- Post starter
- #73
D
Dalika
I think this comes off as really narcissistic when somebody says this. Especially when you say you "earned" your diagnosis by working in emergency services. You have that diagnosis because you fit the criterion. Some people have that diagnosis now and did not before because they (APA/new DSM) more recently changed the criterion. You did not earn a diagnosis. People in general do not fake a diagnosis. If you have PTSD all that means is that YOU experienced a traumatic event that your brain chemistry was not equipped to handle, you became mentally ill you fit the description and fulfilled certain criterion. I'm also a little upset about this "fakes OCD" thing too because, oh so obviously, OCD is only like the very obvious or critically severe/terminal (yes OCD can be terminal) cases. I do have the experience of having a friend in college who was accused of "faking OCD" While her kitchen (shared with room-mates) was dirty and she was considered in general a slob, some of her friends knew that she had a bic pen that had to lay in a certain spot on her window sill, had to pinch herself a certain amount of times if something was out of place, etc. Just because you hear part of a story does not mean you know it all. Just because you are diagnosed with a mental illness, does not mean you know everything about that diagnosis. The only feelings you're hurting by letting another person's health bother you is your own. And those people you think or maybe even say are lying are likely also very hurt. Diagnostics change, people change, diagnoses change.I'm not posting this to hurt any feelers but does anybody else get the feeling that people lie or think they have ptsd whe...