During my last therapy session we delved back to my past, way back to childhood.
My father was 42 when he had me. He served for a little bit in the Army Reserves and the Navy during WWII. His mother dragged him out because he was not 21, so he joined the Police Force.
He did 32 years on the force.
It was only of late that I joined the dots and figured out from his behavior growing up that he had PTSD. He used to work in single man stations in small towns. He would work extra long hours and sort of keep away from the family. He never went to many of our sporting events and was always grumpy. Nothing was good enough. If you got 99 out of 100, he would just say why didn't you get 100. If we were planning to go to the beach or some other crowded place he would fight and bitch to find an excuse not to go, but once he was there we had a good time.
Early on in my military career he did mention a couple of serious life threatening instances that would make you hair curl, about facing three armed gunmen alone, about picking up bits of bodies off a railway track and a story about being on 'Floater' duty (picking up the bodies in the river) in Melbourne in the early days.
.....................
End result is my therapist believes that a lot of veterans and other people with PTSD have a background with it to start with. Whether they were abused, beaten, or just resided with a person exhibiting symptoms of PTSD.
Not that you have to answer, but did any of the rest of you grow up with this???????
My father was 42 when he had me. He served for a little bit in the Army Reserves and the Navy during WWII. His mother dragged him out because he was not 21, so he joined the Police Force.
He did 32 years on the force.
It was only of late that I joined the dots and figured out from his behavior growing up that he had PTSD. He used to work in single man stations in small towns. He would work extra long hours and sort of keep away from the family. He never went to many of our sporting events and was always grumpy. Nothing was good enough. If you got 99 out of 100, he would just say why didn't you get 100. If we were planning to go to the beach or some other crowded place he would fight and bitch to find an excuse not to go, but once he was there we had a good time.
Early on in my military career he did mention a couple of serious life threatening instances that would make you hair curl, about facing three armed gunmen alone, about picking up bits of bodies off a railway track and a story about being on 'Floater' duty (picking up the bodies in the river) in Melbourne in the early days.
.....................
End result is my therapist believes that a lot of veterans and other people with PTSD have a background with it to start with. Whether they were abused, beaten, or just resided with a person exhibiting symptoms of PTSD.
Not that you have to answer, but did any of the rest of you grow up with this???????