• We are a multilingual website again. Read the notice about this.
  • Understand AI use at MyPTSD: all AI use is explained in our AI help page. AI use is by choice here. It exists if you want it, but does nothing unless you choose to use it.

Monarchs Mental Image

Status
Not open for further replies.
The negative thinking style is a hard thing to get over, I see it in many different aspects of my life and it is always my first instinct, so you are totally right on there. When you first started to change that did it take alot out of you? Meaning, did you have to rest and not have the physical or emotional energy to do anything else. I find myself just worn out from trying to change those thoughts around to positive self talk. It is a huge struggle sometimes to wrap my mind around the fact that the negative image is wrong and that I am wrong, how could I be wrong? It is all so crazy and like I said it will take the wind out of my sails often. I do see that i am getting better with it though, it is just practice, practice, practice. What else do I have to work on? I have opened up about my trauma's here, in therapy we are still going through them though and that gets disturbing but i already see that i am looking at things from a different perspective, my therp. is impressed by that. I do it really without even realizing it anymore although I don't always have a positive outcome.

As for the assertive personality, that I have to work on because i am either hot or cold. I can either walk away and shut down or a get in ther persons face and get loud, when that happens sometimes I don't even remember the incident. Truly people will tell me i was scary and I am thinking all I did was get a little mad at someone and let them know that. That is annoying because I don't see it, how can I see that?
 
Monarch said:
When you first started to change that did it take alot out of you? Meaning, did you have to rest and not have the physical or emotional energy to do anything else.
Monica, it is hard work, yes. It takes a lot of time, and this is why I say to people that healing your past trauma is usually the shortest aspect, learning how to manage PTSD takes years because you must now learn to change your personality knowingly vs. your personality changed slowly as PTSD developed, little by little, until it was simply all bad. The harder you work on yourself, the quicker it becomes less straining for you. It will always be a battle for you, have no doubt, but its the size of the battle you fight that changes. I still develop and learn every day, yet it doesn't drain me anymore. Whilst I have changed my thoughts to now be instinctive, to counter the negative with positive, to think before I speak, to rationalize, I still have the negative thoughts, its merely my brain immediately redirects them out and replaces them with a broader thought, less aggressive, open to new things, respect other opinions, etc. I still slip up, but even recognizing that and immediately apologizing and replacing the negative, or countering it, thinking for a few seconds to get out exactly what your trying too in a more positive way. It is constant work, though the effort becomes less as you get better at it.
Monarch said:
I do see that i am getting better with it though, it is just practice, practice, practice.
That is the aim, were you can see a difference your making to yourself and your life. You will see others respond to you differently, because your response is more open. The more assertive you become the better your response will become. You will recognize and approach another who is aggressive towards you with ease and comfort, allowing them a little room and understanding, though if they attack you to hurt, then your personality says walk away or deal with the situation, whatever the right choice is for you. Its a constant learning, though recognizing that our negative thoughts, black and white thinking, all or nothing thoughts, are not correct. We are wrong, you are correct, and accepting that; changing that... it is tough to comprehend. Once you do though, its all downhill from there.
Monarch said:
What else do I have to work on? I have opened up about my trauma's here, in therapy we are still going through them though and that gets disturbing but i already see that i am looking at things from a different perspective, my therp. is impressed by that. I do it really without even realizing it anymore although I don't always have a positive outcome.
What you have to work on is yourself. You have to keep doing what your doing, and as you become better at it as is being recognized by you and your therapist, you then taper aspects out of your life, ie. having to talk about issues that you believe no longer bother you, therapy can be cut back, but you can never stop working on yourself nor analysing yourself, because PTSD will jump you that quick if you think you can let your guard down. Control it, not let it control you. To control something takes constant presence, a presence you must always now maintain within you, consciously be aware that negative thoughts, PTSD, will sneak up on you if you let it, even if you don't let it, it will, but you must catch it quickly. The better you know yourself, the better you will manage your PTSD.
Monarch said:
As for the assertive personality, that I have to work on because i am either hot or cold. I can either walk away and shut down or a get in ther persons face and get loud, when that happens sometimes I don't even remember the incident. Truly people will tell me i was scary and I am thinking all I did was get a little mad at someone and let them know that. That is annoying because I don't see it, how can I see that?
That is black or white thinking style, all or nothing, negative thinking style. You must adapt to change it, instead of responding use pauses in order to allow your mind to process the information correctly, before response. That way you will never respond and then regret it, you will instead be accepting off all your responses because they will truly reflect your true emotional intent, not a negative PTSD one. If you have to pause, think, even tell a person to wait a second whilst you think about the information and find the words that truely reflect what you want to say, say that instead of something you will regret, or don't truly feel, ie. anger is not a feeling, its a response to another feeling.

