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Dealing With Loss And Grief Aspect Of PTSD

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BassistKara

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As you've probably guessed by my name, i'm a musician, and writer. So early last week i had a line in my head that i had to write down to use in some lyrics, but i just kept writing and writing until i had a whole A4 page filled up and was absolutely bawling my eyes out. What i was writing about was the loss of that girl i was before the trauma, and how badly i missed her and all she could've been, and how much it hurt and so on.

The strange thing is, before i blurted all that out onto paper i never actually understood how loss and grief could be part of PTSD and also play such a large part in healing. Obviously that took me by surprise, so i was in shock that all that stuff had come up by itself, but i also knew that it was something i had to bring up in my next session with my therapist in 3 days.

So the next 3 days i spent just bawling my eyes out and hurting so much for the girl i lost with the trauma. I ended up photocopying what i had written to take in and show my therapist. Before my session i was really adamant that i'd bring it up and trying to do that whole self talk stuff telling myself that shes a therapist and deals with stuff like this everyday etc etc. Well, as soon as i walked into the room, i couldn't bring it up! All i could keep saying to my therapist was "There is something i need to talk about but can't". All that loss and grief stuff suddenly seemed really stupid and irrelevent and meaningless, and i was stupid for even feeling all of that about what happened to me, and it wasn't even worth bringing up. As well as being scared what i would feel after i brought it up.

After spending the first 30 minutes talking with my counsellor about why i couldn't bring it up, and what would help me to bring it up. We came to a decision that i'd hand her the photocopy of what i'd written, and while she was reading it i'd go the toilet so i didn't have to sit there in silence while she read it and get anxious and all that. So i handed her the paper, and off i went to toilet.

I started getting really anxious and beating myself up about bringing it up and started crying. I eventually made it back to the room and i started pacing back and forth saying out loud "I shouldn't've showed it to you, i'm an idiot for even feeling that stuff" and all that while crying even more!

Then i sat down, still anxious and almost hyperventilating, i can't remember exactly what my therapist said, but she was validating everything that i wrote down and saying its a huge part of healing and all that stuff. Well, i just completely lost it! I have never cried that hard before in my life! I was shaking too. It just hurt so damn much. It was the first time i have ever felt something completely real, and it scared the crap out of me.
Like with everything i've ever "felt" since the trauma, it's always been in a detached sort of way, like i'm feeling everything at about 1/4 of the intensity of what it should be! But this, oh my gosh it hurt! I actually named a feeling! I am capable of feeling something completely real and not dying from it!

Bringing that out into the open it was seriously like a massive weight had been lifted from my shoulders, everything seemed a bit clearer, and i wasn't refusing to feel, i actually just let it happen without getting rid of it with cutting, drugs or alcohol or anything else!

So with all that happening, my therapist suggested i find a way to honour the memory of that girl who died with the trauma. And after having another crying shaking spell about this loss and grief stuff on saturday night, i ended up going through an old jewellery box and finding a bracelet my nan(the only one in my family who hugged me and believed me after i told her coz she's been through the same plus worse things) had given me for my birthday the year before the trauma, and it has the date ingraved on it too, as well as my name and a bluebird on the latch thing.

I thought wearing that would be one way to honour the memory of that girl, especially since it has my name, and my birthday of the previous year, it'd help convince me that we are the same person too!

Just wondering what things other people have done to honour the memory of there former selves/who they were before the trauma? And also wanted to ask is it just me, or is it a common PTSD thing to feel like that former self died with the trauma, and who you are after the trauma are 2 completely different people, even though logically you know you're the same?

I hope that all made sense and sorry for such a long post!
 
Well, it sounds like you made a major breakthrough. Good for you. You are well on your way to recovery.

I have made great strides in my recovery yet I am still unable to completely let go like that. I envy you that.
 
