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How To Avoid Telling Coworkers About Your Ptsd

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Thanks Kers and Nimkekaa, the receptionist who was also supportive of me said something similar, and although I recognize it as a compliment, I'm still not sure why people say it!
Thank you for your support though, I'm looking forward to getting back on the horse, and bloody well staying on!
 
Congratulations!!!! That is such exciting news!!!

I think you are smart to keep information to yourself until you are ready to share. Once it's out there, then it's out there. The receptionist sounds unusually supportive and fabulous! Yippppeeee!!!!
 
I went back today to fill out the rest of my paperwork, and they were fabulously supportive, they won't stand for any slackers, and they really have taken a shine to me.

I've got an afternoon shift this sunday with someone who is a renowned slacker, they warned me prior and asked me if I'd like to have a bit of a challenge, so I decided that if I had the support, then I was more than willing to do it.

So it's going to be interesting to see what happens, but people who slack off don't seem to last very long at this facility, as eyes and ears are kept open by management, and if you're a good worker, they'll go in to bat for you.

At least, that is how it seems, I'll keep my head low for now and manage my communication so that there isn't a way for me to get stuck with the hardest jobs while the other one sits back and laughs at the newbie.

The staff trainer said, however, that even though I've only been in the industry for 3 years, I have the experience and mannerisms of someone who has been in there longer than all of them put together, and they never had to tell me how to do things, I knew, I did, and did it well.

I'm feeling pretty good about myself at the moment, but I'm going to have to be careful, because if I expect too much, or get to cocky, I'm going to land flat on my face and it's going to bloody well hurt.

I'll keep you guys posted as I go, it will be interesting to see how I transition back into the workplace after being house and bed ridden for so long.
 
Well yesterday as I was leaving work, my nosy co-worker asked me; "What are you doing tomorrow since it's your off day?" and I replied; "I'm going to therapy in the morning and after I might go horseback ridding"(thinking she might ask about the horseback ridding) She goes; "You go to therapy? For what?" and I sarcastically said; "well I suffer from PTSD and I get EMDR therapy from my psychiatrist" (The truth because I'm a honest 22year old too!) So she says; "Ohh your pretty normal for someone with PTSD" and I say; "Well I try:p"

I'm not one to hide what's really going on in my life. It gives me a sense of power to be honest when everyone else makes up lies for everything because my boss is more likely to believe me because she knows I'm that honest about everything, then to believe my co-workers who always makes up these weird stupid and plain ignorant lies about their lives!
 
I'm sorry you find it so hard but for me my work makes me happy and somehow i don't have most of my symptoms at work and so no one really knows about it unless I say something. And lying well to me that's just worse.

I wish you lots of luck on your first day! Try hard not to think of PTSD and enjoy your day!
 
Thanks Chantal,

I wish I could be honest with them, but they are all very judgemental in my line of work, but I'm a bit like you, most of my symptoms don't show at work anymore, so until I tell someone, I think no one will know.
Thanks for all your support, I'm looking forward to my first day in my new work clothes and shoes.....sounds like a new school kid I know!!! :shy::p
 
Hey Bubzilla thanks for sharing this success story! I'm also someone who will answer too truthfully when asked questions, so I'm going to keep this in mind when I go back to school this year so history doesn't repeat itself.

I used to work in health care too and you're smart to keep it to yourself. Sometimes I've been able to share things about myself but as a rule it's just better not to.
 
Hi Elph,

Well I had my first shift without a 'buddy' last night, and man was it tough!
The shit started as soon as I walked in the door.
The carer I was working with was Sudanese.

It was literally like dealing with a client suffering dementia, I had to constantly repeat myself with carefully selected closed ended questions otherwise she tried every trick in the book to talk over me, or get out of it, or she was 'sick' (pretended to faint onto the lifting machine whilst lifting a resident) or disappearing and not answering her phone to get out of work.

Then she tried to get me to do paperwork for all the residents that I didn't do, or that we hadn't checked on yet, and to do all the assessment paperwork for residents who were new and were being assessed for funding, and this is all on my first shift!

