It occurred to me today, that over and above triggers, my underlying baseline of current feelings, and my perception of myself and surroundings, has been one that includes the emotions of past traumas- not fear but terror, not depression but despair, not anger but rage, not abandonment but massive loss, not worry but a fear of indescribable horror, not self-disappointment but self-hatred, etc. Nothing 'sure' and nothing and no one 'safe'.
Thus everything- myself- is seen also as hopeless, unlovable, defective, damaged-beyond-repair. Because I never 'leave' the trauma, no matter what I think. Not just the memories of it (instrusive thoughts, etc- the obvious), but the perception I'm in it.
I have always thought triggers were the issue, and they are, as well, but I think that the baseline I live with daily is so enmeshed in what I have experienced, that I have not even been aware of that being the explanation for what I experience, including the ongoing feeling of a lack of safety, or my perception of being a burden. My system is so wound up I can rarely live through normal days without doing it from the perception that I am back 'there', but I'm not 'back there'. Not just the stress cup analogy- though that is very true and accurate- but also at the best of times never getting 'out' of where I was.
For example, it seems to me, the greater the mistrust/ violation(s), doesn't it just make sense that the greater the fear/ mistrust, not just from past experiences but 'feeling' like this ('now') is the 'same' time, the 'same' place, the 'same' people, the 'same' circumstances/ lack of resources, age, etc? What I mean is, not just the fall-out from past experiences as being the root issue, but the current perception 'fooling' our brains that nothing has changed? But we have changed, as have our environments, the people around us, our ability to make choices for ourselves, our abilities to seek out help, etc.
It made me think, as regards the DSM saying PTSD will no longer be under the grouping of an 'anxiety' disorder, but a traumatic one.
I realize there are current traumatic or life-threatening moments which still occur, but I have been so busy pulling myself together regarding the triggers etc, that perhaps learning and accepting what is different now, could be a key? Perhaps the triggers themselves will lessen, if one can recognize and live within the positive differences of the present?
I am sorry if this isn't clear, I'm just wondering what others think about this, and hope someone can give their feedback.
Maybe 'we can't get over it', because we 'can't get out of it'?
-But maybe we can?
Thus everything- myself- is seen also as hopeless, unlovable, defective, damaged-beyond-repair. Because I never 'leave' the trauma, no matter what I think. Not just the memories of it (instrusive thoughts, etc- the obvious), but the perception I'm in it.
I have always thought triggers were the issue, and they are, as well, but I think that the baseline I live with daily is so enmeshed in what I have experienced, that I have not even been aware of that being the explanation for what I experience, including the ongoing feeling of a lack of safety, or my perception of being a burden. My system is so wound up I can rarely live through normal days without doing it from the perception that I am back 'there', but I'm not 'back there'. Not just the stress cup analogy- though that is very true and accurate- but also at the best of times never getting 'out' of where I was.
For example, it seems to me, the greater the mistrust/ violation(s), doesn't it just make sense that the greater the fear/ mistrust, not just from past experiences but 'feeling' like this ('now') is the 'same' time, the 'same' place, the 'same' people, the 'same' circumstances/ lack of resources, age, etc? What I mean is, not just the fall-out from past experiences as being the root issue, but the current perception 'fooling' our brains that nothing has changed? But we have changed, as have our environments, the people around us, our ability to make choices for ourselves, our abilities to seek out help, etc.
It made me think, as regards the DSM saying PTSD will no longer be under the grouping of an 'anxiety' disorder, but a traumatic one.
I realize there are current traumatic or life-threatening moments which still occur, but I have been so busy pulling myself together regarding the triggers etc, that perhaps learning and accepting what is different now, could be a key? Perhaps the triggers themselves will lessen, if one can recognize and live within the positive differences of the present?
I am sorry if this isn't clear, I'm just wondering what others think about this, and hope someone can give their feedback.
Maybe 'we can't get over it', because we 'can't get out of it'?
-But maybe we can?