sky dancer
Platinum Member
Hi Just me,
I just wanted to offer you a few words of encouragement and a 'hang in there'. I thought my 'main trauma' was an assault that touched off the PTSD. It turns out my main trauma is from childhood violence and psychological abuse. I fought my therapist over that but he kept not letting me process the more recent assault.
It turns out he's right. I've been doing the childhood trauma work and to my surprise I don't think about or feel afraid of the perpetrator of the relatively recent assault.
Healing from PTSD does play havoc with present life. I had been a competent social worker and counselor before the assault by a neighbor that triggered the PTSD. I lost my home, my job and the self-esteem that went with competent functioning.
Slowly, I've been working my way back. I work part-time now. I'm so grateful to have a supportive spouse.
It tmust be so hard for you to be around the people who hurt you so long ago. I hope your therapist is helping you create a safe space in which to work all this through,
Going through this myself, with all the resources I actually have going for me, I appreciate the work that we all do to heal.
It's so important for you to keep going even when it gets tough. All of your symptoms, the crying, the physical illness, the difficulty concentrating, I've had them all. They come and go. I'll go now for a week or two relatively symptom free and then something, some contact with family with trigger the PTSD.
What seems to be happening is I measure my success in terms of the absence of some symptom or the speed of recovery from the symptoms.
Just last week I was able to pull out of a full blown panic attack within twenty minutes. I was able to do so because my spouse was with me and I was able to just be with the symptoms how they were without fighting them. Then I could redirect myself into another activity and come back.
Just wanted to make contact with you and let you know there is a whole community here of people who care about your recovery.
Later,
sky
I just wanted to offer you a few words of encouragement and a 'hang in there'. I thought my 'main trauma' was an assault that touched off the PTSD. It turns out my main trauma is from childhood violence and psychological abuse. I fought my therapist over that but he kept not letting me process the more recent assault.
It turns out he's right. I've been doing the childhood trauma work and to my surprise I don't think about or feel afraid of the perpetrator of the relatively recent assault.
Healing from PTSD does play havoc with present life. I had been a competent social worker and counselor before the assault by a neighbor that triggered the PTSD. I lost my home, my job and the self-esteem that went with competent functioning.
Slowly, I've been working my way back. I work part-time now. I'm so grateful to have a supportive spouse.
It tmust be so hard for you to be around the people who hurt you so long ago. I hope your therapist is helping you create a safe space in which to work all this through,
Going through this myself, with all the resources I actually have going for me, I appreciate the work that we all do to heal.
It's so important for you to keep going even when it gets tough. All of your symptoms, the crying, the physical illness, the difficulty concentrating, I've had them all. They come and go. I'll go now for a week or two relatively symptom free and then something, some contact with family with trigger the PTSD.
What seems to be happening is I measure my success in terms of the absence of some symptom or the speed of recovery from the symptoms.
Just last week I was able to pull out of a full blown panic attack within twenty minutes. I was able to do so because my spouse was with me and I was able to just be with the symptoms how they were without fighting them. Then I could redirect myself into another activity and come back.
Just wanted to make contact with you and let you know there is a whole community here of people who care about your recovery.
Later,
sky