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Is diagnosis "empowerment"?

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So, I felt frustrated by the multiple diagnoses that I have had over the years that seemed to point at something being wrong and defective with me. These diagnosis just made me feel bad. Like dysthymia, anxiety, and adjustment disorder.
It wasn't until looking at trauma that things got better. I got the diagnosis really just of "trauma" and then recently CPTSD.
The "trauma" diagnosis even views symptoms differently. I always felt the message was with previous diagnosis, "there is something defective with you, with your genes."
But with trauma the message is more, "this is a reasonable response to some messed up shit."
I think my reaction to the "defective message" is really me though, because I feel inherently defective (a symptom of CPTSD).
I think that maybe other people might feel relief with non trauma diagnosis and not a feeling of being defective.
Out of all my diagnosis I like CPTSD the most because the symptoms resonate the most with me. This helps with labeling my symptoms which leads to mindfulness responses and then feeling control. If I can lable CPTSD symptoms then I am not going to buy into them.
Sometimes this back fires though.
 
I always resonated with the diagnosis PTSD, years before I was diagnosed with it. What I got instead was "depression", "anxiety" maybe bipolar or cyclothymia, maybe schizophrenia, "BPD", none of which addressed what was going on for me or what I'd been through.

My ex just called me crazy or taunted me with "which one am I talking to now?" In a abusive way.
My mum was pretty invested in me having BIpolar disorder, I'm guessing because that gets her off the hook for having to take responsibility for being a negligent and abusive mother.

When I heard the term complex PTSD, pennies dropped and it really has been helping me dispel a lot of shame and confusion about the struggles and difficulties and uphill battles I've faced and am still facing.

I've come so far, since being diagnosed, I've made leaps and bounds. No one would be able to wack a BPD label on me now as I've come too far for that, and at the same time, no one could invalidate my history of trauma, abuse, assault and long term chronic disadvantage and deny me acknowledgement for the battles I still face.

I am utterly empowered because I can stand proud as a survivor and someone who, despite horrendous history, never gives up and who overcomes (or is still in the process of overcoming).
 
Rad.... please explain (under your name “I am not PTSD)

That statement called to mind when I first started therapy ... I told the therapist I DO NOT WANT A LABEL!
The T was very respectful of my concern about labels. Over the years our discussions just gradually encompassed PTSD without being told you have PTSD. It was a gentle and gradual.

I entered therapy twice a week... At the time I thought my head was going to explode. Like a Nervous Breakdown. I considered self admit to inpatient psyche care. I didn’t know what was happening to me.

Having the diagnosis as TexCat and Ronin pointed out was helpful. The diagnosis directs to a proper therapist and treatment. It certainly gave me an answer to the madness I felt for all those years. How else can you learn about yourself? I guess I shouldn’t look at it as a LABEL but a condition like any physical condition (arthritis or diabetes or asthma)
 
Back then, it was not okay (on this forum) to diagnose yourself.
Still not ok. Self diagnosis is not a diagnosis.
He said that people should´t be afraid of diagnosing themselves with cptsd if it made them feel valid.
I think the person who wrote that is completely misguided. Your feelings about yourself are from self esteem, not from telling yourself, or others, you have a diagnosis that a professional has not applied.

There is nothing wrong with doing your homework, a bit of research and suspecting you may have something. BUT... you then go to an expert and see whether it is valid or whether you're actually the problem in your own circumstance. A person trying to convince themselves they have CPTSD, could actually just be a malingerer.
 
Back then, it was not okay (on this forum) to diagnose yourself

It is never ok, anywhere, to diagnose yourself. With anything. You could be very, very, wrong. And now you are working possibily the wrong therapies and working towards the wrong thing.

Perhaps you are just experiencing grief and not able to see that the grief and trauma are possibly temporary.

The reason one should never self diagnose. It is very dangerous to self diagnose anything but especially mental health disorders. Would someone say they have cancer when they have something different entrely? And if then they start chemo and radiation (as an example) but have a complete different health disorder? It is the same for mental health.

Since I hadn´t gotten an official cptsd diagnosis yet

Then advise you may have cptsd but haven't yet been diagnosed. That is what I do and what I will continue to do until the DSM follows suit with the ICD and I am offically diagnosed, likely the BPD & PTSD diagnosis dropped and CPTSD put in it's place. Just my hunch as there are key features of someone with "true" BPD that is missing in me. But the emotional roller coaster of BPD I certianly have.

are you traumatized enough to claim you have cptsd?

I am traumatized enough to have it but you cannot claim any diagnosis without actually being diagnosed with it by a professional. And in America that isn't even possible as CPTSD isn't in the DSM. Which is what the US uses for mental health diagnosis.

His argument was that a lot of people invalidate their own feelings, and thus don´t feel like they are worthy of seeking help. He said that people should´t be afraid of diagnosing themselves with cptsd if it made them feel valid.

That's a ridiculous starement. A dignosis or not doesn't vailidate or invaildate your symptoms. Which is what a diagnosis is. A set of symptoms. But you have them, diagnosis or not. So why would you need a diagnosis to vaildate symptoms or suffering in general?

For me, I suspected BPD for a long time. I never self diagnosed but I did research it a ton for years before my current therapy. It was the first to be diagnosed and because I had high suspection, I expected it.

PTSD was the shocker for me. I faught it at first. My first statement was "no way my past was as bad as war". It took a while for it to sink in that yes, yes it was. I accepted the PTSD diagnosis after my therpaist went through the DSM with me and all criteria and we agreed on which symptoms matched up but I accepted it reluctently. It took a good year or so to really accept it. I think much of that was because that was about the same time where I didn't call my past abuse or bad nor did I see it as traumatizing. So the more I saw it for what it was I accepted the diagnosis more and more.

It really didn't vaildate anything but once I grabbed the diagnosis and really accepted it, it did give me releif. That I wasn't "crazy" after all and that what I am dealing with is a "thing" that has a name and therapies. I then did a shit ton of research. Bought the PTSD sourcebook my therapist has. Researched therapies, etc. Now that I had a name for what I was dealing with I really wanted to know how to get better. That's empowerment. But I think that is quite common.

I think that so many want a name for what they are dealing with. I think that's common and normal. But you don't need a name to work with the set of symptoms you have. I think that is what most don't get. My therapist and I went to work right away working on the most blaring symptoms right away, before any diagnosis was made.
 
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