Leighlee87
Silver Member
I love the idea of a trauma diary. I write all of the time, so having somewhere to put it all seems therapeutic. I've only had ptsd for a couple years, and I'm still struggling to learn how to cope. Despite the ptsd diagnosis, I've probably suffered from minor ptsd symptoms since childhood.
We jumped back into EMDR last session after taking a full month off. We hit some really hard stuff, and I needed a break because I was struggling to keep up with work and other areas of my life. I didn't expect the memory to elicit what it has, but we are finally getting to the core of things. I'm kinda frustrated with this last session, because I jumped back to older memories instead of staying with the more current memories that have lead to my full blown ptsd. I know the older memories surfaced for a reason, and it's something I need to process and sort out. I just wanted to stick with the memories that cause me the most distress I guess.
The session has left me in a panic though, and I'm freaking out. My mind went back to memories of being raped, something I could never manage to tell her about in sessions. It took me a bit to finally say it out loud. As soon as I said the words, I wanted to gulp it all back in and undo it all. I'm scrambling to find a way to word everything that I feel inside on the topic. Part of the struggle is that I still feel the need to protect the person who did it. I feel like I am partly to blame and I got myself into a situation (somewhat intentionally) for this to happen. But I don't want to explain how I put intentionally put myself into a situation where I knowingly risked being abused. I would rather curl up and die that confess what I've done.
One thing emdr has been good for (or bad for) has been the fact that it's kinda pushed me to admit to past traumas that she had no prior idea about. The first time it happened, I completely panicked--100% wanted to die inside. There were 2 specific instances during that session, one being that my father forced me to hand my son over to him when he was first born since I was still in college. It is the single greatest regret I have in life, and one that hurts immensely. The second involved an incident where I was molested as a child (funny, that was slightly easier to admit that rape). Both times she literally stopped for a minute to take it in, at which point I just wanted to curl up and die. At the end of the session and the following session she mentioned that she had learned a few things that I had failed to mention before. Just shoot me. She then asked me if I want to be in therapy forever. She knows I really like her, but that I absolutely hate therapy tbh--as far as I'm concerned, it's torture. I was so scared that she was going to want to sit and talk about the things I had been avoiding, but surprisingly enough, she hasn't brought anything up or try to steer into the direction of talking about it. I'm incredibly thankful. I'm wondering if she will be willing to do the same with my admission from earlier this week too.
A few therapy sessions back, my therapist alluded to the fact that she thinks I have DID, but she didn't straight out say it--quite possibly because I was on the verge of tears. Part of me thinks it's quite possible, and then part of me thinks that my childhood wasn't THAT bad. To be honest, the thought of it terrifies me, and no matter what people say, it doesn't make it feel any better. People may get offended, but inside, I feel like DID moves me into the category of clinically insane. I don't have time to struggle with this, developing PTSD was a hard enough blow and has made life a very difficult struggle. I feel like I'm just starting to get up on my feet, and I now have this to contend with. Yes, I might be the same person I was before the diagnosis. However, the last thing I want to hear is that everything is much more complex and difficult than I originally thought. I want to get on with my life. I've just started my career, have young kids, a marriage--I don't think there is ever a right time in life to develop PTSD, but honestly, right now most definitely isn't it. I cannot work full time because I'm not in an emotionally stable enough place to handle it. That's incredibly hard to swallow considering it's putting a strain of finances. The idea of alters is frightening (even though I kinda vaguely think I know about them--but can't decipher if it's my imagination), the concept of talking about them is even more terrifying, and I'd rather not know they are there. I'm afraid things are all in my head, that my own paranoia about the situation will cause me to imagine things that aren't true, and that eventually they will see through it and realize that it's all false and I've been making it all up. It doesn't help that I can go online and find plenty of articles that denounce the existence of DID and argue that my fears are factually true--it's all in my head and made up. It adds to the level of denial, and will probably make my therapists job more difficult. I have to learn how to stop fighting her at every turn. I'm defiant in nature, so it doesn't help the matter. I hate emotions and avoid them. But the level of resistance by me makes things slow going, and makes me feel like I'm wasting both of our time. Maybe I'm not ready, but knowing myself I don't think I'll ever be brave enough to go there on my own--to "be ready". A huge part of this process, is just getting me to slowly face this fear and realize it isn't going to kill me--that I'm going to be okay. It's just hard, and frustrating both for me and for her, cause I really don't mean to be this way.
