The trap that C-PTSD falls into, on top of all the rest, is that - of course people in general do not know your history, they judge you based on your behavior. Which naturally brings along huge problems - as if not having problems to start with!
During my life I've met strangers, who think I'm evil bastard, when somethings triggers, say at bar, overwhelming (infant) feeling of being insulted. When this happens, there are people who take it as your attack on people, and their response is a crushing attack on you. Talk about tragedy!
I think general thought of people is simple - people are all the way responsible of their own behavior - which is true, of course. But there is also varying understanding; in my opinion the most noble, intelligent and educated attitude towards a trouble maker is "well, give him/her a benefit of a doubt, that there might be something in his/her history, that makes him/her act that way". But, there are a great majority of people who don't give a shit about that kind of tolerance - *quite the opposite* -, they want to target and "give that shit back in double".
I have been a target of violent attacks many times during adulthood, (say, once or twice a year) , perhaps 4 times leading to injury (during 30 years). It's pretty hard to witness at court (under panic attack), when your testimony in so incoherent babbling due to trauma, and even amnesia about what happened. Certainly in sever cases of violence, it's like it's happening to someone else, and it's not hurting you at all.
BTW, just recalled a thought as a child; "Beating up is OK, it's the shouting that hurts".
During my life I've met strangers, who think I'm evil bastard, when somethings triggers, say at bar, overwhelming (infant) feeling of being insulted. When this happens, there are people who take it as your attack on people, and their response is a crushing attack on you. Talk about tragedy!
I think general thought of people is simple - people are all the way responsible of their own behavior - which is true, of course. But there is also varying understanding; in my opinion the most noble, intelligent and educated attitude towards a trouble maker is "well, give him/her a benefit of a doubt, that there might be something in his/her history, that makes him/her act that way". But, there are a great majority of people who don't give a shit about that kind of tolerance - *quite the opposite* -, they want to target and "give that shit back in double".
I have been a target of violent attacks many times during adulthood, (say, once or twice a year) , perhaps 4 times leading to injury (during 30 years). It's pretty hard to witness at court (under panic attack), when your testimony in so incoherent babbling due to trauma, and even amnesia about what happened. Certainly in sever cases of violence, it's like it's happening to someone else, and it's not hurting you at all.
BTW, just recalled a thought as a child; "Beating up is OK, it's the shouting that hurts".