Marine/w/PTSD
Bronze Member
All throughout my life I was hypersensitive; it took but a pin tilting in the slight way I did not like to destroy my mood.
Every single morning (and I do mean every damn morning) it was a struggle to regain some measure of a balanced emotion. If I did not have my sugar fix I turned into a monster much like the imaginings of Dr. jekyll and Hyde (maybe not literally but if you count that I threw a tantrum when I was kid, to starting fights as as teenager, and insulting people down to the core as an adult, all over something as trivial as a set of subtle words I misunderstood from people - these things are the description of a monster). All these attributes I described I thought were just because I thought I was just sensitive. But this is not the case.
When I am calm I am friendly, positive, active and athletic; this is the person I want to remain and focus on being rather than the monster I turn into.
I finally realize after reading numerous postings of people's testimonials on this forum that I do in fact have PTSD as the doctors have diagnosed. You see I did not think I had it, I thought I was just sensitive and just not tough enough. I find that I am tough and battling PTSD all my life has made me tougher then the man next to me, I can attest this to the way I plowed through deployments because I was right at home emotionally. I'll admit these deployments worsened my condition further, but it made my PTSD just bad enough that I could not deny that I had it anymore.
Realizing that I have PTSD - I think is an accomplishment because I have been in denial of it (for 7 years) since I was diagnosed with it. Now true progress can happen because I know what hinders me and I won't just look past this invisible force.
Lastly I'd like to thank everyone on this forum, for allowing me to realize that I am not alone and that all the things I find funny - you also do.
Every single morning (and I do mean every damn morning) it was a struggle to regain some measure of a balanced emotion. If I did not have my sugar fix I turned into a monster much like the imaginings of Dr. jekyll and Hyde (maybe not literally but if you count that I threw a tantrum when I was kid, to starting fights as as teenager, and insulting people down to the core as an adult, all over something as trivial as a set of subtle words I misunderstood from people - these things are the description of a monster). All these attributes I described I thought were just because I thought I was just sensitive. But this is not the case.
When I am calm I am friendly, positive, active and athletic; this is the person I want to remain and focus on being rather than the monster I turn into.
I finally realize after reading numerous postings of people's testimonials on this forum that I do in fact have PTSD as the doctors have diagnosed. You see I did not think I had it, I thought I was just sensitive and just not tough enough. I find that I am tough and battling PTSD all my life has made me tougher then the man next to me, I can attest this to the way I plowed through deployments because I was right at home emotionally. I'll admit these deployments worsened my condition further, but it made my PTSD just bad enough that I could not deny that I had it anymore.
Realizing that I have PTSD - I think is an accomplishment because I have been in denial of it (for 7 years) since I was diagnosed with it. Now true progress can happen because I know what hinders me and I won't just look past this invisible force.
Lastly I'd like to thank everyone on this forum, for allowing me to realize that I am not alone and that all the things I find funny - you also do.