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I have been reading but I honestly can't find any evidence that I could not have acute PTSD.
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If you are lucky enough to know in advance of when a panic is going to happen, I would prepaid for it in...
Oh my goodness. Well, your psychologist is wrong on the 6 months. Read the criteria. Symptoms must persist for one month. Honestly.
Which is pretty insulting for people who struggle with them. The three phobia categories are Agoraphobia, Specific Phobia, and Social Phobia. Agoraphobics are often house-bound. I know a fear of flying person who is a freelancer, and has to travel job-to-job - but if she can't get there by train, she has to turn it down, since 9/11. That's a significant functional impairment. Someone with a serious fear of spiders might need to move out of their apartment after they see one. Phobias aren't 'simple', they are very, very real.I don't accept that what I have is simply a "phobia"
Cross-posted, so adding...I honestly can't find any evidence that I could not have acute PTSD.
Agreed. Has your therapist taught you grounding techniques?If you are lucky enough to know in advance of when a panic is going to happen, I would prepaid for it in...
It sounds to me like you are determined you have it.I have been reading but I honestly can't find any evidence that I could not have acute PTSD.
Oh my goodness. Well, your psychologist is wrong on the 6 months. Read the criteria. Symptoms mus...
It's entirely possible that the attempted break in is not traumatic enough, but could have pulled up remind...
I don't believe so. A person can experience the subject of the phobia, and then develop the phobia. They are fairly complex things. Read the link and see if the description perhaps sounds like you.It is my understanding of phobias is that they occur without good reason. For example, most people afraid of spiders were never bitten by a venomous spider. Or most people afraid to fly, did not get involved in a plane crash.
More likely to be a reaction to the trauma, but would depend on the symptoms. Also, this does not compare to your situation because a car accident, if it's serious, is a straightforward qualifier for PTSD trauma criteria. Your situation is really murky, especially when you added that you are not sure if it was even there.If you got into a car accident and then suddenly developed a fear of driving...is this a phobia or a reaction to a trauma?
Here's the frustrating thing about talking with you re: your situation. You have been improving. Yes, you did your best to fight through it when it was hard, and it was hard for a fairly short period. I know this sounds like I'm diminishing your experience, which is not my intention.My symptoms have eased off recently. But at my worst point, I was experiencing recurring panic attacks, irritability, physical symptoms and disturbing thoughts. These symptoms were very intense and very troubling. I did my best to fight through it all. The way I see it someone with a phobia of flying would choose not to fly but if forced to fly, would tolerate it and live out the symptoms. There is no avoiding night. So I really had no choice but either immerse myself and hope for recovery or get used to panic disorder.
Because you are not at a diagnosable length of time. I know how frustrating this can be - but you simply haven't had symptoms that have persisted long enough in order to evaluate what, of many disorders, it could be. All you know right now is you may have had an ASD reaction, but now that it's been going on longer than one month, you're not sure.I am not convinced that I have PTSD. If someone could say "well here is what you really have" and to make a 100% recovery you need to do this and this. Believe me I'm listening. I just haven't read anything that neatly described my condition.
This, by the way, is a common phenomenon, and most people experience it. That sudden urge to do something utterly wrong, dangerous, drive off the cliff, jump off the bridge, shoot someone, hit someone...it comes almost out of nowhere, takes you powerfully by surprise, and then when the moment is gone, it's gone. Normal psychological phenomenon.The incident with the running child wasn't my only incident, I also had incident with "flash thoughts" involving adults on the street.
Cross-posted, so adding...
You are not experiencing significant functional impairment.