Maybe there is already a topic about this, but I couldn't directly find it.
The last week I've had several questions from different people and I've been telling some things. It's always a bit of a search what to tell and what not to tell.
How do you people tell about your illness(es) and the causes for that? How do you respond to questions from strangers, people at work or school or church, etc? Do you get good responses? When do you "come out" to new friends with your real story?
The story in short: I have been abused as a child (incidents) and as an adult by the father of my child. This caused PTSD and psychotic disorder NOS in me. I've stayed in a ward multiple times the last years. This is why my son stays with my parents a lot of the time, although he is with me now more often. There is no contact with his father, I have fought really hard for that because it wasn't safe. I use antipsychotics, which make me somewhat dull and disorganized. I had a good education but don't do paid work, I'm on disability and work at a care farm. I will never fully recover.
All sorts of people (kids and parents from school, people I go out with, people from church, acquintances, new friends) ask a lot of innocent questions: what kind of work do you do? Are you searching for a job already? Why don't you work? How often does your son see his father? Do you think your ex wants to see *son* in the future? Your son told me his granddad is his father (not what i told him)? I didn't see you for a while at the school? Where does *son* live? What illness do you have?
My family and longterm close friends know everything. Some new friends know a bit...with them I always struggle how to start telling things. With vague acquintances and people from my son's school I mostly use discriptions that are either vague or less stigmatizing (burn-out or a difficult time instead of PTSD and psychosis). About the father of my child I somehow never tell them he was abusive, I tell them he wasn't good to us or some other euphemistic term.
I am always torn between wanting to be honest and not wanting to tell too much. I had some pretty good responses, but I'm afraid of stigma. About psychosis. About not working. About keeping my son away from his father. Especially for my son. I don't want him to be the "boy with the crazy mum and dad". Also I don't want to whine or ruin a happy superficial chat with a difficult answer to a simple question.
How do you deal with that?
The last week I've had several questions from different people and I've been telling some things. It's always a bit of a search what to tell and what not to tell.
How do you people tell about your illness(es) and the causes for that? How do you respond to questions from strangers, people at work or school or church, etc? Do you get good responses? When do you "come out" to new friends with your real story?
The story in short: I have been abused as a child (incidents) and as an adult by the father of my child. This caused PTSD and psychotic disorder NOS in me. I've stayed in a ward multiple times the last years. This is why my son stays with my parents a lot of the time, although he is with me now more often. There is no contact with his father, I have fought really hard for that because it wasn't safe. I use antipsychotics, which make me somewhat dull and disorganized. I had a good education but don't do paid work, I'm on disability and work at a care farm. I will never fully recover.
All sorts of people (kids and parents from school, people I go out with, people from church, acquintances, new friends) ask a lot of innocent questions: what kind of work do you do? Are you searching for a job already? Why don't you work? How often does your son see his father? Do you think your ex wants to see *son* in the future? Your son told me his granddad is his father (not what i told him)? I didn't see you for a while at the school? Where does *son* live? What illness do you have?
My family and longterm close friends know everything. Some new friends know a bit...with them I always struggle how to start telling things. With vague acquintances and people from my son's school I mostly use discriptions that are either vague or less stigmatizing (burn-out or a difficult time instead of PTSD and psychosis). About the father of my child I somehow never tell them he was abusive, I tell them he wasn't good to us or some other euphemistic term.
I am always torn between wanting to be honest and not wanting to tell too much. I had some pretty good responses, but I'm afraid of stigma. About psychosis. About not working. About keeping my son away from his father. Especially for my son. I don't want him to be the "boy with the crazy mum and dad". Also I don't want to whine or ruin a happy superficial chat with a difficult answer to a simple question.
How do you deal with that?
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