@FridayJones could you explain what this means, or give an example? Thank you!
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So... PTSD peeps have a tendency to use a lot of different things to manage symptoms; food & alcohol are 2 super common ones.
A person can both be an Alcoholic AND have PTSD... Or they can be abusing the hell out of alcohol, but quitting isn't the problem, it's the PTSD symptoms that are the problem. They're not drinking to feed an addiction, they're drinking to manage PTSD symptoms. To oversimplify a smidge;
- Take the alcohol away from an alcoholic, start managing their addiction, and their lives will start to improve in a major way.
- Take the alcohol away from a PTSD person? Symptoms come on heavier, and heavier, and heavier, and their lives just keep getting worse. The solution to this isn't add the alcohol back in. That just creates more problems. The solution is to treat the PTSD.
- A person with both an addiction & PTSD? Can't just treat one or the other. Cause then you've still got all the problems of the other running amok. Have to treat both.
Same thing with eating disorders. A person can both have an ED & be PTSD. Or they can have major trauma stuff surrounding food (or their bodies, and food is just one way they're expressing that). Or they may have zero trauma stuff surrounding food... But have discovered that, like self harm treats PTSD symptoms? Binging/Purging &/or Starving does, too.
I technically meet the requirements for anorexia. But if you look a little deeper? 99% of that is trauma. Under stress I forget to eat, or I've got so much anxiety that my digestive system has shut off, and I can't eat, my body just voids anything I try to. I've also got some major trauma surrounding food... I was starved for a long time while I was being held prisoner, there were a lot of time in military land where supply lines were cut off, few other pieces here & there. Trauma stuff, joy :wtf:. So the vast majority of the time? What
looks like anorexia? Look beneath the surface. Is actually trauma-stuff.
Here's the rub, though. ;) I actually am anorexic.
I joke, and say I don't have an eating disorder, I have an eye disorder; I can't see myself as I actually am. But what it is, is anorexia. It's not a huge part of my life, most of the time (although I do sometimes get suicidal over it), but it's still there. I have to mind my eating & self appraisal
very closely... Because my trauma stuff will kick off my anorexia stuff given even half an opportunity. And then I've got 2 things I'm fighting, instead of 1.