You're welcomed. Haha, my name's too long, but I like it as it give me hope, also very glad to share your achievement.
I've ever read a book name 'life after trauma', it said that the series of bad /destructive feeling or symptom comes from uncomprehensive negative events which buried in subconsciousness. They constantly emerge into the mind, for calling for your attention to process it, digest it. Once they were realized by you & completely comprehended this symptom even nightmare would get away from you.
I've try the therapy of psychoanalysis which this book use, to my experience, it works in alleviate, most of my symptoms. Moreover, some of them even faded, disappear. But to me, it's still a long way for me to go. I need time to settle the rest symptom, rebuild healthy relief of life & confidence , sense of safety.
Most recently, I found a good book named 'the post traumatic stress disorder sourcebook', which could be bought in amazon.com. I browse some chapters, & found it useful and hit the right nail.
Though with the accompany of these good books, I feel that I am on the way of healing, but sometimes some unpleasant event could break me down.
When I read the discussion about the old self and recent self, I feel surprised that many of us used to have glorious past but recent delicate state.
I've ever read a message saying it's the unhealthy living way which lead to failure. For example in Asian Country, a kid spent lots of time to achieve academic success. He may harvest many applause and honour, but at the same while, he lost the time which should have been spent on social activity at peer age. And with more time spent on study in order to achieve academic success, his basic social knowledge lacks more, lag behind more. He then became an academic giant but a dwarf in social activity and daily life. And due to shortness of basic social knowledge, it make it more possible for him to be hurt or defeated by setback in social activity domain. This is the prototype of many diligent asian students, including myself. Sometimes trauma is caused by some unhealthy, imbalanced way of achieving success, leading a person into failure in the end.