We jumped back into EMDR last session after taking a full month off. We hit some really hard stuff, and I needed a break because I was struggling to keep up with work and other areas of my life. I didn't expect the memory to elicit what it has, but we are finally getting to the core of things. I'm kinda frustrated with this last session, because I jumped back to older memories instead of staying with the more current memories that have lead to my full blown ptsd. I know the older memories surfaced for a reason, and it's something I need to process and sort out. I just wanted to stick with the memories that cause me the most distress I guess.
The session has left me in a panic though, and I'm freaking out. My mind went back to memories of being raped, something I could never manage to tell her about in sessions. It took me a bit to finally say it out loud. As soon as I said the words, I wanted to gulp it all back in and undo it all. I'm scrambling to find a way to word everything that I feel inside on the topic. Part of the struggle is that I still feel the need to protect the person who did it. I feel like I am partly to blame and I got myself into a situation (somewhat intentionally) for this to happen. But I don't want to explain how I put intentionally put myself into a situation where I knowingly risked being abused. I would rather curl up and die that confess what I've done.
One thing emdr has been good for (or bad for) has been the fact that it's kinda pushed me to admit to past traumas that she had no prior idea about. The first time it happened, I completely panicked--100% wanted to die inside. There were 2 specific instances during that session, one being that my father forced me to hand my son over to him when he was first born since I was still in college. It is the single greatest regret I have in life, and one that hurts immensely. The second involved an incident where I was molested as a child (funny, that was slightly easier to admit that rape). Both times she literally stopped for a minute to take it in, at which point I just wanted to curl up and die. At the end of the session and the following session she mentioned that she had learned a few things that I had failed to mention before. Just shoot me. She then asked me if I want to be in therapy forever. She knows I really like her, but that I absolutely hate therapy tbh--as far as I'm concerned, it's torture. I was so scared that she was going to want to sit and talk about the things I had been avoiding, but surprisingly enough, she hasn't brought anything up or try to steer into the direction of talking about it. I'm incredibly thankful. I'm wondering if she will be willing to do the same with my admission from earlier this week too.
A few therapy sessions back, my therapist alluded to the fact that she thinks I have DID, but she didn't straight out say it--quite possibly because I was on the verge of tears. Part of me thinks it's quite possible, and then part of me thinks that my childhood wasn't THAT bad. To be honest, the thought of it terrifies me, and no matter what people say, it doesn't make it feel any better. People may get offended, but inside, I feel like DID moves me into the category of clinically insane. I don't have time to struggle with this, developing PTSD was a hard enough blow and has made life a very difficult struggle. I feel like I'm just starting to get up on my feet, and I now have this to contend with. Yes, I might be the same person I was before the diagnosis. However, the last thing I want to hear is that everything is much more complex and difficult than I originally thought. I want to get on with my life. I've just started my career, have young kids, a marriage--I don't think there is ever a right time in life to develop PTSD, but honestly, right now most definitely isn't it. I cannot work full time because I'm not in an emotionally stable enough place to handle it. That's incredibly hard to swallow considering it's putting a strain of finances. The idea of alters is frightening (even though I kinda vaguely think I know about them--but can't decipher if it's my imagination), the concept of talking about them is even more terrifying, and I'd rather not know they are there. I'm afraid things are all in my head, that my own paranoia about the situation will cause me to imagine things that aren't true, and that eventually they will see through it and realize that it's all false and I've been making it all up. It doesn't help that I can go online and find plenty of articles that denounce the existence of DID and argue that my fears are factually true--it's all in my head and made up. It adds to the level of denial, and will probably make my therapists job more difficult. I have to learn how to stop fighting her at every turn. I'm defiant in nature, so it doesn't help the matter. I hate emotions and avoid them. But the level of resistance by me makes things slow going, and makes me feel like I'm wasting both of our time. Maybe I'm not ready, but knowing myself I don't think I'll ever be brave enough to go there on my own--to "be ready". A huge part of this process, is just getting me to slowly face this fear and realize it isn't going to kill me--that I'm going to be okay. It's just hard, and frustrating both for me and for her, cause I really don't mean to be this way.