joeylittle
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Interesting thread. It bothers me in the article that physical sexual harassment (described as "being pushed against walls, forcibly kissed, groped and slapped by MPs") is somewhat of an afterthought. I know that 'bullying' is the buzzword for the article, but what would make someone think that the physical harassment is not the bigger problem? Perhaps that's not the article's intention, but it does read that way.
To me, the major difference between the sudden death of a child and the list you gave, is that those elements all consist of repetitive trauma - Being in a cult, or trafficked, or kidnapped, or tortured - none of them is a singular event. An unexpected death of a child is a single trauma.
Single trauma is not lesser than repetitive trauma.
On the surface it can appear so, because it's one vs. multiples. But, while we know that the symptomology for CPTSD has unique qualities that distinguish it from simple PTSD - there's no evidence or knowledge indicating that multiple or repeated trauma damages the brain more than a single trauma.
It's a question people ask here sometimes, "can I get PTSD more than once?" I'm fairly sure that science doesn't know, yet. The additional symptoms that arise from a CPTSD diagnosis are (currently) assumed to result from maladaptive cognitive and behavioral patterns that develop over the course of (surviving) the repetitive trauma.
(I'd love to know if I'm wrong about that, because it would mean I have some studies to catch up on...)
Would like this 1000 times if I could. It's a distinction that people struggle to make, when making it for themselves (ie self-diagnosis). A clinical outside observer is more likely to see the narrative in an unbiased way, even if the patient/client is unconsciously slanting it.Expectation of violence doesn’t mean there’s any actual / real threat of violence.
The death of a child is often sudden or unexpected - so, the 'real or threatened death' happening to someone who you are extremely close to (like your infant) would probably qualify more often than not. It is important to recognize grief as not the same as PTSD - the common mix-up here is that people can believe the protracted death of someone incredibly close to them can give them PTSD, when in fact, the death is not sudden or unexpected. Grief and it's associated disorders are approached somewhat differently. But I think in general, the unexpected or sudden death of one's child would match criteria.For example, I have seen people post on fb that they have PTSD from losing a child (natural causes). I would never challenge them on it because it's a genuine belief and has probably been diagnosed, plus they have been through hell. losing a child is IMO one of the worst and probably THE worst thing a human being can go through. My Cat A trauma was nowhere near as distressing.
Then why are you trauma comparing, if you don't like to trauma compare? Both with the example of the mother losing her child, and with your own trauma - why does it need to pale in comparison?I'm sorry. No, it's not. I don't like to trauma compare but I lost a child due to a force abortion with a BBQ fork (not natural causes). That was bad but it pales in comparison to some of my other trauma.
I bolded the bit I wanted to comment on.I only advised it as I feel that it's important to know that there are a lot of pain out there. What's worse then the other will always be subjective. But when you throw in cults, human trafficking, kidnapping, torture, and things like that, you start to gain a bit more prespective. In my opinion, it's important to know those things are out there as well. Again though, what's worse then the other is very subjective.
To me, the major difference between the sudden death of a child and the list you gave, is that those elements all consist of repetitive trauma - Being in a cult, or trafficked, or kidnapped, or tortured - none of them is a singular event. An unexpected death of a child is a single trauma.
Single trauma is not lesser than repetitive trauma.
On the surface it can appear so, because it's one vs. multiples. But, while we know that the symptomology for CPTSD has unique qualities that distinguish it from simple PTSD - there's no evidence or knowledge indicating that multiple or repeated trauma damages the brain more than a single trauma.
It's a question people ask here sometimes, "can I get PTSD more than once?" I'm fairly sure that science doesn't know, yet. The additional symptoms that arise from a CPTSD diagnosis are (currently) assumed to result from maladaptive cognitive and behavioral patterns that develop over the course of (surviving) the repetitive trauma.
(I'd love to know if I'm wrong about that, because it would mean I have some studies to catch up on...)