• We are a multilingual website again. Read the notice about this.
  • Understand AI use at MyPTSD: all AI use is explained in our AI help page. AI use is by choice here. It exists if you want it, but does nothing unless you choose to use it.

Period and Symptoms

Status
Not open for further replies.
Pamela Mary Smith may try to trick you into believing you need a can of pop, bag of chips, and milk chocolate, but she's lying.

She makes me want salt so badly I could scream. One afternoon a month just prior to my cycle I end up grazing in the kitchen for anything salty. I usually end up with a couple of dill pickles, some cheese and chips if we have any. Once that craving is satisfied, I'm ok. But don't get in my way during!!!

BTW-chocolate bad? Say it isn't so!
 
I get teary and sad about 2 days before my period starts. A day after that, I feel I NEED chocolate. At least then, I realise why I'm feeling so weird.

All of that is better now than it was. Because of the rape and miscarriage, seeing blood was a huge trigger. It's better now.
 
Marlene,

Aye! Chocolate with low cocoa content that is high in sugar and fat is bad for PMS. Try switching to dark chocolate. I hear you on the salt thing; I could buy a cow's salt lick and make it my best friend and PMS wouldn't be satisfied.

Apparently when we have cravings, our body is actually in need of nutrients we are low on.

Holy crap, BethRSA, I don't know how I'd handle it if my period was triggering! Glad to hear that it's improved though.
 
PMS does seem to intensify PTSD with me. Especially my communication skills are impacted, I think.
I get into a lot of arguments/ conflicts if I don't watch out. Sometimes I get into arguments if I do watch out, too! :wink:

It's a time of heightened sensitivity. I've been experimenting the past months.

I try to be more aware of what's going on emotionally before my period and I found out that if I allow myself room and for example, cry and journal over emotional stuff, there's less chance that I'll get into 'collisions' with my partner or others.
So I tend to think my 'system' just uses that period of the month to rid itself of old 'junk', not just the endometrium that needs to be discarded, but maybe old emotions too...

Freya
 
I think that many females suffer PMS to some degree. Add PTSD, and it can be mind blowing. I suffer horrendous mood swings due to hormones at the TOTM. But I also personally find my monthly period very triggering. Abdominal pains and PV bleed are reminders of being raped. So on top of hormonal problems, I feel the physical aspect too. Put the two together and you should really stay away from me!! When I was held down, raped and cut by a knife I had so many pains that almost any pain for me is triggering.

I realise that knowing others share your pain, doesn't make things any easier, but at least you know that you are not alone.

regards, CB
 
But I also personally find my monthly period very triggering. Abdominal pains and PV bleed are reminders of being raped.

I don't think I get PMS but I definitely get triggered by my period. I'm gradually desensitising to a bunch of triggers, so this latest one hasn't been too bad. The blood is a trigger for one particular rape memory, age 5. Luckily no cramps this time, but that's often a bad trigger for being kicked in the stomach repeatedly for one incident when small. I used to get very dissociated each period.
 
Wow,

I really like that I am not the only one who goes through that roller coaster of emotion during my cycle!! I never used to be THAT emotional. I cry at the drop of a hat, sometimes I cry without even feeling sad first - wierd!! My anxiety is more disturbing than at any other time of the month. My husband and I both agreed that the 'normal' hormonal disturbance with this time of month is actually heightened because I now have PTSD. It makes is feel more normal now. Thanks ladies!
 
I used to be an emotional wreck at that time of the month, actually 2 weeks before. I would become a massive anxiety/stressed out mess, that could fly off the handle at the drop of a hat. Couldn't control any of my emotions at that time.

If there is ANYTHING I can be grateful for.....It's Menopause!!!!!!!
 
HA!!!! I like that. Everyone else dreads it... something to look forward to for us PTSDer's.

I've been so dissociated in the past that I have only just had the pleasure of experiencing acute mood swings and PMT. Now I get so anxious that I cry and cry for days... I hope that I can get a bit more of a handle on is as I get used to it more.

Sometimes I wonder if I would have been better off as the old, shut down version of me, when I was just too frozen to experience any emotional stuff .... Pah! That is just plain stupid I know. I'm glad to be facing the PTSD really, no matter how 'bleeding' hard.

dust
 
Misdiagnosed PMS Really a Side Effect of PTSD?

I realized about 3 years ago that I was having really bad emotional stress around that time of the month and played it off as PMS. At that time Yaz (a PMDD birth control pill) came out and was supposed to be this wonder drug that controlled what appeared to be my symptoms at the time; lethargic, strange emotional fluxes, crying for no reason, and the typical physical symptoms of severe back pain and bloating etc. Well after going into work one morning and bursting into tears for no apparent reason and not being able to stop, thus resulting in me going home after only being there for 40min (coincidentally about 5 days before I was supposed to start) I decided that I would try it.

