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Onebravegirl - Complex PTSD

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My insights into PTSD are my own. What my therapist did was create a safe place for me to think. I haven't mentioned my specific traumas yet, but When my mother said the above words to me, it made me realize that I had been raised to think and feel only with their permission. I looked at their lives and realized that they by no means had happy lives, they really didn't know what the hell they were doing with their lives at all. That made me realize that it was up to me to decide what hurts, what doesn't. It was that moment that I knew I was injured. Who was she to say I could not grieve my own daughter? That made me question the entire frame of logic I was raised with.
I really believe that this is the moment I gave my PTSD permission to be heard. Not consciously of course, but it was like that thought opened a door. I had No idea what was happening when a smell or a phrase or a thought would transport me into all sorts of uncontrolled responses. I had never been given permission to realize my life had been hard and terrifying. So I had to give it to myself. I looked back on my life and saw that I had not been living, I had been in survival mode from one experience to the next. It was exciting and scary at the same time. So once I finally got my therapist it was relieving to know that their was a name for all that I was going through. Complex PTSD.
I don't think my parents meant to do any harm to me as a kid growing up. Their lives were horrible growing up too. But I was a mom with two boys at home. There was no way I would make the same mistakes due to inherited ignorance. The cycle would be broken. The most difficult thing I have ever done in my life was to leave home to "go figure this all out". To put myself first was horrifying. All I could do is hope that one day they would see what their mom had done for them.
My revelation about PTSD is my own. It was not from a therapist. No one loved me as a child should be loved. My injuries started as a child so How could I be upset at those injuries needing attention? I would be part of the abuse if I denied those wounds. So I went slowly. Very slowly. I imagined myself as a person with scars all over her body. The Ones that were weeping were the ones I soothed. The more I soothed, the more that wept for a while. But I wasn't punishing myself for hurting and grieving. I deserved to grieve after being victimized. Those flash backs and triggers were like naive children inside me asking to make sense and come to terms with what happened to them. I was an adult and had to find words they needed to hear. This was you have to understand a long drawn out process. I made mistakes but gave myself permission for that too. I was teaching and learning at the same time. Kinda like being my own parent. But once I started welcoming the triggers as a signal that something else needed answers inside me, the quicker they would pass. I wasn't standing in my own way anymore. I even learned to embrace the nightmares.
When I felt a storm coming (usually a increased hyper vigilance) I would prepare for it. I would go into the hospital if I need too. I would say I didn't feel safe with myself until I could figure it out. I even remember going into the Hospital once with "battle fatigue", because so much would happen at once. But the more I could put a name to what a trigger was trying to tell me, the sooner it would go away. Then little by little there were less triggers, less hyper vigilance, less nightmares, less medications and so on. Pain needs to be tended to. The way I see it PTSD is pain that no one attended too at the opportune time but should have. We all need someone to help us make sense of what we are going through. But we have to make a choice to do the work involved. For me PTSD was a gift. It made me stop and really think about what I was living with and carrying around inside me. I am a better person for having been forced by PTSD to slow down, listen and give myself the time and love I needed to heal. I am no longer a human doing, I am a human being.
I feel I must add a disclaimer to this though. I am in no way a professional councilor or therapist. My way and my perspective are solely my own, and I do not want to in anyway disrespect anyone else's pain or view of PTSD. What makes sense for one may not be appreciated by another. What ever helps you survive a day at a time is obviously a step in the right direction.
 
You are amazingly articulate, and your healing moments and progress and joy in that can only help. I've had this stupid thing for almost 20 years- I appreciate sooo much of what your posts include. Hope is good, progress is great and on days like today I can read what you have to say and be able to go do the laundry. I joined here to do the work, to sincerely get ahead of things even one day at a time and hope I can get myself back to therapy. Please believe me when I say I deliberately look for post where people have stuck out therapy. I HAVE to get back there and am bulding whatever-it-is that 'we' need to build to get it together to get the heck back there. So thank you much for sharing- you're a peach to have done so!
Take care-
Anni
 
Hey there Bravegirl!!

Wanted to say that I really appreciated what you had to say, especially the statement that "I had to break the cycle".

While in therapy I was told this statement. At first I didn't really appreciate what that meant. Now I know that I am responsible for my own recovery. I had spent so much time in survival mode (as you said, day to day) that I wasn't living life much. All I knew for a long time was survival mode.

I broke those chains when I started to understand that I could either live as a victim the rest of my life, or take responsibility for my well being. It was hard to switch thought patterns, but was able to make headway when I realized it was up to me to "break the cycle". I have done so for the last 13 years and hope to continue on a healthy road.

I have broken most of the cycles in my life. Over the years I believe I have been active in helping others in this area. I have no children, so this is how I have given back what was given to me. Without good therapy and positive people such as yourself, I would probably be dead by now.

Thanks so much for your strength and courage in sharing. I hope you continue to share your positive experiences on this forum.
 
