joeylittle
Sponsor
So in short, there's really nothing wrong with you, @Multitudes . Like @Iriseen said... you're human-plus.
I'm always curious when I see people respond to PTSD in this way.Alienation is the price we pay for being individuals in a conformist society, and PTSD is how brains cope with having to coexist with that conformist society.
To me, it's just another kind of black-and-white thinking, or maybe all-or-nothing. Coping with the fact that trauma creates damage by instead viewing the damage as proof of exceptionalism, in some way.
@Multitudes - I have trouble believing that I'm a person. I do think I'm a human being, but I don't see my 'self' as being...a thing, I guess. I see other human beings as people. I have a really hard time explaining it, and I'm totally aware that it's really just a negative core belief. But it can be painful to live with, and I wish I didn't see myself as not-a-person.
@Cyberluddite - to me, alienation is one of the most horrible things about not being a person. I do believe that it is inherent in human nature to want to connect to something or someone. Even a self-professed and highly content hermit is valuing their connection to their solitude. But the feeling of being on the outside of things, of not belonging with the rest of humanity...that's a whole bunch of identity stuff that is part of what makes life most unlivable, for me.
I think the truth is, trauma changes people. Those changes can be viewed as positive sometimes, negative other times; it all depends on what lens you are using to look at them. But with the most neutral lens in place it's hard to say that trauma is beneficial because it creates some kind of 'human-plus' set of attributes. Really, it just exposes one to the more extreme ends of the human experience. It's very hard to describe what it's like to be near death, or in extreme violence, or any of the other PTSD-grade traumas...but once you've lived those things, you can't forget them. What a trauma survivor is left with, after - the ways they have been changed - those things aren't necessarily 'good'. And they can lead to having a disorder, which by definition means, a kind of hampered functionality.
Sorry, that's a bit of a tangent, and more observational than anything else. Just stuff that's been on my mind lately.