If you have suffered from something your whole life, what's waiting a few months to get into a good Psychiatrist? It's a drop in a bucket and free, so what's holding you back?
I think you're afraid and procrastinating about this, doing the wheel spinning.
I just felt that with my mysterious health problem. I'm still feeling very afraid that it's something terrible and that I won't cope well if I'm told that. But I have kids and made myself go in case it needs to be caught early and give us the fighting chance of early detection.
On the other hand, if it's terminal, I would not want to spend a fortune fighting it and hurt them financially. I would do palliative care and let them have my life insurance. But I have read that whether its finding out your baby is disabled during gestation or finding out you are very ill, having the extra time to process the emotional blow makes a huge difference for people.
Since I am extra hindered by PTSD and can go numb for long periods instead of actively processing, I need all the time I can get.
In this case, who do you talk to about the kinds of things we've been discussing here on this thread, in your daily life?
It seems to me having a real and trusted person to offer this kind of feedback has helped me hugely in not shutting down and staying numb. The other person's saying "you seem upset" or "I can tell you are stressed because you are ...." and having that consistency provides the catalyst feedback that I think normal, non-disordered or in touch with their emotions people already have internally.
For me, it's not a therapist but my spouse, and since this feedback is given as needed, or daily, I see it as an externalized alarm system for my emotions.
In my toxic family of origin, I got this kind of feedback from my mother, but she is so toxic and probably the reason I have PTSD, that her observations about my behavior drove me to further dissociate from my feelings. Or I would only feel my body's reactions and not ever find the emotions to connect behind them, since she had zero emotional intelligence.
My husband is trained in psychology and is a natural therapist, as my last T. said she was growing up as well. She said people would just start telling her their issues and she might as well get paid. I do believe some people have this kind of gift, but overall, require excellent training to be able to pick apart the kind of confusion and treatments that can be done. For instance, my best T. was skeptical of EMDR at first, until she saw it helping people, and then she got fully trained and used it whenever appropriate for her ready clients.
She taught me many tricks to cope with dissociation that I needed at that time. Since then, I've used them, but also found that keeping to a routine and being more grounded in my thoughts about what I'm doing (aka, staying busy and doing less living in my head, which my old job actually encouraged) helps me prevent dissociation habits.
I hope you cut through the need to insulate from this by over-thinking it. (Been there done that, and do it all the time!)
Take action based on quality feedback and backed by your own process of elimination, and you won't be wasting time. You might be gifting yourself more time spent feeling well.
I'm glad you are in a remission time, but that is exactly when, with my PTSD, what I'm lucid, that I have to use my memory to know that this will come back again and again during stress times, and I have to be prepared and ready for that.
Take care,
Muse