Hi all,
I've never really spoken about my PTSD, but I'm desperate so here it goes. A large tree fell on my house during Hurricane Irene, burying me and my family under our demolished house, everything in the attic, and the tree itself. Remarkably, we escaped with minor injuries (broken nose, severe concussions, cuts), but the trauma of watching the house fall on me, thinking I was dead, and being buried and immobile haunts me daily.
I shake and loose sensibility when its very windy out (the hurricane winds brought the tree down), and last year during Sandy I could not control my emotions. I slept in the basement for days and couldn't eat, crying a lot, you know the deal. Well hurricane season is coming again, and I cannot go through the torture again of fearing a tree will fall. Hurricanes are predicted to get more severe, and barring moving to Kentucky,
I do not know of any solution of how to deal with the fear of hurricanes/trees falling. During Sandy I wished more than anything I could be sedated for a couple days and wake up when it's over, and I realize that's not realistic. Does anyone have similar experiences and/or found solutions for how to deal with inevitable triggers?
~B
I've never really spoken about my PTSD, but I'm desperate so here it goes. A large tree fell on my house during Hurricane Irene, burying me and my family under our demolished house, everything in the attic, and the tree itself. Remarkably, we escaped with minor injuries (broken nose, severe concussions, cuts), but the trauma of watching the house fall on me, thinking I was dead, and being buried and immobile haunts me daily.
I shake and loose sensibility when its very windy out (the hurricane winds brought the tree down), and last year during Sandy I could not control my emotions. I slept in the basement for days and couldn't eat, crying a lot, you know the deal. Well hurricane season is coming again, and I cannot go through the torture again of fearing a tree will fall. Hurricanes are predicted to get more severe, and barring moving to Kentucky,
I do not know of any solution of how to deal with the fear of hurricanes/trees falling. During Sandy I wished more than anything I could be sedated for a couple days and wake up when it's over, and I realize that's not realistic. Does anyone have similar experiences and/or found solutions for how to deal with inevitable triggers?
~B