• We are a multilingual website again. Read the notice about this.
  • Understand AI use at MyPTSD: all AI use is explained in our AI help page. AI use is by choice here. It exists if you want it, but does nothing unless you choose to use it.

How I (believe I) Healed From Ptsd

Status
Not open for further replies.

VikVikViktorious

Bronze Member
*A few quick disclaimers*

-It's still controversial in my mind as to whether or not it's a completely "healable" condition.

-I understand that everyone's trauma is different, everyone's body is affected uniquely, and everyone's healing journey involves a myriad of different obstacles and setbacks.

-I just want to share my healing experience, in the hopes it can help others in a similar position.

*How I healed*

-step 1: Was to finally surrender to the fact that I have some something very serious going on in my head, and I need professional help.

-Involved my family and seeked support from sympathetic/understanding members.

-Found a therapist and psychologist and religiously went to my weekly sessions.

-Started on an ssri (Zoloft) and fought through the first 2 months of horror and disarray as my body adjusted to the meds.

-Continued therapy and checked in with P doc regarding my emotions often. Suicidal ideation and isolation was ever present.

-Was around this time I found you beautiful people. I personally consider this forum to be a vital aspect of my recovery. Scary nights alone in my bed with the walls closing in on me- the muffins in the chat room from ms. Wonderful would halt that supernatural force when nothing else could.

-Forced myself into activities like going for a jog and doing laundry and bathing.

-Around the 2 month mark of Zoloft and around the 4 month mark of therapy my anxiety switch flicked off and the attrusive thoughts quelled.

-I thought long and hard - and I noticed myself no longer depending on the 90 minute rush-hour-traffic drive to my therapist. I no longer felt the need to take these medicines for an anxiety that was no longer present in my brain and soul.

-Against the genuine, educated suggestion of my T and P, I wrote my T a farewell (for now) letter and expressed my gratitude to her, and I let my P know I was beginning the weaning process with or without him. She thanked me for the letter and he obliged and wished me nothing but success.

-The weaning lasted about 3 weeks, and here at day 5 of being med-free, I am feeling at peace with myself and my surroundings.

One thing I could say with near-absolute certainty, though, is that although I am feeling like myself once again, things will never really be the same. The closeness I once felt with certain friends has been jolted a bit- and it involves a level of unspoken-identity-discrepancy that I never even knew could exist.

Perhaps that will fade with time? Perhaps I will establish new bonds and find other ways to feel close. Surely it has put me closer to a whole new set of people as well- so it all evens out in the long run.

Is this farewell? Certainly not. Helping others is something that helped me - especially in those random gusts of feeling better while in the eye of the storm. I'm also not naive enough to think that I won't be right back in that P office or grubbin on those forum muffins sometime in the near future.

Thank you all for reading and being a part of my journey. :)
 
It is amazing that you have gone from suicidal at the end of July to feeling symptom free in the beginning of September. You seem like you have been approaching this in a very methodical and thoughtful manner. I'm glad that your recovery has been so robust. Good work! I also hope you keep the connections to supports open just in case you should experience a flare up of symptoms so you can get back on track quickly again.
 
Last edited:
I am glad you feel that you are managing well.
If I may put in my two cents, it does take time to get used to meds, sometimes as long as 4 months. Be sure that going off of them is the right thing to do, as you started them not that long ago, and we often times mistake meds working, as being well. It might not be wise to go off them just because you are feeling well as you started this journey not that long ago.
Take Care
 
I am glad you feel that you are managing well.
If I may put in my two cents, it does take time to get u...

Two cents are always appreciated.. Sometimes we snatch those pennies with a bout of excitement, and sometimes we smile at their existence on the floor and let others pick them up.

For me it was an overwhelming need to give them up- many have done it cold turkey and suffered a bit- I did a bit of research on weaning and made a plan. Had symptoms picked up at any point in that process I'd've retraced my steps.

Thanks for the concern, all! I know where my resources are and how to find them.
 
I understand where you are coming from.
I self weaned off klonopin from February to March this year and it was a hell of a journey. It still is. Yes life would be easier back on it, I even had a doctor try to get me back on it last Thursday. But I look at the weaning process and all I had to go through, and living life without it, as hard as it is, is better than having to go through getting off it.
Sometimes we have to take the hard road to get ourselves to a place where we are happy with our (medical) decisions, and that sounds like what you are doing x
 
Wow, that's the fastest PTSD cure I've ever read about! Congrats!

There was a good 5 months of suffering prior to getting help- but still- all in all it was about 7 months of suffering, and 6 months of recovery work with about 2 months of inter-lapping factored in. All in all about 11 months total- it all began around the end of this month last year.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Donation drives

2026 Donation Goal

Goal
$1,800.00
Earned
$930.00
This donation drive ends in
0 hours, 0 minutes, 0 seconds
  51.7%

Trending content

Featured content

Back
Top Bottom