

So why am I writing this letter to you and why does it matter?

While some people may have co-morbid Bipolar Disorder, many other people with PTSD and especially complex versions of it are often initially misdiagnosed with thought and mood disorders, like bipolar, because their behavior may appear erratic to others. When old trauma is activated, people can seem very charged and generally elevated. Yet, for people who are in the grip of that old trauma, their behavior, internally makes perfect, rational sense.

When you have lived through the experience of grave harm to your body and mind, and that memory is re-activated in your being, while you may logically understand the threat to be long past, in the body and in the feeling-self, it is re-experienced as though it is happening in the present moment.

Things which may seem banal or, at least, much less threatening to those around you are experienced by you as a shifting combination of the current upsetting event fused with much older and more powerful events which now feel present again and carry with them all the original feelings of danger and desperation.

Accompanying this is the very deep need to be able to communicate your experience, as you may not have been able to when the traumatic event first occurred. It feels as though your survival depends on others recognizing and properly responding to that threat. Because this is so emotionally elevated, it can, certainly, add to the seemingly erratic quality of one's chosen words and communication. But that desperation and upset makes all the sense in the world to the person living through it.

Depending on the extent of the now-triggering incident, it can take some time to settle and to gain enough calm and clarity to parse apart the old feelings from the new events.

The greatest harm done to me was the near annihilation of my ability to trust and maintain healthy interpersonal relationships of mutual care, respect and dependability. As a result of this, important relationships in my own life sometimes have a tendency to re-activate all kinds of complicated feelings as well as the extraordinarily deep desire for real, genuine connection and intimacy. This can be very confusing to me and clearly it happened in my friendship with you. You were an important friend to me and I wanted to be close to you and I didn't know quite how to work with that so I did so unskillfully.

You have called me "dramatic" in the past. And it's certainly true that I have a tendency to present things in a dramatic fashion. But, as this note has tried earnestly to explain, that is an old habit that I'm still working with. It was borne of being unheard in a time when I was in danger. It has outlived its usefulness, for sure, but it came about as a child's way to seek help and to be heard, not of any organic mental illness.
 
Hi Lost Pup,
This letter is very helpful and really helps me as a supporter, how to understand a little better what may be going on in my sufferer's mind. My sufferer goes through small episodes from time-to-time, and he seems to recover from them within two to five days, it's difficult, but he recognizes what the root of the issue really is or may be. But there are times (currently) when his episode becomes VERY severe. He pushes me away, isolates himself at home - As if he just shuts out the entire world. I've noticed that when he goes through a life-change in routine, it ignites an episode. My assumption of this current deep episode is because his therapist of four years recently relocated to another city, but I could be mistaken. My sufferer does have a new therapist, but there were a few weeks that went by that he didn't have therapy.

Would you be able to shed some light on what goes on in the mind during these episodes? Is it a sense of reorganization of the thoughts? Or is it more like a cooling off period?

~Spring
 
What goes on in the mind?

Do whatever you can, whatever you need to feel safe again. That's the bottom line for me. It manifests in various ways, but the core need is always the same.

No "reorganization".... Dare I say there is no organization? It's pretty chaotic. Rationality and foresight fly out the window. It's all about feeling ok right here and now. Tomorrow be damned.

At least that's how it is for me. Trying to establish a primary need. There is no deep thought. It's all reduced to basics.
 
ScareOfLonely,
Thank you so much for your insight- It is very helpful. And yes, we deal with a lot of his irrational thoughts and ideas that lead up to his episodes.

Once you've had time to re-establish your thoughts, are you able to make sense of what may have brought you to that point of chaos?
~Spring
 
Hi Spring,

We're all different so I can only speak with any authority for myself but a lot of what you describe does sound familiar. It's difficult, for me, to put it into words.

Maybe the best I can explain is this: when I am seriously triggered, it is as though I have suddenly stumbled back into a world I thought I had escaped for good, marked mostly by deep, deep fear of, for lack of a better word, total annihilation. Sometimes I am pretty much a child all over again and am operating on that primitive a level of fear as well as logic - i.e., if I just hide out in my house and push everyone (including my own girlfriend) away, I will be safe. But, as someone else said, it's such a primal or primitive level of experience it barely even has form. There's certainly, for me, no forethought and very little conscious decision making.