Its sounds as though your starting to "get it" though monica, and that is promising. It takes every person time to discover this uniquely. Some do it quicker than others. Well done for finding what you are finding, and realising the positive change you can have to influence your own life. Some will never find it because they cannot accept that their PTSD thinking style is wrong, they believe they are right and will never change. Well done to you....
 
That is black or white thinking style, all or nothing, negative thinking style. You must adapt to change it, instead of responding use pauses in order to allow your mind to process the information correctly, before response. That way you will never respond and then regret it, you will instead be accepting off all your responses because they will truly reflect your true emotional intent, not a negative PTSD one.

This is very important to me, I need to learn to slow that down and not jump off and react. I am learning so much about myself and really taking the time to figure out where I have gone wrong. When someone like you or my therp. point it out, it is almost like "ah-ha, that is totally wrong, now what can I do to fix it". I guess that i realize that not everyone in my life can be wrong if they all see the same thing separately so it must be me. Thanks, I am also starting to taper off my meds, dropping from 25mg of paxil to 12.5mg for the next 6 weeks and then probably another drop from there and hopefully will be off of them totally in the next couple of months. That will feel good, it will give me the opportunity to learn more about how to control my anxiety instead of letting the meds do it.

For once I am truly excited about the future and I hope it stays that way.

Monica
 
Positive news... just remember, take it easy on yourself, don't give yourself a hard time when things go to shit, because they will, that is guaranteed. Work through the problems and you will come out the other side. Medication withdrawal is intense, it will shake you and make you believe everything you've done or learnt was a failure, but it isn't, its merely your body reacting to withdrawals. Keep up the great work.
 
Thanks for your encouragement and truth! In other good news, I got a new job! The one I wanted and I start Sept. 4th so I have a couple more weeks. Hopefully this won't effect getting off my meds. Since I have a couple of weeks, if things start looking bad then I will get back on and wait awhile to try again. This is something I want to do though, I am finally ready to be honest with everyone especially myself. I will keep in mind to not give myself a hard time.

Monica
 
Anthony, you are right about the withdrawl and I appreciate you telling me that, it is helping me to focus on the fact that it is just the meds and not me I just have to work through it. I am sleeping alot, don't know if that is normal but I feel tired all the time, that sucks being that i am a Mom. Hopefully I will get past that before I start my new job. Fun shit....NOT!
 
ok, things have gone to shit...I am angry, damn angry....but I see it and I am trying my hardest to not give into it. Keep my mouth shut and not yell at my husband or son, but go on here and write instead and be alone. Frustrating
 
Your doing just fine Monica.... it is hard, but worth it. Honestly, get yourself out and going for walks. It doesn't matter how far, but more important how long. Go for a good 30 minute or more walk. Shit, an hour would be great. Throw the kids on their bikes or stroller, whatever they are in, take them with you even. Just the activity outside will help you fight the depressive aspects of withdrawal, being the desire to sleep lots. There is a point in withdrawals you must actively grab your life back, force yourself out of your lazy zone and back into life. If you have to get active all day, do it until withdrawals are over. Once you have no meds, you really do need to get daily exercise though to maintain your mental health without meds. You need outdoors good 30 minutes to an hour of walking minimum per day to keep depression away from you. You can skip a day, but you will notice depression kicking back in if you don't exercise for a few days / week.
 
YOu are right, I know it, I have been sleeping alot, then I will get bursts of energy and take my little one to the zoo or park,etc... Today was icky, I was tired all day, I should have gone for a walk that would have got me outside and active but I ran errands and then took a nap instead. I will make it a point to get out. I start my new job in about a week so then I will have to be active. It is downtown, lots of walking but that is a good thing but not so much fun when it is -20 degrees out, thank goodness we have some time before winter hits.

I had a good evening though, met a friend out for some food and beers, had a good time.

Thanks Ant
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Donation drives

2026 Donation Goal

Goal
$1,800.00
Earned
$910.00
This donation drive ends in
0 hours, 0 minutes, 0 seconds
  50.6%

Trending content

Featured content

Back
Top Bottom