I used to play and teach piano - one of my hands can't anymore, so I've been struggling with accepting that I'm not who I was before. I also have other injuries, which restrict me to modified yoga and walking for exercise. I have terrible nightmares about busted up pianos and pianos without keyboards and so on. We are definitely the same people, but with significant experiences that have changed us. I don't know how to honour who I was before, because I don't know who I am now.
 
I have never known myself before the trauma.

The only person I know now is a person who is good at survival.

I want to be about something else.
 
BassistKara-

Sounds like you're making incredible strides- that is so great! :occasion:
I know I am different, but I don't know really "who" I was before that -except that it felt like my childhood ended, along with any possibility of peace or relaxation or happiness really, but I have felt what you have described (privately) in terms of gratitude and relief and amazement some times when I could get a grasp on managing the symptoms, or deal with some grief, and even feel hope.

-More "good stuff to come for you"!!
-That took a lot of guts!
:Hug_emoticon:
 
Dear BassistKara,

I really can connect with your experience. For me, it was as if I held in my womb, a dead child. A lot of abuse had happened to me since I was a baby but I think that I started carrying the dead child when I was old enough to understand what death was. I carried her like that for decades. It was the part of me that just curled up and died. I learned later that she wasn't really dead and that I could help her back to life. It took a long time. I cryed a lot. I learned that tears are a merciful gift that washes our souls and bodies from the traumas that happened.

I think your idea of wearing your bracelet is very good.:smile: The comforting presence of your Nan is good to call on too. We are here for you, brave one.
 
I have been through a process of grieving my former selves (still grieving more incidents.) After having survived trauma, I believe that grief is easier to deal with - it is as a relief/change/shift. I perform small rituals for my grief - for example lighting a candle or making up a small improvised event. It is a lonely process and there has been (for me) little or no understanding from friends or family (one of my friends even told me that PTSD was not equivalent to grief.) I recognise that am probably the only person that can understand the significance of my grief. I wish grief could be more openly shared, but sadly it is something we end up facing on our own. 'Honoring' is a good way to think of grief - respectful to the former self.
 
Yea, hooray! The letter is important, your feelings are important, that little girl is important. I have had shifts of growth in my healing in times like those. Do you also feel that you let go of the fear? It seems I had to let that go see myself as the little girl, or young woman and feel compassion for what she went through. I recently exchanged an engagement ring at an antique jewelry dealer from someone who did not know love and got MYSELF a promise ring. It's from 1905, 18k white gold and diamond. From me with soooooo much love to me with love. It is my promise to love and honor myself and the little girl in there. It seems to also help me not disassociate. I put my thumb to it as a reminder of how much I love myself, of how I have to give that love to myself, noone else can replace the love I missed as a child, noone else can let it in but me-AND it is the one thing I have that can only be given by MY choice, not taken by force, even through torture. So now I CHOOSE to give my love.
Hugs and love to you guys.
 
Bassistkara and Cindy,

I love the idea of jewelry, something that can be worn close to the body:

Bassistkara, because your bracelet has a connection to the past...

Cindy, because your ring was bought with awareness of its significance of the here and now.

I always thought I would get a tattoo to mark getting through the worst, but now I think that a personal piece of jewelry might be a better idea?

dust
 
Thanks so much for all the replies and nice words, i read through them yesterday but didn't know how to respond!

Morgan, believe me i tried my hardest to stop myself from just letting go, but in the end it was like i just burst at the seams emotionally! I'm still unable to let go like that with other aspects of the trauma, so try not to be so hard on yourself!

Midi, i liked what you said about being the same person but with significant experiences that changed you. I'm going to have to remember that from now on.

Tlight, i'm having the same kind of issue! I don't want to be all about my trauma either, but at the same time i know it's had such a profound impact on who i am i can't not acknowledge it. I wish i knew how to combine my "normal" self with that experience in a way that'd allow me to use it for good and not self destructive purposes!