I have learned that, when I really work, afterwards to take the time to carefully trace back the timeline of events (including thoughts and feelings) that lead up to, accompanied, and then followed the initial triggering, it does lead to a more healthy reorganization of thoughts and understanding over time.

One of the pitfalls, for me, is that I often feel a tremendous sense of relief after the episode ends and I calm down again. I think, in a funny way, that is how I relive the end of the trauma and re-experience the false sense of safety - i.e., phew, it's over and I can breathe again.

So I have learned that it's ultimately more helpful for me if I also note that sense of relief as *part* pf the whole traumatic episode and its narrative. And, rather than doing what I did in the past - thinking I've now safely escaped danger, I try to stay present and dive into the work of looking at exactly what happened - what the specific triggers were, what my responses were and what the general current of feeling that preceded the episode itself was.

Hope this helps in some way. I can say, for sure, that changing therapists has been very, very difficult for me in the past.

I do hope you and your sufferer get some ease and peace soon.

Best
LP
 
Once you've had time to re-establish your thoughts, are you able to make sense of what may have brought you to that point of chaos?

Yes. But unfortunately I repeat these patterns even though I tell myself I won't. It's like that instinct to be safe overrides everything and rational thoughts be damned when I'm triggered. I keep trying though. Some areas of my life are getting better, others not so much.

Relationship triggers are the worst. I seem to be able to improve when others are willing to work with me. When the full blame is thrown my way I endlessly repeat the same patterns. These relationships ultimately prove to be too much for me and I have no choice but to break free.

Thanks for your inquiry. The thought process has enabled me to make an important realization and I appreciate it.
 
WOW, you two gentlemen are a TREMENDOUS help to me! We've been in this relationship now for three years. I've done so much research, support group therapy for supporters,and private therapy specializing PTSD (for myself) - But nothing compares to the willingness to be open, honest, and personal insight that your answers and experience(s) provide to me.

Lost Pup, yes, my boyfriend began to journal his episodes at the beginning of this year and he has admitted to me that it is an effective tool to understanding his triggers.

Scared Of Lonely, my boyfriend does put a lot of pressure on himself to try and be a "perfect man", and when he comes to the threashold of an episode he just bails on the relationship (me).

My sufferer seems to exhibit the same behavioral patterns. He rarely shares his feelings with me. Thank you both so much for reaching out to me, you've been a blessing.

~Spring
 
Glad that something in there was helpful, Spring. I want to add that I concur with SOL about splitting town when the full blame is thrown my way. For better or worse, I've found I need to be with a partner (and, thankfully, am) who understands this is our shared problem and experience. I can't deal with being the stigmatized one or the one with "problems" on my own. Good luck with all....

LP
 
Reading this post has made me more aware of one aspect of my PTSD that I don't usually address in the analysis of an episode. I don't easily remember my total commitment to the idea that my behavior is completely normal or my complete disregard for the reactions of those around me to the perceived threat. Put simply, self monitoring goes away for awhile.

My supporter is my wife, married over 25 years, together over thirty, all of that time spent being my supporter even though I was only relatively recently diagnosed with PTSD. Regarding my inability to perceive other peoples reactions during an episode, the help I need is really pretty simple: Don't argue with me about my responses to a threat.

She needs to understand that making me change how I react is not something that is going to happen, but filling in the missing pieces of my perception of the situation may be a way to help me change my reaction.

An ideal supporter is someone that has taken on the role of accomplice but maintains the role of leader by understanding that I am reacting to the threat as I see it, that trying to change or limit that reaction will be seen by me as a perpetuation of the threat, and that helping me is best accomplished by helping me: Helping me see the threat from another perspective, pointing out that it is passing or has passed, helping me see an opportunity to relax rather than just telling me to relax.

Thanks for helping, I don't think I spend enough time thinking about this aspect of my disorder.

For better or worse, I've found I need to be with a partner (and, thankfully, am) who understands this is our shared problem and experience.
 
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