Hi all,
I am hoping you can help me fairly quickly.
I have to go have facial reconstructive surgery this afternoon under general.
I am highly triggered because:
1. I have a history of not responding to sedation readily. My nervous system fights sedation of all kinds. I have extreme hypervigilence which started in early child hood.
2. I can tell them I have PTSD and hypervigilence and anxiety and they will give me valium. I am a benzo withdrawal survivor (always took as prescribed, but horrible withdrawal) and this valium will help but I will be hypervigilent still. If I never had to withdrawal and experience the damaging effects of benzos then this would be a comfort.
3. I have had pressure and even anger from doctors in the past because I wasn't readily becoming sedating. So the pressure to respond and be sedated makes me fight it more.
4. I have had responses from doctors to crank up the propofol or sedating drugs to get me fully sedated and this makes me me nervous because I don't know how safe that is.
My surgeon told me last week when I asked about the worst out come, he said, "you could die."
So obviously THAT raises hypervigilence.
5. I also cannot eat or drink anything or take anything like CBD. They will give me valium there, again which I am not overly comforted by.
Can any one relate? Any ways to cope?
I am hoping you can help me fairly quickly.
I have to go have facial reconstructive surgery this afternoon under general.
I am highly triggered because:
1. I have a history of not responding to sedation readily. My nervous system fights sedation of all kinds. I have extreme hypervigilence which started in early child hood.
2. I can tell them I have PTSD and hypervigilence and anxiety and they will give me valium. I am a benzo withdrawal survivor (always took as prescribed, but horrible withdrawal) and this valium will help but I will be hypervigilent still. If I never had to withdrawal and experience the damaging effects of benzos then this would be a comfort.
3. I have had pressure and even anger from doctors in the past because I wasn't readily becoming sedating. So the pressure to respond and be sedated makes me fight it more.
4. I have had responses from doctors to crank up the propofol or sedating drugs to get me fully sedated and this makes me me nervous because I don't know how safe that is.
My surgeon told me last week when I asked about the worst out come, he said, "you could die."
So obviously THAT raises hypervigilence.
5. I also cannot eat or drink anything or take anything like CBD. They will give me valium there, again which I am not overly comforted by.
Can any one relate? Any ways to cope?