Lately, all flashbacks, and a couple of the nightmares, seem to cluster around a memory of almost drowning as a small child by my mother, probably when I was age 4, maybe more than once (also as a baby?).
Since September, any anxiety (being around people at work especially) and I feel like my throat is closing and I start coughing. I keep feeling throat irritation, and like I am struggling to breath. It's been happening so often that I wondered if I'm developing asthma. I have an inhaler and it doesn't work much on this. This went on Sept.-Jan., went away and then has recently come back worse and stronger and more triggered by anxiety (now obvious).
My throat felt really bad during social anxiety yesterday at work, and then when I got home and took a shower, I started coughing so much that I nearly threw up twice. I was working too hard to breath, hyperventilating, and passing out. I "could breathe" enough to cry, because I felt so "I CAN'T BREATHE!" in my emotions even more than in my body, as if the allergies became a trigger. I thought maybe I was having an asthma attack and panic attack at the same time. I coughed a lot and felt like I had just been drowning. My right lung was hurting REALLY bad, like a hot spot was in it.
(I have no clue what was going on, and thought it was all physical. My husband came to help me and said he thought I was having a PTSD flashback, not a real breathing problem cause I could talk fine, just not breath normal or stop coughing and trying to open my airway with throat clearing noises.)
In other words, I wonder if it's possible that this is new PTSD symptoms related to a new surfacing of a trauma. Has anyone experienced chronic breathing problems as part of PTSD body memories or flashbacks?
I'm also really frustrated/angry that everyone wants me to do deep breathing for my PTSD not realizing that most of my trauma is triggered by noticing my breath (or lack thereof).
Deep breathing exercises make me feel the opposite of how I'm sure they are supposed to. I find it helpful if I can move through, but mostly I don't even want to do it, avoiding the triggering of breathing at all. I'd rather not notice that I'm breathing at all and dissociate from breath altogether.
Has anyone found a way to work with this kind of thing?
Since September, any anxiety (being around people at work especially) and I feel like my throat is closing and I start coughing. I keep feeling throat irritation, and like I am struggling to breath. It's been happening so often that I wondered if I'm developing asthma. I have an inhaler and it doesn't work much on this. This went on Sept.-Jan., went away and then has recently come back worse and stronger and more triggered by anxiety (now obvious).
My throat felt really bad during social anxiety yesterday at work, and then when I got home and took a shower, I started coughing so much that I nearly threw up twice. I was working too hard to breath, hyperventilating, and passing out. I "could breathe" enough to cry, because I felt so "I CAN'T BREATHE!" in my emotions even more than in my body, as if the allergies became a trigger. I thought maybe I was having an asthma attack and panic attack at the same time. I coughed a lot and felt like I had just been drowning. My right lung was hurting REALLY bad, like a hot spot was in it.
(I have no clue what was going on, and thought it was all physical. My husband came to help me and said he thought I was having a PTSD flashback, not a real breathing problem cause I could talk fine, just not breath normal or stop coughing and trying to open my airway with throat clearing noises.)
In other words, I wonder if it's possible that this is new PTSD symptoms related to a new surfacing of a trauma. Has anyone experienced chronic breathing problems as part of PTSD body memories or flashbacks?
I'm also really frustrated/angry that everyone wants me to do deep breathing for my PTSD not realizing that most of my trauma is triggered by noticing my breath (or lack thereof).
Deep breathing exercises make me feel the opposite of how I'm sure they are supposed to. I find it helpful if I can move through, but mostly I don't even want to do it, avoiding the triggering of breathing at all. I'd rather not notice that I'm breathing at all and dissociate from breath altogether.
Has anyone found a way to work with this kind of thing?