alexabroad
New Here
I've been trying to do more writing specifically about my PTSD and trauma for a while now. I am a writer (or at least, I write) but it's been difficult to write about this in a way that feels therapeutic in the same ways that I write creatively. My experiences and feelings come up in my creative writing, but it isn't as free-form or cathartic as just getting it out. So I'm going to try to write here in less structured ways.
After I was assaulted, things got so bad so quickly. I struggled to finish the classes I was in and struggled to deal with being so far away from my family. I was studying abroad in the UK at the time, and I'm an American. After the term ended, I travelled for a bit and then came home. Since I'd been anxious before, a lot of my negative emotions during my traveling seemed just like very bad anxiety. Most of my difficulties at school that term just felt like the normal processing of trauma. Even though the therapist I started seeing used the term PTSD, I just didn't take it seriously.
Then things got scary very quickly once I was home. It was like I'd made it out of the survival situation and could finally fall apart. For months I'd focused on getting home, getting through the time when I had to be strong because I was on my own. Once I was back in my mother's house... it was like I hit a wall. I didn't have the energy to push through anymore. I just laid in bed for hours. I skipped all of my classes. I just couldn't go and be in a room full of people where I was expected to contribute. I was a great student, but since I developed anxiety and a panic disorder a year or so ago (before the trauma) attending class when I felt overwhelmed had been difficult for me. Suddenly, it was impossible.
I had started seeing someone I'd dated briefly before I left to study abroad again, largely because I just needed to be held. Sleeping alone was terrifying. My sleep schedule was f*cked. I was scared all the time and constantly on edge. Being able to get stoned out of my mind in a safe place and go to sleep in someone I knew wouldn't touch me inappropriately or hurt me's arms was comforting. And I really needed comfort.
What I remember most vividly was how often it felt like I was really losing my mind. I couldn't trust my perception anymore. I saw grass move out of the corner of my eye and it looked like a dog was running towards me to attack. I imagined I saw people walking down empty streets. Hearing noises of a busy street with cars driving by and occasional honks sounded like a domestic dispute happening outside the window. So often I had to ask the person I was dating whether or not things I thought I was hearing were real. And they never were.
I remember at the worst of it, he and I were having a conversation about his depression and how he just wanted to be himself again. I said back flatly that I didn't expect to be who I used to be again, but that I'd like to be functional. I just wanted to be able to get through the day without crying, to do what I needed to do without completely falling apart. I hadn't meant it to be an abrupt or disruptive statement, but he looked at me for a long minute and finally just told me how sad that was to hear when he'd known me before the trauma happened.
I got really lucky. I do feel like the person I used to be. I'm different, but so much of the personality that was gone during the worst of the aftermath is back. I feel happiness again. I feel things in general again. I'm not always terrified.
But the terror creeps up on me often. For a few amazing months, being out of the worst of it gave me such an intense feeling of gratitude that I couldn't consider the aspects of PTSD I was still dealing with. Not visualizing anxieties or hearing them was such a gift that everything else felt inconsequential. Being able to smile again and go about most of my day with minimal anxiety was a blessing. It was like a constant high to just be... pretty normal again. Especially since I moved abroad and was in legitimately challenging situations very regularly.
But now always being fatigued and dealing with intense anxiety is starting to wear on me again. My gratitude is still there... but it's not enough to keep me from realizing the magnitude of this thing I'm dealing with. I'm not as "cured" as I thought I was. Maybe I never will be. But it's manageable now, and I do think it can keep getting better. The hard part is just finding the energy to push through. I'm so tired just trucking along in my day to day. But I want big things for myself. Not even big in a traditional sense, but I want to pursue experiences that are challenging.
Today I was researching fruit picking in Australia, because that's something I'd like to do for a few months and it hit me like a sack of bricks that it might be too much for me. Of course, it could also be good for me. Getting away from intense social politics in an office and spending my day doing physical labor might take a load off my mind and give me a physical outlet for anxiety. Or it could make it worse and the entire situation could implode on me. It's hard not being able to inherently count on yourself. I'm still going to give it a go if I still feel like it'd be worthwhile when the time comes... but god, it's frustrating not being able to count on yourself reflexively. Weighing the pros and cons of taking risks with my condition is really tough on my self esteem and morale.
