I was hoping you'd reply. Deploying?
A lot, to possibly most, combat vets with PTSD? Become asymptomatic once deployed.
There's the reverse "kind" where people crack up in the field, but get better at home, that saw hundreds of British soldiers shot for cowardice during WWII. Sent home the first time to recuperate, deemed fit for combat & sent back, but the second time they lost it they were executed.
PTSD just kinds sorta seems to split that way?
Some people just seem to adapt so completely to life threatening situations, that returning to 'normal' f*cks them up. The suicide rate for retirement is higher than for any group that's survived teenage years... but the suicide rate for retiring from trauma jobs? (Military, police, fire, ems, certain kinds of journalism, etc.?) Is ASTRONOMICAL.
Whilst others becomes so hypersensitive to trauma that even normal life stressors break them (and I don't mean in the way pretty much everyone with PTSD periodically loses it because the toilet paper roll is on "backwards", or stress Cup stuff with weddings/births/funerals. But full on psychosis & worse).
PTSD does that a lot... 180 degrees difference in RESPONSE to the same symptom or stimuli. (Fight/ flight/ freeze/ etc) being a great example.
So SOME PEOPLE, as long as they stay IN trauma seem to avoid the whole 'post trauma' bit, whilst others just get worse and worse and worse (until psychosis).
So IDFK why, but for the IN TRAUMA = PEACE crowd? It sure as hell avoids all the post trauma fallout & predicts where they're going to point their professional & personal lives. High Octane Adrenaline Fueled work/play.
BUT? That's only one subset of PTSD.