I think context - before and after - has a lot to do with it.
For example, I was on a plane that failed while in the air and had to make a crash landing in a blizzard. We all thought we were going to die. I won't go into details, but it was terrible. I ended up injured and in shock.
I had medical treatment for my injuries. Everyone knew about the plane and talked with me about it. Everyone expected me to be afraid afterwards, and was patient and supportive. I had to get a flight soon after. The airline put me in first class and assigned a member of staff to sit with me and talk to me the whole way. I still don't like travelling by plane, but I didn't get PTSD and I don't have any unresolved issues relating to the experience.
It could have been very different if I'd had no-one to turn to afterwards. If I hadn't had validation and support. If I'd been afraid of being disbelieved, blamed or judged. If it had felt unsafe to talk about it. If I'd had previous bad experiences regarding planes. If travelling by plane was very important to my livelihood or self-esteem. If my injuries had been worse. If I was already struggling with other issues. If lots of things.
So it's subjective, but that can be a word with some negative associations. I think of it more as situational. It depended on my whole situation - my history, my life situation, my resources, what happened, what happened afterwards, what didn't happen. Not just what happened.
For example, I was on a plane that failed while in the air and had to make a crash landing in a blizzard. We all thought we were going to die. I won't go into details, but it was terrible. I ended up injured and in shock.
I had medical treatment for my injuries. Everyone knew about the plane and talked with me about it. Everyone expected me to be afraid afterwards, and was patient and supportive. I had to get a flight soon after. The airline put me in first class and assigned a member of staff to sit with me and talk to me the whole way. I still don't like travelling by plane, but I didn't get PTSD and I don't have any unresolved issues relating to the experience.
It could have been very different if I'd had no-one to turn to afterwards. If I hadn't had validation and support. If I'd been afraid of being disbelieved, blamed or judged. If it had felt unsafe to talk about it. If I'd had previous bad experiences regarding planes. If travelling by plane was very important to my livelihood or self-esteem. If my injuries had been worse. If I was already struggling with other issues. If lots of things.
So it's subjective, but that can be a word with some negative associations. I think of it more as situational. It depended on my whole situation - my history, my life situation, my resources, what happened, what happened afterwards, what didn't happen. Not just what happened.