But getting it out feels good. And I always seem to find just enough momentum to push a little bit farther than I have before. If not every day, at least some days. At least enough to make a difference. Enough to keep me fighting.
After I was assaulted, things got so bad so quickly. I struggled to finish the classes I was in and struggled to deal with being so far away from my family. I was studying abroad in the UK at the time, and I'm an American. After the term ended, I travelled for a bit and then came home. Since I'd been anxious before, a lot of my negative emotions during my traveling seemed just like very bad anxiety. Most of my difficulties at school that term just felt like the normal processing of trauma. Even though the therapist I started seeing used the term PTSD, I just didn't take it seriously.
Then things got scary very quickly once I was home. It was like I'd made it out of the survival situation and could finally fall apart. For months I'd focused on getting home, getting through the time when I had to be strong because I was on my own. Once I was back in my mother's house... it was like I hit a wall. I didn't have the energy to push through anymore. I just laid in bed for hours. I skipped all of my classes. I just couldn't go and be in a room full of people where I was expected to contribute. I was a great student, but since I developed anxiety and a panic disorder a year or so ago (before the trauma) attending class when I felt overwhelmed had been difficult for me. Suddenly, it was impossible.
I had started seeing someone I'd dated briefly before I left to study abroad again, largely because I just needed to be held. Sleeping alone was terrifying. My sleep schedule was f*cked. I was scared all the time and constantly on edge. Being able to get stoned out of my mind in a safe place and go to sleep in someone I knew wouldn't touch me inappropriately or hurt me's arms was comforting. And I really needed comfort.
What I remember most vividly was how often it felt like I was really losing my mind. I couldn't trust my perception anymore. I saw grass move out of the corner of my eye and it looked like a dog was running towards me to attack. I imagined I saw people walking down empty streets. Hearing noises of a busy street with cars driving by and occasional honks sounded like a domestic dispute happening outside the window. So often I had to ask the person I was dating whether or not things I thought I was hearing were real. And they never were.
I remember at the worst of it, he and I were having a conversation about his depression and how he just wanted to be himself again. I said back flatly that I didn't expect to be who I used to be again, but that I'd like to be functional. I just wanted to be able to get through the day without crying, to do what I needed to do without completely falling apart. I hadn't meant it to be an abrupt or disruptive statement, but he looked at me for a long minute and finally just told me how sad that was to hear when he'd known me before the trauma happened.
I got really lucky. I do feel like the person I used to be. I'm different, but so much of the personality that was gone during the worst of the aftermath is back. I feel happiness again. I feel things in general again. I'm not always terrified.
But the terror creeps up on me often. For a few amazing months, being out of the worst of it gave me such an intense feeling of gratitude that I couldn't consider the aspects of PTSD I was still dealing with. Not visualizing anxieties or hearing them was such a gift that everything else felt inconsequential. Being able to smile again and go about most of my day with minimal anxiety was a blessing. It was like a constant high to just be... pretty normal again. Especially since I moved abroad and was in legitimately challenging situations very regularly.
But now always being fatigued and dealing with intense anxiety is starting to wear on me again. My gratitude is still there... but it's not enough to keep me from realizing the magnitude of this thing I'm dealing with. I'm not as "cured" as I thought I was. Maybe I never will be. But it's manageable now, and I do think it can keep getting better. The hard part is just finding the energy to push through. I'm so tired just trucking along in my day to day. But I want big things for myself. Not even big in a traditional sense, but I want to pursue experiences that are challenging.
Today I was researching fruit picking in Australia, because that's something I'd like to do for a few months and it hit me like a sack of bricks that it might be too much for me. Of course, it could also be good for me. Getting away from intense social politics in an office and spending my day doing physical labor might take a load off my mind and give me a physical outlet for anxiety. Or it could make it worse and the entire situation could implode on me. It's hard not being able to inherently count on yourself. I'm still going to give it a go if I still feel like it'd be worthwhile when the time comes... but god, it's frustrating not being able to count on yourself reflexively. Weighing the pros and cons of taking risks with my condition is really tough on my self esteem and morale.
But getting it out feels good. And I always seem to find just enough momentum to push a little bit farther than I have before. If not every day, at least some days. At least enough to make a difference. Enough to keep me fighting.