If it doesn't, you can call it Purple Taco Saturn Derailment or Cocoa Purple Taco Saturn Derailment for all I care. I just want to not be like this forever.
Agreed! Though, my only thing with labels and making sure you have the right ones that actually do fit is therapies specific for that disorder. So, for PTSD an example would be EMDR. Specific for PTSD but if the person has some symptoms that mimics PTSD but doesn't have PTSD but rather one of those other disorders, EMDR may not be a good therapy for them. Or, for cPTSD, like Anothony said, they would do DBT and/or CBT to stabilize the person first before trauma processing. That may not be the same for a PTSD person. So, that's my only thing with labels and making sure you have the right ones.
Also, say hypotheticly I fit cPTSD and was diagnosed with cPTSD. Maybe I also would not be diagnosed with BPD. I have many BPD symptoms (enough for diagnosis) but those same symptoms are listed here for cPTSD. My therapist (and yesterday, my pain doctor) said I do not act like the "typical BPDer" and my therapist says he sees mostly PTSD in me. My pain doctor said "I would have them recheck that diagnosis". The missing link, per both of them, is manipulation. I even argued with my pain dr telling him I did (was told I did) manipulate without meaning to and that is when he threw out examples of a "typical BPDer" and what, he said all, do to manipulate and told me that he has not seen one sign of BPD in me. He also said that even if I didn't tell him, he would be able to spot it based on manipulating him and his staff and any other companies involved. My therapist did the same thing, give examples of how a "typical BPDer manipulate, which I have never done.
So, I don't know, but I think having one single diagnosis, cPTSD, would be a f*ck load easier and it would be something that would fit better then PTSD and BPD per the above views.
I also had to stabilze first via DBT and medication, before we could really dive into trauma processing. I mean, really dig into it. Would it have taken so long to stablize me and process trauma if they had cPTSD and these guidelines, or whatever you call them?
Though, they may be able to do that with just the symptoms. I don't know.
I think insurence companies also play a big part in that. At least in the US. Not sure if this is all of of them but you have to have a disorder listed for them to cover you. That, i believe for me, is GAD as anxiety comes with PTSD and the proposed cPTSD so, to me, it is an unneeded label. So, maybe that is why many therapists quickly give you at least one lable. Insurence reasons. PTSD maybe that quickly given label.