Thanks for starting this thread
@Kubash16
I share my diagnosis with ease when i think it is relevant. eg a friend who continually talks to me about PTSD symptoms who has shared experiencing childhood trauma or context of therapy groups, metal health forums, etc. i am not someone to disclose athe diagnosis. i am more likely to share the lived experience -- isolating, depression, challenges relating etc. this helps me not to add to the pit of shame, not to keep secrets, become less isolated etc. sometimes i will share the label, if the people seem to respond well tp what has been shared, similar to
@Sophy
i am also cautious sharing about it due to trauma bonding (although that can and does happe regardless)
what is your motivation for wanting to disclose?
i find disclosing diagnosis at work useful. instead of having to explain anxiety and depression which often leads people to ask what is causing it, i will say I experience PTSD symptoms and they can work out that some bad shit happened with long lasting symptoms - the end! (although we all know it's often just the beginning)
i find workplaces are more understanding and accommodating with PTSD than generic anxiety and depression which often gets met with some variation of --
yea we all have that
i generally talk openly, when relevant ,about challenges i experience, things i am working through and why. anyone who knows anything about growing up as an adult child in a dysfunctional family and complex PTSD can spot another and there isn't much need to talk diagnosis! the focus is the lived experience (unless going through shit in the mental health system)
i was diagnosed around the same age as you, i am 37 now. i am curious what impact receiving diagnosis had on you?
i look back and see much of my behavior pre and post diagnosis was complex-PTSD. for me the diagnosis was a signpost to what has turned out to be a long ass journey of dis covery. diagnosis in itself did not explain the mechanisms of my specific avoidance patterns, which i came to understand as social, emotional and sexual anorexia. although now a little more fluent in PTSD i can see these behaviors as the avoidance component but the way i lived it out was not obvious and was better (which i believe we all do in our own ways) illuminated through 12 step work and other modalities. excavating with these tools are helping to understand more
clearly how certain things are a manifestation of c-PTSD. hope that made sense?
blimey that was a ramble. anyway, hope there was something useful there