Hi all,
Brand new to the forums, and am really reluctant to post about this because I can't seem to find anything else even remotely similar and because of fear of being judged, or grouped in with the "fake PTSD-ers".
So, first things first... I was abused emotionally/physically for about 6 years as a teenager. I don't really want to say more than that yet, except that I started self-harming at age 12 and developed anorexia (which has dominated my life for the past 15 years) at age 15.
During those years I very intentionally "learned" how to dissociate because I decided that the emotions were too painful, and for that matter useless, and I just needed to survive until I could leave home. It then took years in therapy before I could agree with a therapist that what had happened was in fact abuse that could result in PTSD.
The dissociation has continued to the point where I lose chunks of time or spend days feeling like I'm going through the motions but am not really "there". I have flashbacks that are beyond my control and that I'm just beginning to try to address and put words to and it is horrible and exhausting. All of that I've said to prove, if only to myself, that I DO have PTSD, and that what I've been through IS worthy of the pain and time lost and other struggles that I've experienced.
I am currently doing intensive trauma therapy. The focus is on putting words to the trauma, being able to feel and express emotions (I am just numb until completely overwhelmed), and identifying needs and how to get them met.
But here's the thing:
Sometimes in session when I feel myself starting to dissociate in the numbing sense or in the imminent-flashback sense, I don't always do everything I could to stop it, and that makes me feel like the horrible manipulative person that I was often told I was.
There are a few reasons I'm aware of as to why I do this, and probably many that I'm not. Some of the stuff I know is:
- I think some part of me needs my T to witness it; nobody was there to see it when it really happened
- I feel like the only time I can give myself permission to actually feel those horrible emotions and let myself cry at all is if I am, or at least perceived to be, in crisis and completely out of control --- I am so worn out from all the bottled up emotions and this is the only way I know to get them out
- When I go into a dissociative state my T pulls her chair closer, and will take my hands and rub my shoulders to help bring me back. I need and crave this closeness for the few moments that it breaks through the constant isolation and I feel connected and somewhat safe and because I really don't know how to soothe myself, and I truly don't know how to ask for it other than in this round-about way.
So my question is, has anyone else struggled with something similar, or am I the horrible person my mind is telling me I am?
Brand new to the forums, and am really reluctant to post about this because I can't seem to find anything else even remotely similar and because of fear of being judged, or grouped in with the "fake PTSD-ers".
So, first things first... I was abused emotionally/physically for about 6 years as a teenager. I don't really want to say more than that yet, except that I started self-harming at age 12 and developed anorexia (which has dominated my life for the past 15 years) at age 15.
During those years I very intentionally "learned" how to dissociate because I decided that the emotions were too painful, and for that matter useless, and I just needed to survive until I could leave home. It then took years in therapy before I could agree with a therapist that what had happened was in fact abuse that could result in PTSD.
The dissociation has continued to the point where I lose chunks of time or spend days feeling like I'm going through the motions but am not really "there". I have flashbacks that are beyond my control and that I'm just beginning to try to address and put words to and it is horrible and exhausting. All of that I've said to prove, if only to myself, that I DO have PTSD, and that what I've been through IS worthy of the pain and time lost and other struggles that I've experienced.
I am currently doing intensive trauma therapy. The focus is on putting words to the trauma, being able to feel and express emotions (I am just numb until completely overwhelmed), and identifying needs and how to get them met.
But here's the thing:
Sometimes in session when I feel myself starting to dissociate in the numbing sense or in the imminent-flashback sense, I don't always do everything I could to stop it, and that makes me feel like the horrible manipulative person that I was often told I was.
There are a few reasons I'm aware of as to why I do this, and probably many that I'm not. Some of the stuff I know is:
- I think some part of me needs my T to witness it; nobody was there to see it when it really happened
- I feel like the only time I can give myself permission to actually feel those horrible emotions and let myself cry at all is if I am, or at least perceived to be, in crisis and completely out of control --- I am so worn out from all the bottled up emotions and this is the only way I know to get them out
- When I go into a dissociative state my T pulls her chair closer, and will take my hands and rub my shoulders to help bring me back. I need and crave this closeness for the few moments that it breaks through the constant isolation and I feel connected and somewhat safe and because I really don't know how to soothe myself, and I truly don't know how to ask for it other than in this round-about way.
So my question is, has anyone else struggled with something similar, or am I the horrible person my mind is telling me I am?
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