Then, whilst toileting a resident, I go to change the continence aid, and she tells me that it's still dry, and we can't change it until the last round, despite the obvious fecal smearing on the continence aid.
I reacted very firmly and told her ABSOLUTELY NOT, and to go and get me another aid, so she decided to argue with me in FRONT of the resident who was FULLY cognitive and sitting on the toilet watching our face off.
It took 10 MINUTES, but I kept repeating myself, 'we cannot leave this on her, it is unhygenic, uncleanly, undignified, and NOT proper care.' I think I repeated myself about 5 times over 10 minutes while she dallied around and tried to do other things so that I would cave, but I was rock solid, and would not give in until she did it.

At the end of it, we were turning a client over who was bed ridden, and halfway through she decided to do the whole 'I'm sick' thing, and let him go half way, which meant I bore his full weight, and instantly pulled a muscle in my shoulder/neck.

She kept complaining about her neck and shoulders all the way through, and pointed out that she had been feeling sick since yesterday.....so I asked her what she was doing at work if she was sick.....and she kind of laughed it off, because she had no answer.

She kept complaining the rest of the shift until I pointed out that this was my first shift in nursing after 2 years, and I was getting no help from her at all, AND I had pulled my shoulder.

The supervisor saw me gripping my pec muscle and grimacing, and asked what happened, and I told him, turns out she bullied him the same way when he started a year ago too, so he took me and gave me a whole heap of panadol.

As I'm packing up to leave, she tells me that she will walk home with me, as she lives not far from me, so I told her that my partner is picking me up, as I am not walking home after dark and with a sore shoulder.
So she immediately asked for a lift home, and I told her I will have to ask my partner when he arrives.

I stood outside waiting for my partner to arrive to drive me home, and she keeps pushing me to walk with her, and dancing around saying 'I wanna walk, I wanna walk, it's not far, come on, come on.' Again I refused, and then my partner drove up.

I told her we are not driving as far as her place, and she could only go as far as our place, so she immediately said that it's not far, and we can drive her, once again, I said no, we are going as far as our place, and if it wasn't good enough, she could walk.

So she shut up and got in the back, and we dropped her off 400m from the facility.
She refused to get out of the back seat, and kept telling us that it wasn't far, and that we could drive her home, so I turned around and said "goodnight, ****."

She got out of the car, and stood there, not closing the door.
So I turned around to her and said, "****, next time we are going to work a bit better together, aren't we?" She tried to play stupid, and said "what do you mean?", "This shift could have gone much better, and next time we work together, it's going to be much better, isn't it?".

She asked me what the problem was, and so I said, "I'll talk to you about it when we meet up again, it's late and I'm going home."

She stood there silently for another minute, and then shut the door and we drove home.

I have had 5 hours sleep, my heart rate is elevated, and my shoulder is aching, but by God Almighty, I made that bloody bitch pull her f*cking weight, and I got everything done on shift without any help or direction from her at all.

I bloody well won, I might be tired, and still winding down from 7 hours of being as unmovable as a bump on a log, but I bloody well won, and I'm proud of myself.
 
Wow, well done!! What a s&*t situation and you really pulled it off! Nursing is known for 'eating their young' so you really have to be a tough cookie to get through it! And I'm so impressed that you wouldn't let her mistreat a patient either!! Bravo.
 
Thanks Elph, I still feel a little jittery because of the amount of energy I had to put into it, but I'm not anxious about it, I'm not stressing about it, in fact, I feel empowered, because for the first time in my entire life I got to stand up to a bully and I had support behind me.

Not only that, but despite her best efforts, everything got done to a high standard, and the satisfaction of digging my heels in and firmly saying "NO" without being a bitch was bloody satisfactory.

I still can't get over the fact that despite everything, I WON, and no, I don't give a flying f*ck about anything anyone has to say negatively about it, I don't care about what she has to say about it, for the first time in my entire life I've stood up to the f*ckers and stood my ground as a person in my own right, and damn the consequences.

This is not going to make me arrogant, or full of myself, or a pushy cow, this has merely made me proud of me, myself and I for the first time, and I'm so proud of myself that I could almost cry with relief, and I know now that no matter what crap happens down the track, I am happy to be me, do what I know is right, and be fully vindicated.

I hope you have felt this sensation Elph, its, pardon the intimate nature, like a round of the most satisfying sex you've had in a while, your body feels like everything has been pleasantly stretched, you are relaxed even though your heart is still racing a bit.

Damn it's good.:cool::smug:
 
You reacted so well, Bub! I'm 53 and I don't know if I would have been able to handle that first day so well! I'm hoping to go back to work in Sept as a hospital RN. There is a bully in the unit I want to work in, and I will take your lead with her.
 
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