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Sufferer Long-time Sufferer, First Time Admitting It Openly

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trevor

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I guess I've been suffering from it for as long as I can remember, either because it started so early or I just can't remember being any other way. My family and general childhood were the cause. Alcoholic, rage-oholic father, uncaring, narcissistic mother, psychotic older brother, similarly affected twin sister. Moved to a new state at the age of 8, and did so missing my 4 top front teeth. I was an instant and easy target for bullies, and remained a target until high school, where I just blended in and kept my head down, but that only solved part of the problem.

By then the damage was long since done and I was numb, angry, and unable to function like a normal person. I've had all of the classic symptoms since then, but only started to realize what they were and what the cause was until after I saw a psychiatrist in college. She basically diagnosed me, but I wouldn't let her make it official since that would have excluded me from the kind of military work I was preparing myself for at the time. I think it's lucky that a knee injury sank that ship at harbor, though at the time you can probably imagine how it felt to have the one plan you had to get away suddenly destroyed. I still had hope of getting back in, even for years afterwards, even after suffering yet more injuries (mysterious ones at that!). But I have finally given up on that and no longer find myself constrained by what the truth might reveal. Up until a few days ago, only my most trusted friend, who I am eternally grateful for, ever knew the extent of my worst injuries. He knew my family better than most, so he had a keen sense of what I meant when I used vague words to protect myself.

When I told my mother, she asked what the cause was, and I said "my childhood", and she just looked away and continued watching her TV shows, like I wasn't even there. Par for the course. I told my father today after he asked me if I was "angry at something". How could I ever begin to fully answer that? But I told him why I behaved the way I did, that I had PTSD, that it was because of him and my childhood. He said "you complain too much", and refused to believe it, like he refused to believe any problem I ever had growing up. The result is that I feel more distant than ever from my parents despite being in their house again, for the moment.

That will change as I transition back to the life I established overseas, thousands of miles away from them and everything that reminds me of them. I'm thinking of completely cutting off ties with them once and for all, finally closing the book on my old life. Not sure how wise that course of action is, but I wonder if they would even notice.

Anyway, thanks for reading.
 
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Welcome Trevor!

I hate that your mother turned away and your father said you complain too much. Talk about complete denial!! Un-frigging-believable. Except it is too frequently the case in families like ours with an alcoholic parent and the other looking the other way.

I am so glad you were diagnosed and accept it. Growing up in a family who denies your reality usually results in the adult child denying their own reality for years and years and years.

You are most definitely not alone, and I am glad you are here.
 
I agree. I don't see how talking about the past will change it or the way I feel about it. At most it will help me identify what happened a little more clearly, but again that can't really change anything. That's why I'm thinking of just leaving it all behind, quite literally, and moving on. When I first went overseas, I had the opportunity to invent a whole new person for myself, which was difficult, because the old me was still there, but eventually I got pretty good at being the new me. I still have trouble with faking certain things, and eventually I hope to make them real for me, but the old me seems best left by the roadside.
 
You and only you know what works for you. We all share PTSD, but our solutions for healing can be different.

For me, the unconscious rules were: Don't talk. Don't trust. Don't feel. It worked for a while...as in I functioned okay when I was young. But sometimes stuff breaks thru. We might have been treated like we weren't human, but we were and are. That was rough for me. Feelings coming thru. Flooding, bursting. I couldn't bury them fast enough. Then it was decades of numb.

If this ever happens for you, if it all breaks thru the new you, know that it is normal and there are solutions.

New or old you - you sound like a great person.
 
I think we have some things in common. I've don't remember the abuse, but every thing inside points to it. I don't have my parents any more as mom has epileptic seizures and doesn't care to visit at all. Dad took me to superior court and tried to put a restraining order on me. I contested it and he dropped it . I chose to stay away now. If it were not for my little sister wanting to be in her own room . I wouldn't have thought about how upset I am with him .
 
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What a cruel and invalidating childhood environment to grow up in, Trevor! And to face the persistent denial of parents who display such blatant ignorance as to what could possibly have been wrong...I agree that sometimes cutting oneself loose from such people is the only way towards a positive life. Even if they are our closest family. It hurts to mourn this double loss: what we did not have in the past in terms of a "normal" and loving childhood, and then the total loss of any chance that they might redeem themselves at some point in future and do good to make up for the bad.

I hope you find meaningful relationships to nourish and sustain you as you go forward. I hope you manage to close the chapter, but still find some closure and healing for all the pain suffered through your childhood to present date.
 
Hi Trevor. Welcome to the forum.

Perchance, is your overseas life with the military? My own therapy began in earnest while I was stationed in Germany from 1974 to 76. I went on to get allot of great therapy through the VA. FWIW.

The recovery from my own cPTSD has been a long and winding road. The journey through the pieces I passed on to my now adult children is feeling like a high-speed, downhill flight down even rougher twist and turns. That remorseful silence is the only brake pedal available to me. I think, maybe. I have precious little precedent to learn from. Inter-generational healing techniques seem to be a gigantic void in our system. Both of my parents died without ever knowing I was in therapy and I can still imagine them cursing me for it from the echoless shore. Or is that cursing "just" their adult grandchildren? Sigh. Sure wish I knew a better way... Where's my road map? Where is that all-seeing wisdom that was supposed to come with all these wrinkles and aches?

Whichever way your own recovery road takes you, I hope you find healing companionship here.
 
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