Thank you for explaining to me the meaning of 'shame' in CPTSD symptoms a little. What you have said here makes me realise how the constant 'hypervilence' and 'hyperarousal' can fit into 'shame', but we ought not to be 'ashamed' about what we have suffered at the hands of our perpetrators. As infants and very young children when we fell victim to the injuries inflicted on us, it is blatantly obvious that we did nothing wrong.I am finding it hard to sit with the shame of not having had a life with a job, career, frie...
In saying:
I am finding it hard and I am ruminating more than a little bit about it. I have to go through this process I know to get to the other side so I can move on. Denial is not helpful. Lying is not helpful.
You identify a worrying conflict that your t seems to me to be encouraging and accommodating and perhaps is making worse when she encourages you to explain your CV gaps by "My psychiatrist said I could say I have been a homemaker." Surely if you want to be honest you need to say that you have been dealing with bringing up your family (if you have one) and additionally handling ill-health but now your family has grown up, and your ill-health is more stabilised such that you can work. Ok, so it is difficult to predict how potential employers would perceive this, but the fact that you are being honest and demonstrating that you juggling bringing up your family while suffering your ill-health does demonstrate that you are hard working, take responsibility for commitments, and despite your illness capable of meeting any expected roles in the job description. Remember, running a home requires management skills, and good management skills as a homemaker result in your children becoming well adjusted adults.
Firstly, be honest to yourself about what you can and cannot do, then apply for jobs that realistically match your abilities and skills, Be prepared, for a time at least, to take a more mundane job than your education level might normally suggest is right for you. What employers need to see is that you are reliable, that you can definitely fill the job description, and that you are unlikely to take excessive sick leave. If you keep on giving up voluntary work jobs, before you have identified another job that you are moving on to, you demonstrate a lack of commitment, and a tendency to have poor work ethics in the area of staying power when things get tough in the work environment.
Ok so some jobs do not suit us, and some work tasks are not of our liking but they need to be done. For example, what self-employed homemaker or employed cleaning operative enjoys cleaning toilets, but cleaning the toilets is a vital task within both job descriptions. An employer looking for a cleaning operative would be a fool if they employed somebody who said I can do everything in your job description, but I do not clean toilets. Unless there is an identifiable disability that stops said homemaker or cleaning operative cleaning toilets, it would be lawfully legitimate not to give this applicant the job.