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I Was A Nice Person Before Ptsd

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Notsowild

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I've been thinking lately about what I was like before PTSD. I was kinder, funnier and more compassionate. Now that I have all these crazy PTSD symptoms especially the dissociation, I find I just live in my own little world. I'm so consumed by thoughts, "am I going to have a panic attack", "remember to breathe" or "remember your grounding techniques" etc etc

I have no time to think about the world around me. People annoy me. I hate talking to them. I don't want to go out and have fun. I rarely laugh anymore. I'm all consumed by these symptoms. It's getting to be too much. Where is the light?
 
Hey there Notsowild,

The light is still in there. Never you fear. It is inside you. It might be buried under all the symptoms and it might be like a turtle inside its shell, but it is there. Nothing can take that away from you.

What worked for me was to talk to myself and remind myself there is a good person inside there.

And sometimes I could remind myself that my symptoms are not me. All my symptoms are things that are overlaid on top of the good and compassionate person I was. These symptoms are not inherently existent. They will eventually fade and the good me will reappear.

I hope you are able to find your good qualities again soon.

Namaste - Laurie
 
So true I feel just the same most of the time and then I feel guilty for being so wrapped up in my own world and not being there for others. I want to hide under my rock , I can't because I have to function but I want to.

The thing is socialising actually is a healthy good thing to do - even if it's just seeing your T or a quick coffee with a friend . Just that human contact -even if the thought of it is not appealing I do usually feel better for doing it .

So what am I saying ? Basically totally get where you are coming from but I try to keep up some social interaction however much I don't want to and by letting some non ptsd stuff into my life I hope ptsd won't totally consume every bit of every day .
 
I can really identify with your post. Like @Jane.l, the only thing that keeps me from blockading myself in my room forever is the guilt I feel when I am not participating with family at home and with friends. Most people in my life right now knew me pre-PTSD and it can be difficult for them to understand how drastically different I am now. I feel very overwhelmed a lot of the time because I am dealing with so many symptoms and yet have to try to pretend I'm okay when dealing with people. It's exhausting. I often think seriously about abandoning my life here and disappearing.

Didn't mean to hijack your thread. I just wanted to say that I totally get how you are feeling. Thanks for being open about how you feel as it has helped me. Hang in there.
 
I hear you! I don't know if you or I will ever be the people we were before. Maybe we can't be. Maybe we shouldn't be. Maybe we can still be good people. Life before PTSD seems like a childhood house I moved away from. I come back and see it. I have memories I love there but I no longer live there. Maybe we need to build a new home.
 
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From someone who thought they were a monster, the light is still inside you. I am finally able to differentiate between "me" and PTSD, the havoc and poor quality of life it causes. It's not me, and it's not you.

I don't know if I will be the person I was before.. I don't know who that person is. But maybe that's a good thing.. PTSD seems to give a vast amount of life lessons that most people never get the opportunity to experience. Some of it is bad, but it also makes us tough as nails, and grants a resilience that can be depended on if/when it is ever needed again.

But with going forward and learning to navigate it, I consider my future a clean slate in many ways. It's a second chance for being able to survive atrocities and come out relatively intact, alive, and not a victim. For me, that is hope.. maybe it's not the fairy tale, curable ending.. but it is better than the alternative.
 
The light comes with finding a way to enjoy getting to know this new, stronger person that you've become.

We could spend every day looking in the mirror and hating ourselves for being a self-centered, trauma obsessed, walking list of symptoms. But in reality, that isn't who we are becoming, that is what we are focusing on. There exists a silver lining within each and every symptom we're experiencing. Just try finding those rays of light for yourself.

I was once nostalgic about my pre-trauma personality, but as the months pass - I am learning to welcome the changes with open arms. For example, I stand up for myself more now than I've ever been capable of doing in the past. Granted it's usually because I am overreacting, being mean or rude, but at least I am saying something. I'm still working on things like being forgetful that other people in my life have problems too - I am rarely selfless and caring for others anymore as I am so focused in my own anxiety, but like all things. It will come with time.
 
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