Here is their page on emotional abuse...I am curious if other people here would say they have also been emotionally abused at any point in their lives. I suspect it makes us more vulnerable to PTSD, but Im just guessing.
Anyhow, now I try to really listen to my feelings. I am a big believer now that they are important.
I definately relate to what you are saying here. I have experienced lots of emotional invalidation and abuse from my family and people in general. It's a world wide epidemic that many people are becoming more aware of. I learnt in my late teens how to start validating my feelings, and that they are valid and important regardless of what messages people try to tell me.
I still revert back to bottling emotions as a habit, and possibly a survival mechanism(?), but I do spend time most days feeling into my feelings. I don't usually self-medicate...(sometimes I do), and have been committed to expressing my feelings for about 15 years now, sometimes reverting, but mostly being on track. I'm quite proud of myself for this and consider it a huge achievement, even if no one else really sees or acknowledges it.
The more I come to this forum, the more I see , through other peoples posts that I really am not making it up, and I never was. I tried, like many people here, to minimize it and thought the psychologist was crazy fro diagnosing me with this thing, when I hadn't been in a war...and it wasn't that bad...but it's not true. I have lived with ptsd for 15 years now as well as clinical depression...and my parents still have no idea what happened and wrote it all off in one day as being my fault for going with the guy in the first place...as though that resolved everything. They've only just acknowledged that it was really that bad...so they minimized it as well as me doing it to myself. I knew I was going through a lot...I was going through hell, but I still wouldn't let myself accept that I had this disorder...but I did, and I still do. I'm not sure it's something that ever really goes away. It's always there, and the more I have grieved things in the past, the more it tends to open up other wounds as well, that were happily mending.
For me, it really depends who I am around as to whether I feel safe expressing what I am feeling. Definately not safe around my family. I have two girlfriends who have experienced depression and ptsd, so I know it is safe to talk about feelings and be open with them, thankfully. Otherwise I just journal...which has been my habit for 15 years now, as well as art therapy that I taught myself.
One good thing that came from all of this is that I discovered my own creativity and have become quite a talented artist without any formal teaching. I think that is quite common with many people who live with depression and ptsd though.