HoosierGal
Bronze Member
I need to preface this by saying that I have so much love and respect for veterans of war, not just those who suffer PTSD, but each man and women who has mad a sacrifice to serve the people of their country.
I'm noting a difference in how the public, mainly non-PTSD sufferers perceives PTSD from combat/military service versus PTSD from childhood abuse or sexual assault/rape (of course, there are other ways to become inflicted with PTSD and I understand this).
Once my college had an anonymous bullies board where students could wrote secrets, confessions. Some were funny, some were serious. I saw that someone had written "I have PTSD." Below this someone else had written "If you are a veteran, I'm sorry and thank you for your service."
Now, I don't believe for a minute that the person who wrote that response meant ANY harm at all in their wording. When I saw it I wasnt offended and I hope the person who wrote the original confession, whether or not they were a vet, interpreted it as a supportive message and was also not offended.
I also have two classmates who suffer from PTSD. One is a male, one female, and both are 20-30-something veterans with combat related PTSD. Both are very brave individuals who have spoken and written about their experiences with PTSD and war in general. However, it wasn't until I'd known her for a year that my female friend told me she had been raped in the military. Both she and my male friend had discussed other deeply painful and traumatizing aspects of military service, but my female friend said that for her personally it was "less complicated" to leave out the part about the rape.
I am not a war veteran, I will never personally experience the horrors of war and combat. I don't consiser my PTSD "better" or "worse" than anyone else's simply because everyone's experience is unique - its not a competition, after all, and no one wins with this disorder. My PTSD comes from years of reoccurring sexual abuse from my dad, and his friends. The abuse has not only left me mentally scarred, but physically disfigured due to not receiving medical treatment for multiple injuries (including broken bones, genital and intestinal mutilation) that occurred during episodes of sexual abuse.
I guess in some (maybe selfish) ways, I feel more ashamed of my PTSD. I once told someone I had PTSD and they asked if I was a vet. Of course I replied, "no" bit for some odd, inward reason I felt my face redden with shame. I felt like the conversation had to stop there because i knew mentioning sexual abuse would likely make the person I was talking to uncomfotable. I didn't make a brave decision to serve my country, and on a weird way I feel that I deserve less support that veterans. Ugh. Sorry if that makes no sense.
My question for everyone else is, do you feel that you yourself, your family/friends, or society around you perceives combat related PTSD as different that abuse-related PTSD? Is the difference good, bad, or neutral for PTSD sufferers?
I truly, truly hope I haven't worded this in a way that comes across as disrespteful to any PTSD sufferer - regardless of how the disorder came about. Wishing everyone the best on their journeys. :)
I'm noting a difference in how the public, mainly non-PTSD sufferers perceives PTSD from combat/military service versus PTSD from childhood abuse or sexual assault/rape (of course, there are other ways to become inflicted with PTSD and I understand this).
Once my college had an anonymous bullies board where students could wrote secrets, confessions. Some were funny, some were serious. I saw that someone had written "I have PTSD." Below this someone else had written "If you are a veteran, I'm sorry and thank you for your service."
Now, I don't believe for a minute that the person who wrote that response meant ANY harm at all in their wording. When I saw it I wasnt offended and I hope the person who wrote the original confession, whether or not they were a vet, interpreted it as a supportive message and was also not offended.
I also have two classmates who suffer from PTSD. One is a male, one female, and both are 20-30-something veterans with combat related PTSD. Both are very brave individuals who have spoken and written about their experiences with PTSD and war in general. However, it wasn't until I'd known her for a year that my female friend told me she had been raped in the military. Both she and my male friend had discussed other deeply painful and traumatizing aspects of military service, but my female friend said that for her personally it was "less complicated" to leave out the part about the rape.
I am not a war veteran, I will never personally experience the horrors of war and combat. I don't consiser my PTSD "better" or "worse" than anyone else's simply because everyone's experience is unique - its not a competition, after all, and no one wins with this disorder. My PTSD comes from years of reoccurring sexual abuse from my dad, and his friends. The abuse has not only left me mentally scarred, but physically disfigured due to not receiving medical treatment for multiple injuries (including broken bones, genital and intestinal mutilation) that occurred during episodes of sexual abuse.
I guess in some (maybe selfish) ways, I feel more ashamed of my PTSD. I once told someone I had PTSD and they asked if I was a vet. Of course I replied, "no" bit for some odd, inward reason I felt my face redden with shame. I felt like the conversation had to stop there because i knew mentioning sexual abuse would likely make the person I was talking to uncomfotable. I didn't make a brave decision to serve my country, and on a weird way I feel that I deserve less support that veterans. Ugh. Sorry if that makes no sense.
My question for everyone else is, do you feel that you yourself, your family/friends, or society around you perceives combat related PTSD as different that abuse-related PTSD? Is the difference good, bad, or neutral for PTSD sufferers?
I truly, truly hope I haven't worded this in a way that comes across as disrespteful to any PTSD sufferer - regardless of how the disorder came about. Wishing everyone the best on their journeys. :)
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