tommytwojays
New Here
I signed up last year and I think posted one thread. I got some good advice and support so thanks to you all for that :) I was diagnosed with PTSD in the end and had a course of CBT
Thing is, I didn't really take a crucial bit of advice that I was given back then. To move out from the home I shared with my partner of ten years. Over the last year, things got worse. CBT helped a lot and I learnt how to stay on top....in the main. Though when I lost it, I lost it big time.I'm sure folks here will know what that's all about. My partner too got progressively worse in parallel with me. We passed the stress back and forth, back and forth.
Anyway, 7 weeks ago I decided I had had enough. I was getting increasingly suicidal, my relationship had gone badly wrong, I was on the verge of being sacked, etc etc.
So I moved out and set about sorting myself out. Set about getting to the bottom of it. REALLY feeling it. REALLY understanding what the hell had happened to me. I was determined. It was either that or put myself out of my and everyone else's misery....
It's been a difficult process for sure, with many steps forward and back. I was lucky and had a very wise and experienced confidant online, who seemed to always be there when I needed her with advice and support. That was utterly invaluable. I took to writing a journal. A thing which I'd now urge ANYONE with any kind of mental/emotional disorder to do. It has been crucial to the progress I have made.
Within the first two weeks of focused attention, journalling, grounding and centering techniques, the hyper state began to fade. The anxiety levels dropped and I started to feel vaguely human again.
However, as I dealt more and more with the accident that instigated the PTSD, I became aware that that wasn't all there was to it. There was an underlying malaise. I discovered that traced right back to trauma I experienced as a child. Trauma that I had learned to cope with but never resolved.
I now understand that I was going through complex PTSD, not classic PTSD.
One of the most beneficial techniques I have used involved re-assessing the traumatic experiences that damaged me. Both the accident and the childhood. I was encouraged to look at those experiences from different angles and slowly I started to change the neural pathways and the engrams stuck in the Hippocampus. I now feel so much better. In fact better than I have since I was 7. The only sadness left is that I had to leave someone I love dearly to do it. I am left with heartbreak and no real evidence that the lady and me will ever get together again :( But still, that is a far better thing to bear than the consequence of not leaving and following this path.
I'm not going to go on and on. I just wanted to add another thread that shows that there CAN be light at the end of the PTSD tunnel. We CAN do this! It's far from easy and a painful task but it can be done :)
Good luck all of you with your recoveries :)
Thing is, I didn't really take a crucial bit of advice that I was given back then. To move out from the home I shared with my partner of ten years. Over the last year, things got worse. CBT helped a lot and I learnt how to stay on top....in the main. Though when I lost it, I lost it big time.I'm sure folks here will know what that's all about. My partner too got progressively worse in parallel with me. We passed the stress back and forth, back and forth.
Anyway, 7 weeks ago I decided I had had enough. I was getting increasingly suicidal, my relationship had gone badly wrong, I was on the verge of being sacked, etc etc.
So I moved out and set about sorting myself out. Set about getting to the bottom of it. REALLY feeling it. REALLY understanding what the hell had happened to me. I was determined. It was either that or put myself out of my and everyone else's misery....
It's been a difficult process for sure, with many steps forward and back. I was lucky and had a very wise and experienced confidant online, who seemed to always be there when I needed her with advice and support. That was utterly invaluable. I took to writing a journal. A thing which I'd now urge ANYONE with any kind of mental/emotional disorder to do. It has been crucial to the progress I have made.
Within the first two weeks of focused attention, journalling, grounding and centering techniques, the hyper state began to fade. The anxiety levels dropped and I started to feel vaguely human again.
However, as I dealt more and more with the accident that instigated the PTSD, I became aware that that wasn't all there was to it. There was an underlying malaise. I discovered that traced right back to trauma I experienced as a child. Trauma that I had learned to cope with but never resolved.
I now understand that I was going through complex PTSD, not classic PTSD.
One of the most beneficial techniques I have used involved re-assessing the traumatic experiences that damaged me. Both the accident and the childhood. I was encouraged to look at those experiences from different angles and slowly I started to change the neural pathways and the engrams stuck in the Hippocampus. I now feel so much better. In fact better than I have since I was 7. The only sadness left is that I had to leave someone I love dearly to do it. I am left with heartbreak and no real evidence that the lady and me will ever get together again :( But still, that is a far better thing to bear than the consequence of not leaving and following this path.
I'm not going to go on and on. I just wanted to add another thread that shows that there CAN be light at the end of the PTSD tunnel. We CAN do this! It's far from easy and a painful task but it can be done :)
Good luck all of you with your recoveries :)
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