After the first few months I was great!! My bf said it seemed like the hormones were alleviating some of the symptoms. I appeared a lot happier and everything seemed to be going up. Well then a little while after that i snapped!! My roommate a stolen a pair of my shoes for some girl that i didnt know to wear out to the club and I found them in another friends room the next day. I played it off like i didn't notice and gave her about 24hrs to replace them, but the next day when they weren't there I let her have it. She walked into the room and I started yelling, the yelling soon turned into crying and I eventually locked myself in my room for 4 hrs and redecorated to get my mind straight.

I soon realized that the happy feelings that the hormones were giving me didn't last and that all the pill was doing was making me gain weight. I stopped using it after less then a year and I have found myself falling into similar loops of crying for no reason and having random tantrums.

Now I am wondering if all of this is related to PTSD and that it only appears to be PMS related because all of my natural hormones are amplifying my feelings that I can usually control. (That is not saying that I don't feel like a jumbled mess the rest of the month, it just feels 10x worse).

:think:Does anyone else feel over the edge around that time or is it just me???
 
Butterlamb, I merged your thread with another one which already exists on this topic. Hopefully you will find the previous responses helpful!
 
PMS Aggravates, it Doesn’t Cause

Butterlamb, PMS can sure make what is already a hard time an even more difficult time - and somtimes it can make it impossible to deal with the next five minutes. The birth control probably did help your PMS symptoms and would've continued to do so, but it can’t help what had nothing to do with the PMS. The weight gain thing is such a bother, I swear. It seems to be worse for those who are stressed out the rest of the time, but I don't have a study to point to that says, "Birth control will make you gain weight and may even make you verbally assault people with, ‘Are you calling me fat?!’” Someone should do a study about that, though.

I am a huge fan of birth control - for the purpose of birth control. If, however, it also causes trouble (weight gain, etc), then it's best to use something else. I personally found Natural Family Planning (NFP) to be very useful, and treated my PMS with marked success with a crapload of vitamin B complex and evening primrose. One or the other will help, but both made a big difference. They did not, however, alleviate my crying attacks, tension you couldn't cut with a band saw or my anger.

For all that I took anger management classes once a year, attended a support group every week, saw a therapist at least twice a month and took enough Ativan to bring down a small horse (not all at once :wink: ).

I was quite poor and was a single mother of two small children, so getting all that in while also working was enough to make me need all that. Yes, I'm telling you I was in therapy so much I complained about being in so much therapy to my group and my therapist. Fortunately for me, the support group was free and the therapy was on a sliding scale. I was so poor at one point that I aspired to poverty level income so that I could actually be charged at all. Medicaid paid for the Ativan.

I was reluctant to go on state aid of any kind because I was proud, but then I became depressed, overwhelmed and in danger of shoving a fistful of coupons down a cashier's throat when she rolled her eyes at me and said, "Gawd, you people and your coupons!" But I didn't shove them down her throat because, you know, they put you in jail for that sort of thing, and the only thing worse than emotional confinement is physical confinement, so I went on welfare. And I was happy when a friend pointed out that my welfare was being provided by the taxes being paid by that snotty cashier.

As you already know, college brings with it a great deal of pressure with all the assignments, reading and just the work of it. Trying to keep a happy face on with all that plus school plus a roommate (who doesn't sound like your best buddy) would drive anyone a bit batty. Remember that: it would drive anyone a bit batty. So while you're wondering if PTSD and PMS have anything to do with all this (yes, they do), remember to also be a little bit more forgiving of yourself. Again, anyone would be batty and would want to show a happy face as much as possible, but hey, that's not always possible. What is possible is taking better care of yourself in advance.

You already know the week before your cycle creates problems for you. You're a different person, yes? Prepare for that person. What can you do now to make it easier for the person you're going to be when your next cycle rolls around? What will she need? What will she want to do/not do? What kind of food will she like? Who is her favorite person? Make a play date for her, as it were.

Does your campus have a counseling service? Look into it now - before the person you are when you PMS comes 'round. Schedule the appointment for her. Will she try to talk herself out of it when it's time for the appointment? Will she say, "No one cares" or "I don't deserve this"? If so, write her a letter now telling her why you need this, that she does deserve it, that someone does care (you!) and that you're here for her. She might just tear the letter up, set it on fire and curse your name – but she’ll also be more likely to make that appointment when she’s done.

Be sure to come back here and let everyone know how you're doing. And also, install a lock on your bedroom door. Seriously. No woman should have to put up with having her stuff lifted - especially shoes. That's like some guy "borrowing" another guy's tools without asking. Very uncool.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Donation drives

2026 Donation Goal

Goal
$1,800.00
Earned
$910.00
This donation drive ends in
0 hours, 0 minutes, 0 seconds
  50.6%

Trending content

Featured content

Back
Top Bottom