Tiana and nurse1, welcome to the forum! I hope you both get as much out of it as I have.
Actually Tiana I do understand how you feel, my own trauma is a rather uncommon one, my father murdered my family one night, and tried to murder me as well before turning the gun on himself. I was the only survivor. Sounds like an episode of CSI. In real life it's difficult to meet another person with a similar experience. There are other family shootings, but usually there are no survivors. I do sometimes wonder about other people with a similar experience, and if they feel the same as I do.
Yes I think this is one of the main reasons people want to find like sufferers, they want to be validated. Also, for me anyways, there is a constant urge to compare myself with others. I want to see how I measure up. But both of these thinking patterns are incorrect. You don't need validation of this kind, your trauma is yours alone and even if someone shared a very similar experience it would not be the same as yours, as we are all different people. By the same token, comparing yourself to other people is also wrong. We are all individuals, we react and heal at different paces. That's why it's so important to look at the symptoms and the illness itself, rather than how we got the illness.
Think about it this way... if this was a support group for cancer survivors, we wouldn't be dwelling on how we got cancer, but rather on how we survived, the treatments we were receiving, the pain and other symptoms we were experiencing, etc. Think of your PTSD in the same way. I know it's difficult though, I struggle with it myself still, all the time.
Well nurse, initially it was good for you to read of another's similar experience, because it helped you to realize that you had PTSD too, just like a military person. However, now that you know people who are raped can also have PTSD, do you still feel the need to identify only with people who have been raped? I think you answered that for yourself when you said you relate to everyone here in a strange way. You just needed more information on PTSD I think, and its different causes.
Anyways, just my thoughts, a little convoluted as I'm coming out of a difficult period myself right now. Take care, both of you.
I can't help but feel that way. I have this need to know if anyone else has survived an ordeal like mine.
Actually Tiana I do understand how you feel, my own trauma is a rather uncommon one, my father murdered my family one night, and tried to murder me as well before turning the gun on himself. I was the only survivor. Sounds like an episode of CSI. In real life it's difficult to meet another person with a similar experience. There are other family shootings, but usually there are no survivors. I do sometimes wonder about other people with a similar experience, and if they feel the same as I do.
Tiana said:To this day I feel everything I say is subject to scrutinization. I don't feel credible, no matter how truthful I am.
Yes I think this is one of the main reasons people want to find like sufferers, they want to be validated. Also, for me anyways, there is a constant urge to compare myself with others. I want to see how I measure up. But both of these thinking patterns are incorrect. You don't need validation of this kind, your trauma is yours alone and even if someone shared a very similar experience it would not be the same as yours, as we are all different people. By the same token, comparing yourself to other people is also wrong. We are all individuals, we react and heal at different paces. That's why it's so important to look at the symptoms and the illness itself, rather than how we got the illness.
Think about it this way... if this was a support group for cancer survivors, we wouldn't be dwelling on how we got cancer, but rather on how we survived, the treatments we were receiving, the pain and other symptoms we were experiencing, etc. Think of your PTSD in the same way. I know it's difficult though, I struggle with it myself still, all the time.
nurse1 said:So maybe you need some sence of someone getting here in a simalar manner. I really did. Even if symptom are the same it made a life changing difference for me to read Candys intro.
Well nurse, initially it was good for you to read of another's similar experience, because it helped you to realize that you had PTSD too, just like a military person. However, now that you know people who are raped can also have PTSD, do you still feel the need to identify only with people who have been raped? I think you answered that for yourself when you said you relate to everyone here in a strange way. You just needed more information on PTSD I think, and its different causes.
Anyways, just my thoughts, a little convoluted as I'm coming out of a difficult period myself right now. Take care, both of you.