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Experienced Sufferer Who Knows There Is Hope

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Diana

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I was abused as a child and am married to a military veteran who struggled when he came home from Iraq. The things I learned on my own road to recovery were very useful to me as we did everything we could to hold our marriage together. At first I felt obligated to help him despite the immense burden it became because, for all intent and purposes, he helped to save my life when PTSD was a huge ball of crap that held me in place, mostly under the covers, and kept me from doing anything else. Then, even though he did not immediately improve, I realized how far I had come and used that strength to help him and ultimately save our marriage and family.

I have since worked with numerous veterans and active duty as they have moved through a system that seems disinterested in effective treatment. This work has allowed me to contribute to the wellness of others while also helping to keep myself in check.

I do not look fondly upon my experiences as a child or a wife. I am glad, however, that the experiences have not been in vain. I am not a professional anything. I am an experienced PTSD sufferer who knows there is hope.
 
Hi Diana

Welcome to the forum.

Your experiences have definitely not been in vain, what a great help you must be to other sufferers.

I hope being here will help you to move further forward with your journey.

Good luck and take care.

Amethist
 
Hi Diana,

The belated Doctor Viktor Frankl, psychiatrist, concentration camp survivor, and author of Man's Search For Meaning, stated in his book that the worse kind of suffering was when we could find no reason, no meaning, as to why we were suffering.

He went on to say that, once we find meaning, it become more bearable.

It sounds like you found meaning in yours by helping others through their pain. I think that's wonderful.

Perhaps you'll find even more meaning by sharing your words, your experiences and the wisdom you acquired by suffering through them with others on here.

Welcome to the Forum Diana.

Johnny
 
:hello:-Hi Diana
Welcome! The saying "knowledge if not shared is useless" is a favorite of mine. I think you would agree. I am looking forward to hearing more about your experiences. The more we know, the more we know!
O
 
Hi Diana,

Welcome from me too,

It is always uplifting to know that there is light at the end of the tunnel and that you are now able to help others come to terms with this condition.

Look forward to seeing you around the forum

Helena
 
Thank you for the Warm Welcome

Thank you for the warm welcome. At my age it's funny to be referred to as a "jr." member. My youngest child is a junior in high school. I will, however, try to act my age, but don't hold me to it. I read a funny thing the other day: "When you say, 'Act your age' I hear, 'Be sad with me'."

I do act my age most of the time in that I have tempered many things about myself with experience - patience and compassion mostly. I was not patient or compassionate as a younger person. I was hostile, quick to judge and mouthy. That said, I look back on that younger person fondly because she didn't roll over and die. She had zero idea what to do about her abuse. She had no idea of a direction to take and she wasn’t even sure what was wrong.

I am here because of her. I am here because of her lack of direction and her judgment, mouthiness and hostility. I have written a great deal over the course of my life, and the things I wrote in recovery are still the dearest to me. I can honestly say one of the most important things I ever did for myself was to accept my every fault, and I learned along the way that some of my "faults" were talents - talents that had been mislabeled as faults by those in my life who sought to keep me quiet.

I do still have to check myself because I really don't like it when someone answers a simple yes/no question with, "Blah blah, Look at how smart I am. Blah blah." This "fault" turned off one therapist who wanted me to "understand" how the abuse was probably enjoyable to some extent. He didn't like my defiance, and that brought around a new therapist who, when I told her, "That guy thinks I enjoyed it," got him fired.

(I should've started this post by saying I digress a great deal.) My point with having talked about acting one's age is that I don't. I acted 30 when I was 10 and continued to do so until recently when I started acting 35. I'm not 35, so my mirror tells me, but my heart overrules that and is quick to join in as the neighbor children blow bubbles and color the sidewalks with chalk. I am blessed with children who are not embarrassed to be seen with me - or dance, sing and spontaneously gather for a group hug on aisle 3 of the grocery store.

PTSD did, at one time, make me feel very, very old - although not old in the sense of age, but rather in the sense of my time being up and my having nothing to offer the world. While not a pivotal moment in my life, I fondly recall my oldest daughter coming to my bed after she arrived home from school one day when she was six years old. She said, "But you have to help me with my singing part in my class play or I will dieeeeeeee."

I sat up in bed where another mother wouldn't have been in bed in the first place, and we sang until she giggled and her brother joined in and we had snacks that got all over my pillows and they giggled some more. Then later, when I woke up from another bout of depressed sleep, there were cookie crumbs stuck to my face and I remembered that brief reprieve from the darkness that hung over me like a heavy, wet wool blanket.

I suppose the point I labor to make is that sometimes, platitudes like "Hang in there" and "Take it one day at a time" really mean, "Don't brush the cookie crumbs from your face right away."
 
Dear Diana,

Welcome to the Forum- and btw, don't feel bad because I am a "senior (member)", lol

I just wanted to thank you for your last post- well, all posts- and for starting this thread. It is funny, the conclusions you draw are exactly what I was just thinking (for the first time) tonight.

I found that I did increase in a manner of speaking in understanding and compassion/ empathy, due to my circumstances, but in many respects considered that a fault of sorts because I was told that that inferred I was a "bleeding heart", etc. But now those are the (only) things that I thank ptsd and my life experiences for, primarily.

Hope you find much great info and support here, thank you for your wisdom.

P.S- May you have many more incidences of "cookie crumbs" :smile:
 
Cookie crumbs, chocolate even Pizza have all been in my bed. It was not even children that caused the mess it was me and hubby :rofl:
It made him feel better at the time too, so keep doing and remembering.

Amethist
 
Welcome to the forum......May there always be cookie crumbs in your bed, and stuck on your face.....Thanks for the smile today!!!!!
 
What a delightful story ... cookie crumbs will make me smile from now on. Thank you for that gift.

Welcome to the forum :)
Grainne
 
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