Catherine167
New Here
Hey all, my name is Catherine. I am in the military, and am looking to make some low-threat friends who know what I'm going through.
This year has been a rough one and while my stress has been very high, I was doing okay. About a month ago, my grandfather passed suddenly. He was my favorite person in this world and his loss is crushing. It was while I was out at his place a few weeks ago that the nightmares started. I've been able to lucid dream since I was young, but I found that I couldn't control these, so I just woke myself up. It was just happening here and there, so it wasn't that big of a deal. I was out there for a few days, then went home.
When I got home, I started intermittently feeling like there was someone outside my home. I didn't see anyone. The feeling remained. I started keeping my curtains closed (I live in the country).
The nightmares started escalating to full on night terrors, and I started being afraid in my own home. Walking to the car in the dark became terrifying. I started having mood swings and became emotional. My startle reflex is greatly exaggerated. Now, when I get going, I feel like someone is inside my home. I lock my bedroom door at night before I go to sleep. I used to sleep with it open.
I went to see my therapist yesterday and as soon as she repeated the symptoms back to me (night terrors, mood swings, paranoia, etc) I knew that they are ptsd symptoms. Saying it out loud feels like a lie. It's been three years since my last deployment. I'm not fixating on a singular trauma and I never saw anything over there that made me as scared as I am now. I always just had an attitude that if something was going to happen it would, and all I could do it minimize my risk. I didn't get scared like other people did. I don't feel like I have a right to have ptsd. So many people had it worse than me, and it just doesn't feel real.
I'm OK when other people are around, thankfully. I'm still in the military, so I don't want them to find out. Anyone else feel a sense of disbelief when they were diagnosed, or dealt with similar symptoms? I'd be appreciative of any advice you can offer.
My therapist taught me guided imagery yesterday. I've confided in my girlfriend and a few close family members who, at my therapist's recommendation, are going to stay with me in the near-term to give me a break from the anxiety.
This year has been a rough one and while my stress has been very high, I was doing okay. About a month ago, my grandfather passed suddenly. He was my favorite person in this world and his loss is crushing. It was while I was out at his place a few weeks ago that the nightmares started. I've been able to lucid dream since I was young, but I found that I couldn't control these, so I just woke myself up. It was just happening here and there, so it wasn't that big of a deal. I was out there for a few days, then went home.
When I got home, I started intermittently feeling like there was someone outside my home. I didn't see anyone. The feeling remained. I started keeping my curtains closed (I live in the country).
The nightmares started escalating to full on night terrors, and I started being afraid in my own home. Walking to the car in the dark became terrifying. I started having mood swings and became emotional. My startle reflex is greatly exaggerated. Now, when I get going, I feel like someone is inside my home. I lock my bedroom door at night before I go to sleep. I used to sleep with it open.
I went to see my therapist yesterday and as soon as she repeated the symptoms back to me (night terrors, mood swings, paranoia, etc) I knew that they are ptsd symptoms. Saying it out loud feels like a lie. It's been three years since my last deployment. I'm not fixating on a singular trauma and I never saw anything over there that made me as scared as I am now. I always just had an attitude that if something was going to happen it would, and all I could do it minimize my risk. I didn't get scared like other people did. I don't feel like I have a right to have ptsd. So many people had it worse than me, and it just doesn't feel real.
I'm OK when other people are around, thankfully. I'm still in the military, so I don't want them to find out. Anyone else feel a sense of disbelief when they were diagnosed, or dealt with similar symptoms? I'd be appreciative of any advice you can offer.
My therapist taught me guided imagery yesterday. I've confided in my girlfriend and a few close family members who, at my therapist's recommendation, are going to stay with me in the near-term to give me a break from the anxiety.