Geena Amandus
New Here
Hello,
I am new to this site, so I will not be surprised if this issue has come up before. Trauma, and PTSD, along with MDD, panic, and dissociative symptoms have often derailed my career paths. Concretely speaking, there have been times when I was near bottom of the USA financial pyramid. I was even without housing for a good part of a year. (An evil landlord did not help matters in kicking all tenants out of the building.)
Fortunately, my therapist kept me on a sliding scale. For a time I even had Medicaid. My concern is that any relapse with bad symptoms could put me out of work. I have some savings, but that would not be enough for the out of pocket medical costs I have.
I am wondering how other people survived and maintained treatments and medications, if they also found a sudden shift in careers, or long unemployment. Note that many years ago I worked with people with chronic psychotic disorders, or mania. They were usually given SSI or SSDI, and either lived in the worst parts of towns, or were in residential facilities, maybe better than homelessness, but still broke and often over medicated. (Looking back, I know that some of them were dealing with severe complex PTSD, and intrusive thoughts and severe dissociation was diagnosed as "psychosis.") Some people did some healing and moved on but it seemed most were trapped in the system. I can only hope and pray that our system of treatment changes.
I am new to this site, so I will not be surprised if this issue has come up before. Trauma, and PTSD, along with MDD, panic, and dissociative symptoms have often derailed my career paths. Concretely speaking, there have been times when I was near bottom of the USA financial pyramid. I was even without housing for a good part of a year. (An evil landlord did not help matters in kicking all tenants out of the building.)
Fortunately, my therapist kept me on a sliding scale. For a time I even had Medicaid. My concern is that any relapse with bad symptoms could put me out of work. I have some savings, but that would not be enough for the out of pocket medical costs I have.
I am wondering how other people survived and maintained treatments and medications, if they also found a sudden shift in careers, or long unemployment. Note that many years ago I worked with people with chronic psychotic disorders, or mania. They were usually given SSI or SSDI, and either lived in the worst parts of towns, or were in residential facilities, maybe better than homelessness, but still broke and often over medicated. (Looking back, I know that some of them were dealing with severe complex PTSD, and intrusive thoughts and severe dissociation was diagnosed as "psychosis.") Some people did some healing and moved on but it seemed most were trapped in the system. I can only hope and pray that our system of treatment changes.