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Undiagnosed Could This Be Ptsd Or Secondary Ptsd? Confused

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mmagenta

New Here
Hi.
I'm not sure if I should be on here but stumbled here after a day of googling trying to make sense of what has always gone on in my life.

I'am starting to wonder if my troubled childhood and adult problems could be related to PTSD and a kind of secondary PTSD which I have been reading about occurring in children of fathers with PTSD.

Very briefly my dad grew up in WWII in an area of heavy bombing and daily trauma, death destruction and extreme poverty. His father served in WW1 and was injured and many family members killed. My dad then served in the Malayan Emergency and never spoke about his service, [other than to once tell me a horrific story about a woman cut in half by machine gun fire.

My childhood was spent with a dad with hair trigger anger, isolation, inability to deal with social situations and other symptoms that I'm now starting to realise could be PTSD related. My dad was hypervigilant and controlling in the extreme. It feels like generations of my family were under this dark black cloud of war and anxiety, even years after it was all over.

I grew up petrified of war, fighting and with a view coloured by my dads anxious and frightened view of the world. Nothing was safe, everything and everyone was a threat.

I myself lived in London during the height of IRA bombings where random bomb attacks happened with no warning. I once missed a bomb by 1 minute, the people standing at the bus stop I had walked past a minute previously losing legs and limbs in the blast. It got to the point where my nerves were shot and every journey on the tube was a test of mental strength. I had to leave London as I just couldn't cope with living there any more. It felt like death was around every corner.

In my life I have struggled with alcohol and keeping a normal and positive view of the world. After having my kids[8 & 6 now] I was pitched into being hypervigilant and far too over protective. I have learnt to chill a little [hypnotherapy helped] but have a fear of but obsessive need to watch the news all the time, constantly checking it on my phone all day so I know what's happening.

The current crisis in N Korea has pitched me into a state where I am finding it hard to function in my everyday life, which I am trying to cover up from my husband and work. My instinct is to get some tinned food and supplies and run and find somewhere like a cave to hide to keep my kids safe. I work out plans and escape routes. I know this isn't normal, hence why I have spent today trying to figure out exactly why I react in this way and what I can do to deal with it. My work and homelife is suffering. I have a new job and HAVE to get on top of this as I can't afford to lose it

I have been like this before in the past, even to the point of having a survival kit prepared with food, sleeping equipment etc in my car.

Obviously my husband thinks I'm nuts so I don't really tell him I feel like this at the moment as he gets angry and frightened when I behave like this. It really freaks him out so I'm trying to look normal.

I am starting to unpick this a little and have been reading about PTSD and the effect it can have on kids of people who have it. I'm pretty sure my dad did have many elements of this. When I compare his behavior with my husband about his parents I realise the way I grew up wasn't normal. For example I remember him leaping out of the car which he abandoned in the middle of the road, screaming and chasing down a little kid who had innocently pointed a stick [in imitation of a gun] at us as we drove past. He went mental at this poor kid and my mum having to shove him back in the car.

Anyway. I'm sorry for rambling and I guess I'm just trying to make sense of this in my own head rather than getting an answer of any kind but it feels like something is starting to make some kind of sense about everything.

Does any of this make sense or am I just mad as people think ;-) lol.

Thanks
 
I think your googling skills are quite good! It took my doctors over 10 years to give me a correct diagnosis of PTSD!

I also think it is a rational conclusion that you are dealing with PTSD - but professional help is needed to heal from this. I say this because none of us are capable of seeing where our vision of the world is skewed - and even if we can see our own irrational fears, we still don't have the tools to change it.

Best wishes to you - read as much as you can to gain insight and understanding, but don't use it to replace professional help. ;)
 
Thank you so much both of you. For someone to say "I don't think you're mad" means the world to me. LOL I can do this. I am a bit of an obsessive Googler and it's part of my job too so I get a bit carried away ;-).

I have found a lot of valuable info here but you are right. I think I do need to find some kind of professional help. I did see someone years ago but they never thought of PTSD and just gave me beta blockers which I have used on and off ever since, but I feel a bit more pointed in the right direction now.

Just writing all this down has brought me some kind of clarity.

Thanks so much for your replies.
x
 
Welcome to the forum. I can relate to a lot of what you've described...though the difference is, I've experienced some of this stuff myself (now WWI or II...though have lost family members in those as well)...Anyway, just wanted to welcome you to the forum and say I that I don't think you're mad. I'll also echo the others and say that the best thing is to see a professional. Good luck.
 
Secondary PTSD is just a term... nothing more. Yes, it aptly describes what you've endured, and then you have your own traumatic events beyond that inflicted by your father with PTSD. I would honestly recommend you seek a therapist for some chit chat, and see what happens. I think you fall squarely into the PTSD realm... wait and see what a therapist thinks now.
 
Thank you everyone and reallydown and anthony. Just popping back to say that I have an appointment booked tommorow with a therapist I have seen before who is really good. Will see what she says. Thank you for all the help
 
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