You are amazingly articulate, and your healing moments and progress and joy in that can only help. I've had this stupid thing for almost 20 years- I appreciate sooo much of what your posts include. Hope is good, progress is great and on days like today I can read what you have to say and be able to go do the laundry. I joined here to do the work, to sincerely get ahead of things even one day at a time and hope I can get myself back to therapy. Please believe me when I say I deliberately look for post where people have stuck out therapy. I HAVE to get back there and am bulding whatever-it-is that 'we' need to build to get it together to get the heck back there. So thank you much for sharing- you're a peach to have done so!
Take care-
Anni
Dearest Anni,
First of all I love your name. The daughter I lost was named Annie Grace!
I am so happy to have heard from you. You sound like a very wise and determined woman. It can be so difficult to be those things, especially if no one ever taught you how to see your strengths. I am glad you can do the laundry today. That is s sign of strength in itself. While in treatment for so long, I never took the time to brush my teeth, comb my hair, shave.. nothing. Now I go to the dentist and the Hygienist says "What have you been doing?". It makes me laugh. I tell her I was busy looking after my Mental health and the teeth were not a priority. I knew it would sound strange to her, but I didn't care. People have to get used to hearing about the seriousness and time consuming effort required to face deeper issues. My teeth may not be a white as the Hygienists, but If her and I were both involved in the same crisis I know I would get through it alot sooner than she would! I guess my point is that I hope you can try and appreciate your own efforts. Regardless of what the Laundry hamper weighs, you are doing "internal" laundry every moment that you face your PTSD. Please try and see the beauty in that. Anni, you are beautiful.
Big Hug, O
 
Hey there Bravegirl!!

Wanted to say that I really appreciated what you had to say, especially the statement that "I had to break the cycle".

While in therapy I was told this statement. At first I didn't really appreciate what that meant. Now I know that I am responsible for my own recovery. I had spent so much time in survival mode (as you said, day to day) that I wasn't living life much. All I knew for a long time was survival mode.

I broke those chains when I started to understand that I could either live as a victim the rest of my life, or take responsibility for my well being. It was hard to switch thought patterns, but was able to make headway when I realized it was up to me to "break the cycle". I have done so for the last 13 years and hope to continue on a healthy road.

I have broken most of the cycles in my life. Over the years I believe I have been active in helping others in this area. I have no children, so this is how I have given back what was given to me. Without good therapy and positive people such as yourself, I would probably be dead by now.

Thanks so much for your strength and courage in sharing. I hope you continue to share your positive experiences on this forum.
Dear Suzieq,
Yep I completely agree. I hate the idea of someone else telling me how I need to think of myself. That was what made me realize that my family really had no idea what was healthy and what wasn't. It can be very painful to break these cycles of thinking. For me I had to completely separate from the toxic family I had while in the hospital. Absolutely NO contact while I tried my hardest to stop listening to all the poisonous thinking I had programmed in to me from an early age. Like you I did a complete overhaul on my thought process. I asked my self how I wanted to quantify Love, Hate, Truth, Integrity, Faith, Justice and so on. I made up my own mind. I did a huge amount of reading, meditating, praying, crying etc. It took so long to finally be angry at the right people for the right reasons. It was so liberating.
I am so happy that you are on the same path. I am really looking forward to hearing more of your story and growth.
Keep up the fantastic work!
O
 
Thanks so much for that. Gave me chills! I had the exact same dentist scenario only wasn't astute enough or strong enough at the time to be able to explain the real reason my teeth were such a mess. Even today, when I'm in the process of getting them all FIXED ( and can smile without shame!) I sometimes end up doing that ridiculous babbling thing in the dentist chair where one attempts explainations to avoid 'judgements'. ICK! Good god I detest doing that but it keeps popping up in life.
Again-you're a peach for sharing your various strengths. Today I have to actually CALL several people to take care of some children's appointments, mail some packages, go to the STORE and the bank, of all places. Instead of mulling around in blank confusion trying to get out of the house(like most days lately) I'm most-of-the-way dressed, know where the dam car keys are, and have the packages almost ready to get out. NORMAL for most people-not for 'us'. So today- I can be on top of the PTSD. I have a huge and wary respect for this rotten thing and know I'm not going to function better without getting myself back to therapy. Reading these stories and hearing from you and others- I can directly attribute this to being able to have gotten this far today!!
You take care, too and many hugs! Annie- Grace is a lovely name, and they mean the same thing, I think-'Grace'- it's what this healing is all about isn't it?
Anni
 
Thanks so much for that. Gave me chills! I had the exact same dentist scenario only wasn't astute enough or strong enough at the time to be able to explain the real reason my teeth were such a mess. Even today, when I'm in the process of getting them all FIXED ( and can smile without shame!) I sometimes end up doing that ridiculous babbling thing in the dentist chair where one attempts explainations to avoid 'judgements'. ICK! Good god I detest doing that but it keeps popping up in life.
Again-you're a peach for sharing your various strengths. Today I have to actually CALL several people to take care of some children's appointments, mail some packages, go to the STORE and the bank, of all places. Instead of mulling around in blank confusion trying to get out of the house(like most days lately) I'm most-of-the-way dressed, know where the dam car keys are, and have the packages almost ready to get out. NORMAL for most people-not for 'us'. So today- I can be on top of the PTSD. I have a huge and wary respect for this rotten thing and know I'm not going to function better without getting myself back to therapy. Reading these stories and hearing from you and others- I can directly attribute this to being able to have gotten this far today!!
You take care, too and many hugs! Annie- Grace is a lovely name, and they mean the same thing, I think-'Grace'- it's what this healing is all about isn't it?
Anni
Good for you! Maybe there is a little voice in you letting you know that on the other side of this, you will be a much wiser, stronger and braver person than most people out there. I really believe that it is true for me. When ever I see people crying cuz' they don't have it easy, I think to myself "Honey, you have no idea". At one point I couldn't handle pouring a glass of milk on my own. Now when the neighbourhood dog gets hit by a car, I'm the first one out there with blood on my hands, calming everyone else down! I guess once I learned how to face all my fears, everything outside of my head wasn't as tough to deal with! I hope your day goes well. Don't forget your sense of humour, I find it incredibly valuable when under pressure. That and the thought "This too shall pass".
:rofl:O
 
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