Junebug, that's exactly how i'm feeling, i'm still in shock about how big of a step it was, when at the start i thought i was just being overly emotional and writing it all down!

Mercy, Wow! That analogy really got to me, especially the part you said about being able to bring her back to life, i guess that'd be the next step then hey? "Tears are a merciful gift that washes our souls and bodies from the traumas that happened." Oh gosh! Another sentance that gets to me, i think i'll have to remember this too and learn to just allow myself to cry and let it out instead of stopping myself feeling anything. Thanks for the beautiful inspiring words!

Dust, i know exactly what you mean about no one else being able to understand the grief aspect of trauma. I certainly didn't either until i blurted all that stuff out in writing! I wish i could talk to someone, apart from my therapist, about it, but i'm just worried they'd think i was blowing things out of proportion or being stupid or attention seeking. Maybe it's because the understanding of loss and greif normally is in relation to losing something/someone physically, and we've lost so much psychologically, and some of us physically too?
I'm also planning on getting a tattoo symbolic of all i've been through. I'm going to get "survivor" but in the theban alphabet(the witches alphabet) around my arm like an armband. I'm yet to get it because i haven't connected any emotion to the "I'm a survivor" statement even though logicallyi know i am! I guess the better thing about a tattoo in comparison to jewellery is that it's there permanantly, and you can't take it off and undo all that work you put into wearing it when you get in a full blown everything sucks PTSD state! What were you planning on getting?

Cyndi, i've still got a fair amount of fear, but not nearly as much as before, so i guess that's a start! One thing i am struggling with with all this is that i feel like who i am today, meaning an adult with power over herself etc, should've protected that scared terrified little girl and if the adult me did that, she would not have died. The confusing thing with that is logically i know we're the same person just at different ages, so that would never happen anyway! I dont really get it! I love the idea of giving yourself the ring, i'm sure it means more than anything anyone else would ever give you.
 
I have gotten two tattoos since I began therapy and shortly after getting out of an abusive relationship, both are on my left hand. One is on the top side of my thumb, the OM symbol , for meditation helps me tremendously. The other is on the underside of my thumb (this really hurt) and it is a cross. I use them both and look at them often to remind me of the present moment..........of hope..........especially when I'm being triggered, which is often.
Young people comment on them, like they are some new piece of jewelry. I just kindly say that they are extremely important to me. And they are.

I recently went through an intense triggering event, being stalked, and had a rage fit when hurt by a 'friend,' who knew about my illness. I felt all my trust in life destroyed. I went and got a nose ring............
Seems I'm trying to permanently signiture myself with 'owies' on the outside, perhaps to get them out of my inside. I don't know. If I keep risking and keep getting abused, I might end up pierced and tattooed all over! I don't want to do this........but it's like a silent way to express the hell and torment...............I don't do it for other people, it's more like a ritual for me.

I'm scarred........here it is..........wish I could say, DON'T HURT ME ANYMORE..........I CAN'T TAKE ANYMORE!!!! But then that would just be advertising to abusers.
 
I can really relate to the outside "owies" signifying inner hurt. All of my piercings, apart from my ears, actually hold alot of meaning. It was a small way of reclaiming certain body parts from the sexual abuse. Because somebody hurt me in those areas against my will, i needed to prove to myself that i have choice and can allow myself to be hurt and still survive it, and being willingly hurt in those areas was like a reclaimation of my body.

I'm only 20, but i do get lots of people commenting on my piercings like you said like they're the latest fashion. I even get alot of people telling me how stupid i am for having them, and when i say "Well, they actually hold alot of meaning" they reply patronisingly with "What possible meaning could they have?".I hate how people think they can tell me what's right and wrong for my own body. I think even if i told them the meaning they wouldn't believe me!

I'm sure you'd look fine pierced and tattooed all over! But i hope it doesn't happen purely as a response to abusive situations.

It's nice to hear that other PTSD people find piercings and tattoo's useful!
 
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