@BlueBerry6999 this year I took off the last month of my job as sick leave. 3 of those week, I attended an intensive therapy program, where they taught coping skills for trauma. It’s been 7-8 years since my ptsd flared up, but recently is the first time I got help for it. Furthermore, I was misdiagnosed with other things before, which made it hard to get help for the trauma.
Why am I bringing it up? Because I always tried to do it alone, but it never worked out. I got a lot better after the intensive program and then followed it up with seeing my therapist twice a week.
At therapy, we talked a lot about work because that aspect of my life blew up in smoke when the ptsd flared. I could not keep a job. I wanted to prevent another job loss due to losing my temper or feeling out of control or social anxiety.
I hope you find a helpful therapist who can help you talk about your job and tie it back to trauma. I guess I’m assuming you were diagnosed with ptsd, but I’m not sure. In my case, the trauma was not something we discussed in depth. When we started, my flashbacks increased and I couldn’t function. So, instead, we focused on coping with various life stressors, including work - which was a big one. I never realized that talking a lot about something painful could help so much.
Based on what you shared, I can see how your childhood situations may have resulted in trauma, which changes a child’s brain development and affects the rest of their lives. This is not about saying bad things about your parents, but only talking about the result of a volatile situation on you. In any case, it may be worth reaching out to someone who knows how to help trauma people to help you explore what’s going on. This changed my life for the better... I’m not healed by any means, and this forum helps a lot too because I don’t have much of a support system.
There were many times in my life when I considered therapy. The first time was at thirteen, so 12 years ago. For me, going to therapy always seemed (and still does) like a huge deal. When I was younger, I told myself I was "normal" and that seeing a therapist would make me crazy and would make everything too real.
Later, I started thinking of it as the absolute last option if nothing else helps. That scares me a lot, because what if I go to therapy and it doesn't help?
I also have these weird fears that either they won't take me serious and call me hysterical or the opposite- think I'm a danger to myself and lock me up.
Part of me knows this is just again the anxiety talking, but I really feel like so much could go wrong.
Yesterday, I talked to a friend about this because she is going through similar things and just told me that today, she was going to have her first therapy appointment.
Now, she just texted me saying that her therapist wants to put her on temesta.
Temesta and the therapist who prescribed it to my sister, after she got r*ped, were what made our family practically fall apart. She was sixteen and had severe panic disorder, so she ended up taking it way too much, gained weight and got addicted.
My boyfriend's ex got addicted to it as well, also after gettin sexually abused.
My doctor gave it to me also, after I told her I was afraid of flying, but I didn't take a single pill. My friend does have issues, but nowhere as strong as my sister had and yet, she was given temesta.
I just can't stop thinking that most doctors, no matter what field they work in, just want to make money off their patients. My best friend got prescribed Methadone after being addicted to codeine when she was seventeen. Now, she's 25, can't work, lives in a shelter and has still not been able to stop taking these pills.
Anyway, I'm glad that therapy helps you and also I found many positive stories in this forum, so I am currently working on going to therapy. (means first I have to change my health insurance.)
However, I am strictly opposed to taking any medication and I fear that if my future therapist told me to take them, I might not be able to trust them at all...
So I haven't actually been diagnosed with anything because I never went to see a doctor about my problems. Mental health issues have been a constant thing for me since I was thirteen, changing from depression to panic disorder and addiction. Then I had a few great years and after a car accident everything got worse, so after reading up online and watching documentaries, I started to think it might be ptsd.