So, over Christmas I ended up finally having my first appointment with a Psychiatrist, who gave me a full 1 hour consultation and sent me one week later a full breakdown of his diagnosis.
The big crazy thing I discovered, was that he diagnosed me with having Panic Disorder, with 'probable' PTSD.
This has been MIND blowing for me, as it now explains why the PTSD treatment alone never helped me to overcome my most debilitating symptoms, which were the constant panic attacks and hyperventilation.
Since then I have been having the appropriate treatment from my therapist, as well as being able to utilise Panic Disorder relevant self help techniques, which have made a VAST difference to my daily life. Instead of avoiding everything, I am now finding little by little, by facing my fears, I am gaining confidence and losing the fear. Its baby steps but life feels different now. I feel hope in a way I couldn't find it before.
I know I still have the PTSD, and I can now see when I'm having a PTSD trigger as opposed to a Panic Disorder trigger. I'm able to see the difference between being triggered by an EVENT that mimics the event of my past trauma, and being triggered by an irrational fear (basically agoraphobia).
The whole development of my panic disorder makes so much more sense to me also. I had had a HORRIFIC pregnancy, with hyperemesis gravidarum (severe morning sickness for months to the point I was in hospital on a drip with potential kidney/liver failure etc), then my digestive system basically shut down due to the fact I hadn't eaten for so long, after which my daughter was born in an emergency situation whereby she was drawn out by forceps in a violent way. My body pretty much shut down in the weeks following this and I ended up in hospital again with what they thought was swelling in my brain (?!) having MRI scans etc. NIGHTMARE! Accompanying this my mother became severely dependant on me during this time and nearly mentally destroyed me (that's not a joke!)...All the build up of stress led to what I now know were panic attacks. I thought I was dying. Literally. And I think because my PTSD was being triggered, my stress levels were at an all time high and I had been ill so much, I basically stopped trusting that my body was ok...thus the development of the panic disorder....
IT ALL MAKES SO MUCH SENSE NOW!
It might seem obvious to some, but not knowing you have panic disorder is so disabling because the agoraphobia side of things had gotten so bad that everything from driving in a car, lying down, having a full stomach, exercise or walking too fast, or even just thinking about the 'fear' etc was bringing on symptoms. I now understand that this is panic disorder and even just this knowledge itself has hugely helped these feelings to subside and calm down. I am far from 'fixed' in terms of the panic disorder yet, but I have come on more in the past few weeks than I did in the last year and a half.
Crazy...
Sorry for the huge explosion of thoughts but it feels good to get those written down!
Hugs to the beautiful PTSD community on here xxx
The big crazy thing I discovered, was that he diagnosed me with having Panic Disorder, with 'probable' PTSD.
This has been MIND blowing for me, as it now explains why the PTSD treatment alone never helped me to overcome my most debilitating symptoms, which were the constant panic attacks and hyperventilation.
Since then I have been having the appropriate treatment from my therapist, as well as being able to utilise Panic Disorder relevant self help techniques, which have made a VAST difference to my daily life. Instead of avoiding everything, I am now finding little by little, by facing my fears, I am gaining confidence and losing the fear. Its baby steps but life feels different now. I feel hope in a way I couldn't find it before.
I know I still have the PTSD, and I can now see when I'm having a PTSD trigger as opposed to a Panic Disorder trigger. I'm able to see the difference between being triggered by an EVENT that mimics the event of my past trauma, and being triggered by an irrational fear (basically agoraphobia).
The whole development of my panic disorder makes so much more sense to me also. I had had a HORRIFIC pregnancy, with hyperemesis gravidarum (severe morning sickness for months to the point I was in hospital on a drip with potential kidney/liver failure etc), then my digestive system basically shut down due to the fact I hadn't eaten for so long, after which my daughter was born in an emergency situation whereby she was drawn out by forceps in a violent way. My body pretty much shut down in the weeks following this and I ended up in hospital again with what they thought was swelling in my brain (?!) having MRI scans etc. NIGHTMARE! Accompanying this my mother became severely dependant on me during this time and nearly mentally destroyed me (that's not a joke!)...All the build up of stress led to what I now know were panic attacks. I thought I was dying. Literally. And I think because my PTSD was being triggered, my stress levels were at an all time high and I had been ill so much, I basically stopped trusting that my body was ok...thus the development of the panic disorder....
IT ALL MAKES SO MUCH SENSE NOW!
It might seem obvious to some, but not knowing you have panic disorder is so disabling because the agoraphobia side of things had gotten so bad that everything from driving in a car, lying down, having a full stomach, exercise or walking too fast, or even just thinking about the 'fear' etc was bringing on symptoms. I now understand that this is panic disorder and even just this knowledge itself has hugely helped these feelings to subside and calm down. I am far from 'fixed' in terms of the panic disorder yet, but I have come on more in the past few weeks than I did in the last year and a half.
Crazy...
Sorry for the huge explosion of thoughts but it feels good to get those written down!
Hugs to the beautiful PTSD community on here xxx