becvan,
I think it is great your son was allowed to play games to help relieve some of his trauma. From what you said it seems to have helped reduce the symptoms a little at least.
helena,
I think denial is counterproductive for the most part. I do think that some parts of the brain can be retrained though. I notice that playing games can help me with other tasks and become more functional on a regular basis in my adult life. I also played a lot of games when I was a child and that probably helped reduce some of my symptoms. Again in this I am counting symptom management as "success" since that's about as far as science has gotten.
anthony,
Thank you for your input. I believe you are correct that exposure therapy is best overall. I also think it is good that we keep looking for ways to improve treatment. Reading books, listening to classical music, playing challenging games, art, exercise... all these things are good for even healthy people... and extra good for us while we are trying to get well.
clare,
Not sure about treatments for cortisol levels. I heard something about elevated cortisol levels being a bad thing in general but I do not know enough to even start to give you a response. You mentioned a Harvard med study about PTSD... I would love to read it... or anything else you have to say on the matter. I am glad you are doing research and wish you and your son the best. BTW: how is he doing on antipsychotics? One of my doctors tried zyprexa on me and it backfired horribly... but I have read that it has worked wonders for some people.
Best Wishes,
Liz H.