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I Believe PTSD Is Curable - An Anonymous Source

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I love it....I have some pens for writing on fabric. Maybe we could write "I dont have a sore eye, I'm retraining my brain" in really small letters. People won't like to stare to try to read it...hahah
 
Ok...the other day I patched in the morning, as soon as I got up, felt good all day. Usually I patch in the afternoon or at night while relaxing and watching a movie. When I went to bed that night I was unable to sleep... No anxiety or anything, I just couldn't seem to shut my mind off. So last night I patched for my 20 min on each eye in the evening, slept great. Anyone else finding there are better times to patch for being able to sleep? Is first thing in the morning the wrong time?
 
Maybe for you the right way is morning and night? I had to skip a day patching and it seemed to knock my sleep out of synch.
 
So you noticed it affected your sleep too, interesting. I thought it might be that I stopped drinking... for the first time in years I just feel like I don't want or need too. I kinda just forgot to patch that evening. I really like my normal sleep so I won't be forgetting again. I know you don't have PTSD but do you feel you are sleeping better because you are patching?
 
Sleeping better, dreaming better, and coincidentally, not craving that after work beer. It's always in the fridge, but the last few have sat there opened but unfinished. nothing conscious, and no drinking problem or effort to quit. hmmm. I had a bit of a sleeping problem last night, but blame that on taking amino acid suppliments too late in the day
 
Yes, the dreaming.... I'm dreaming a lot but they are good dreams where I don't feel out of control and traumatized, I didn't think that was possible for me. I'm not scared to sleep anymore. I used to drink and smoke pot so I could pass out and not dream. During the years I was with my abuser I was crying in my sleep and would wake up sobbing still. I am so happy that time in my life is over and I can now put it behind me. A cure... ? I think it has cured me in that department. It's really cool that you are patching as a carer and feeling the benefits*
 
I always patch at night while watching TV. I patched during the day yesterday for the first time and could not go to sleep. Wasn't anxious or anything just couldnt go to sleep. I am going to go back to only doing it at night watching TV.

Do you think if I look at a cupcake or potato chips while patching I will stop inhaling carbs for two days straight if I get a bit anxious.?haha Maybe I could paint a cupcake on inside of my patch....or I could do EMDR with a cupcake on a string...
 
I continue to wear my eye patch almost daily, and especially like it for walking around, doing yard work, stuff like that. Still looking forward to getting my sketch pad, some tracing paper and taking on left hand sketching skills. Think this will be good. Been using my mouse (trackball) on the left, it feels normal now.

Learning some other new healing techniques as well. EFT. Will be posting some more on this soon. Thought it a good time to bump this thread.
 
I really am just curious- have they found if this is a matter of the routes being re-RE wired, or the original disrupted 'electrical' paths, which were ( for want of a better word ) broken by the trauma , actually healed back together by using these methods-like broken bones in a cast? When this thread first came out, I asked that but didn't get an answer. Does anyone who has been getting success with this know what the dynamics are-is there research which shows the physiological results? I'm truly not being argumentative, just curious? :)

Anni
 
Hi anni,

For an explanation, you could google the word neurogenesis or brain plasticity. There are a number of articles that explain new neuron growth on the Internet. And you are correct, this is not the re-connection of old pathways. They have atrophied. This is the formation of new pathways. There is an excellent book by a Canadian psychiatrist, Dr. Norman Doidge, 'The Brain That Heals Itself'. I highly recommend this book. It is a good read on the subject and is written for the layman so user friendly language. Norman has an official website and there are some free downloads on the site. Check out his lecture schedule as he might be in your area sometime.

Physical activity also promotes neurogenesis and 'Spark' by John J. Ratey, MD explores the new science of exercise and the brain.

There are some therapies that are showing promise in this area and I refer you to Brain Gym. You can google this for information.

Irlen vision therapy is showing promise. Research recognizes that the way vision is processed after a stress related event may be due to changes in the plasticity mechanism. This is somehow related to sensory neuronal plasticity coupled with changes in the amygdala response leading to long term change in sensory processing (I am quoting from memory regarding what the neuropsych people told me when I was screened). If you look on the Irlen site under research and TBI (traumatic brain injury), there is some info. I wear Irlen lenses all the time. When I wear them, I have depth perception and am better with contrast, vision characteristics I had pre-trauma. Some measurable changes in vision are now apparent when I am not wearing the lenses attritributed to new neural pathways. I started wearing the lenses December past and am very pleased with the results.

All interesting. Hope I was not too long winded. This is a subject I am passionate about.
CM
 
Wow, I just stumbled upon this thread and I think I'll take some more time to read through it.

I think there is something to helping re-connect left and right brain hemispheres. Something interesting about yoga, there are exercises designed to help, can't remember all the names, but example "alternative nostril breathing technique" to help reduce anxiety. I think there is a primordial psychology out there, where the old masters did have some important insight and methods.

Interesting thing about fish oils, Omega-3 and Omega 6s. . . I went to some dietary counselling to manage my cholesterol level. There's an intesting connection between PTSD-Cholesterol and Cortisol production. I've recently trained myself to accept eating sardines!!! ;-) Probably the fish oil supplements might be a better idea, more practical and to make sure I have a good level of it in my system.

I was lucky in that while I practiced drug use at one time, I don't have the addiction gene in me, not like my brother has, when one beer leads to many more, he doesn't stop-- so he needs to stay away from it altogether. It was less physical, recreational and for a while, it was an escape, mentally, emotionally and a scene that tolerated my craziness (too stoned to notice what was really up with me ;-) )

Ativans-- I should be more careful about my advocacy for them then. I get prescribed a controlled amount, I'm aware of their addictiveness and that tolerance can't be built to them, so I manage okay (really last resort, when other coping fails and only when having to deal with that and a public situation-- I'm good at avoiding taking them and it's not hard for me to keep rules about that). But I should be more mindful of where others are with it. It's a quick fix and it should replace development of good coping skills.

Attending to the physiological makes a lot of sense. My symptoms come through the body before the mind apprehends it, and I'm noticing that even more with the practice of Mindfulness. I'm working on practice my breathing techniques to help cope with anxiety, post flashback recovery, reduce hyperarousal.

Cool thing I've recently been introduced to and which I've heard others talk about here is the Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction, e.g. book, Full Catastrope Living by Jon Kabt-Zinn, that's basically what I was taught in the course-- easier to learn it via course instruction-- many important elements in that book, once one gets how important and relevant each piece is. There are some CDs available by same author and his collegues. Really useful stuff, IMO.

Anyway, I'll come back to this thread as wow, there's 15 pages, so I have more reading to do. Very fascinating and glad it was brought up.

I believe PTSD is curable. Patience is good along the way. I believe the brain is really pliable and adaptive and it can learn new things, new neuropathways and especially I think when the body is engaged in the healing, the mind-body.

Anthony-- I identify with the earlier beginings, Interesting. As for schizoid, I know there's been times in my life, the PTSD re-traumatizations, so crazy and no break, that my mind literally got spun into a psychosis-- I remember how that was :/
 
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