• We are a multilingual website again. Read the notice about this.
  • Understand AI use at MyPTSD: all AI use is explained in our AI help page. AI use is by choice here. It exists if you want it, but does nothing unless you choose to use it.

Sufferer Can't Believe I'm Doing This

Status
Not open for further replies.

Justin87

New Here
Hi,

I have been reading this forum for a few weeks, looking up various topics and it has been really helpful to read and see the support that people offer each other. I was diagnosed about a year ago. Since going on medication, the night terrors have stopped (thank God). I don’t really think I’ve taken my diagnoses seriously, though. I’ve mainly been doing a lot of sex addiction recovery in group therapy as well as individual counseling. A few weeks ago I finally came out and talked about my diagnosis in my group and it turns out that our group therapist has PTSD and that is one of his areas of focus! He talked to me after individually and was telling me all kinds of things and I kept thinking “How does he know this stuff about how I think?” I think it was surprising to talk to someone that took it seriously and I felt like they knew what they were talking about. Anyway, it was pretty startling and I’m feeling that my PTSD is a major area to start working on. I don’t really want to. I still feel really closed off. It is draining and exhausting to push through the shame with my therapist and in group. I dissociate when I talk about certain things and have panic attacks the deeper I go. It is hard and I feel scared and confused. A lot of this is especially hard as a man, I feel like I should be strong and confidant but dealing with the PTSD make me feel small and vulnerable and childlike. I absolutely hate it. In our couples therapy I feel stupid and slow in front of my wife and our therapist. I had a panic attack last session when we started talking about some very early memories I have of watching some neighbor girls touch each other. Those memories have been unearthed recently. My therapist thinks there is some kind of abusive power dynamic that was going on (like I was being forced to watch them). I don't really remember, I was between 2 1/2 and 5. I talked with my therapist about EMDR and he said he doesn't think I'm ready because of my struggle with control during sessions. He says I probably won't benefit unless I can "buy in" to the process more fully.

Anyway, I feel really overwhelmed with everything. My story has a ton of emotional and spiritual abuse components and a lot of pornography and self-punishment. Really shameful and I wish I could just make it all go away, but I can't. I have to move forward and feel like this is a good place to help me open up more and ask questions.

Thanks!
Justin
 
Welcome Justin!
It sounds like you have a lot of good support and are already doing therapy that can help.

Sorry it feels so overwhelming. Little steps at a time and you will make progress.

You will find a great group here to share with and find support from.
 
Welcome to the forum mate, sending a UK :hug: if you accept it

Laurie
 
Really shameful and I wish I could just make it all go away, but I can't

Your truth is in this sentence. You may feel ambivalent and afraid, yet you've taken courageous steps to get your life on a healthier track. Between group, couple and individual therapy you're already doing the hard work. And much more than most others in a similar situation.

It takes a long time to reach full acceptance of a PTSD diagnosis and the brokenness that causes and results from it. I'm 2.5 years in and far removed from even considering returning to work, yet there are days when I still live in a cloud of denial. Acceptance seems to move in bits and spurts. I think it takes time for our minds to fully process the scope of our reality.

You are not alone. PTSD has the ability to bring the strongest among us to our knees. It strips away our dignity and makes us feel weak and vulnerable. We develop maladaptive coping mechanisms, such as sex and pornography, that further add to the shame that's inherent with this disorder.

When we're immeshed in our struggle it's easy to lose perspective. We don't give ourselves credit for showing up and putting in the hard work. And we can't see the incremental steps of lthe progress we are actually making.

My life has taken a nosedive from where it was a few years ago. I lost my career and income and it takes every ounce of my strength to raise my daughters while coping with my PTSD symptoms. My husband had a lengthy period of unemployment and almost lost the one job he finally got due to his own pornograohy addiction. Here we are in our mid- fifties, two broken people with a marriage that has been pushed to the edge.

Ironically though, despite all this, I think we're already stronger than before. I'm just now realizing how few people actually commit to this journey. It takes huge courage to face our inner demons, and even more to have the fortitude to stay the course. Do not be deluded: it will feel worse on the road to getting better. There are no short cuts or easy ways through, but have faith that you have it in you to go the distance.

I'm inspired daily by the members of this forum and their strength increases my own. There's a wealth of information and support here. You should be proud of what you have accomplished so far and I'll say prayers for your continuing recovery.
 
@Justin87 Welcome to the forum!

A lot of this is especially hard as a man, I feel like I should be strong and confidant but dealing with the PTSD make me feel small and vulnerable and childlike.

Although I am female, I am an adult and found myself very frustrated with myself when dealing with my own childhood abuse issues. The feelings that you described left me angry with myself as I thought I should be mature enough and competent enough not to have feelings like that. I had the attitude of "really, I am a grown woman". It took me a while to realize that what I was processing were the emotions that I had as a child that I had stuffed. I learned to be easier on myself and to realize I could not judge myself as an adult, because I was not one at the time. I learned to be kinder to myself as it was not a reflection on who I am, it was dealing with the things I never dealt with as a child.
 
@Justin87 ...I felt that way at first when I joined. After reading about what others here are going/went though, I no longer felt alone with my thoughts and feelings.
I wish you all the best.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Donation drives

2026 Donation Goal

Goal
$1,800.00
Earned
$910.00
This donation drive ends in
0 hours, 0 minutes, 0 seconds
  50.6%

Trending content

Featured content

Back
Top Bottom