- Post starter
- #13
T
Tefed
It's saddening to me that I have to explain this to you all, but you don't have to experience something that is physically harmful in order to have PTSD symptoms. Isn't PTSD just when you over-react to something because it triggers a reflex in your amygdala that originated from a traumatic event? Not necessarily a "life threatening" event as Oguh had mentioned. Your life doesn't have to be in immediate danger to experience a level of trauma/anxiety that causes PTSD symptoms
The treatment for cancer is chemo. The treatment for TB can also sometimes be chemo. That does NOT make tuberculosis like cancer.
The treatment for PTSD can include medications which can include antipsychotic medications. The treatment for schizophrenia includes antipsychotic medications. That does not make schizophrenia like PTSD.
Autism and brain tumors and Hypothyroidism and even the neurological damage that can come from the blood disease that you have - all these can all cause "fight or flight" responses to be heightened. However, that does not make any of those conditions like PTSD. The treatment and path of recovery and even the symptoms of all these conditions are very different than PTSD.
When ones' life is in imminent harms way, the nervous system is affected in a very specific way that does not happen with other kinds of difficult and awful life events.
I do believe you have a very difficult disease, but it's not PTSD. Misophobia must be very hard to live with. It may be significantly contributing to what mental health problems you have now. You don't have PTSD.