I don't believe empathy and compassion should give way to honesty and truthfulness.
I don't think these are mutually exclusive.
When I see a rape victim talking in this place about self-harming thoughts, I don't give a damn about the rape, I care about the self-harm. Rape is a horrible bad thing, but it's in the past and there's nothing I can do about it. Self-harm, nightmares, dissociation, eating problems, violent impulses, compulsion to re-enact the trauma - these are evils that I have an opportunity to address.
@BlueOrange, I believe you are coming from a compassionate and helpful place and while I think addressing self-harm, nightmares, dissociation, etc. can be helpful, it's like giving a person in cardiac arrest a band aid. As I said earlier, at least for me, all of these behaviors were symptoms, maladaptive coping mechanisms, stemming from the trauma. Until I started seriously started working with the trauma, it was like playing symptom Whack-A-Mole - ok, I've got the eating disorder under control, but now I'm drinking like a fish...ok, I've got the drinking under control, but now I'm dissociating constantly and back to puking...ok, I've got...well, you get the picture.
I also believe that trauma comes in many flavors and degrees - and I believe that there are probably biological factors that make one person more susceptible to developing PTSD than another person who may have had a similar (or "worse") trauma. And I am definitely not in to "my trauma is worse than yours" (I call it "Trauma Olympics").
I don't think any one here is denying that any trauma (even a hangnail) is...well...traumatic. What I think folks are saying is that there is a concrete definition of PTSD ( as "concrete" as mental health definitions can be :) - but I can go even more off topic there) - and it's the "D" that is important to distinguish a temporary maladaptive adjustment to trauma vs a full blown disorder - and that serves as the common denominator for discussions here. For now, it's the Criterion A that serves to make that distinction.
If I was a cancer sufferer, and someone who had the symptoms of cancer (but didn't have cancer) wanted to join my self-help group, I'd be glad to have them on board. Because they might know a useful trick for managing nausea. Because they might have question about hair loss that sparks a useful discussion. They'd be worthless for treating my cancer, but that's what my doctor is for. Comparing their 'not cancer' to my 'cancer' is not the point.
As a cancer survivor (and, interestingly, even though I almost died, it didn't traumatize me or even trigger my symptoms - in fact they went away while I was under treatment) - I would have been a little taken aback by a non-cancer sufferer joining a cancer self-help group. I would have questioned their motivations...unless maybe (just maybe) they joined and said "I don't have cancer, but I have nausea and am at my wits end trying to figure out how to resolve this - does anyone have any suggestions?" I would be offended if a non-cancer sufferer came to the group and said, "Well I had hair loss and here's how I cured it" (I'd probably be less offended if they said "I have hair loss and here's how I kept my head warm" ;)).
I hope I haven't added to your fear and anxiety
@BlueOrange.