wonderwall
Bronze Member
Hello People:smile:,
I mention in another thread that I don't agree with people saying PTSD can't be cured. Yes this is a personal opinion. I was told by Anthony I quote his response in the original thread:
'Every scientist that has examined in depth the illness. There is no scientific or medical cure for PTSD to date, though there are plenty working towards trying to find one. Please read the PTSD information section which points you to relevant scientific and medical facts. There are leading physicians own statements and comments on this forum outlining this fact. This is not debatable, because it is currently scientific fact. Opinions are one thing, but they are not factual. This forum deals in the facts only, not misinformation.'
I don't see really why we can't debate it.
Personally I'm not to hot on giving myself the title PTSD. So I don't.
This is meant in anyway to diminish anyone's symptoms.
I too after a attack where I was raped and tortured and fed different drugs until I had no capacity to understand where I was or what I was doing.
I am incredibly lucky to have met a stranger that helped me as I wasn't in my own country and didn't speak the language. Basically they had tried to break me down completely and done a good job of it. Whilst I was in another dimension as I was giving what I believe now to ketamine. I was in such a state I didn't have the faculties to negotiate myself to help the airport or anything. I spent two days where I wandered about in complete shock at a family's house of this friend.
I am describe this to explain to people that I do know what it is like to be in hell.
Afterwards I have suffered two breakdowns. One where I hallucinated e.t.c and relived the hell I had been through. Alone in a flat on the outskirts of the city. Where I had been temporarily housed. I had no help and got through it on my own.
Since then I have had all the s***. Anxiety. Panic in the dark. I used to not be able to sleep unless I was fully dressed and used to barricade myself in my bedroom.
I am in no way discount peoples feelings or their pain. I write a little of my own experience to say yes i HAVE BEEN THERE.
But really I am not keen to put my healing in the hands of shrinks who read books and dish out pills. As for these scientist who say PTSD can't be cured. I think it is a c****of S***.
Don't really see how science could have all the answers. As to what I perceive to be spiritual in nature. No I am not religious. But I know through experience that part of me left my body during trauma.
I'm sorry but I don't find it helpful to walk around saying I have a disorder so I don't. As for no cure. No I don't believe this. I think it is a pessimistic thing to say to people. Sorry but this is my opinion. Frankly I don't see why we can't discuss.
I found this blog with some intresting musings on PTSD.
http://healmyptsd.com/2009/10/meandering-micheles-mind-do-you-believe-ptsd-can-be-healed.html#
I will quote Jaliya in this post from the above blog.
Whew! — what a post. I want to jump into the fray and argue this; argue that … and then I remind myself of two things:
1. What does healing mean — both in a universal sense and to each individual person? The linguistic root of our English word “heal” is in the Old English “haelen” — “to make whole, sound, and well.” What does it mean to each of us to be whole, sound, and well?
2. There are definite and measurable physiological injuries that occur with severe shock and life-threatening events … and there are so many variables in each individual experience. One person’s experience of healing may be impossible for another person; some injuries *do* leave permanent, altering effects. At the same time, I believe that it’s possible to be “strong at the broken places.” There’s such a paradox about it all … As Leonard Cohen wrote, “There’s a crack in everything; that’s how the light gets in.”
No person has any one, or “the” answer to whether PTSD (or any injury/illness) can be healed according to one uniform definition … we have only our own experience, choices, understanding, and relations to go by. It is hard, hard work … I’ve been at this work for 27 years now, and I have salved and truly healed — made whole, come to rest and resolution with — some injuries. Others, no; not yet. I do know my intentions, though. Sometimes they work at cross purposes, and there, then, is the work to be done … at that particular moment.
A wise man named Matthew Fox once wrote, “We do not enter the world as blotches on existence, as sinful creatures. We burst into the world as original blessings.”
The original blessing — Life — is already, always within us. In that respect, I believe we are all healing and healed …
Really are the scientist the ones who have the answers. Because surely it is the people wha have been through it that understand it best.
:smile:
I mention in another thread that I don't agree with people saying PTSD can't be cured. Yes this is a personal opinion. I was told by Anthony I quote his response in the original thread:
'Every scientist that has examined in depth the illness. There is no scientific or medical cure for PTSD to date, though there are plenty working towards trying to find one. Please read the PTSD information section which points you to relevant scientific and medical facts. There are leading physicians own statements and comments on this forum outlining this fact. This is not debatable, because it is currently scientific fact. Opinions are one thing, but they are not factual. This forum deals in the facts only, not misinformation.'
I don't see really why we can't debate it.
Personally I'm not to hot on giving myself the title PTSD. So I don't.
This is meant in anyway to diminish anyone's symptoms.
I too after a attack where I was raped and tortured and fed different drugs until I had no capacity to understand where I was or what I was doing.
I am incredibly lucky to have met a stranger that helped me as I wasn't in my own country and didn't speak the language. Basically they had tried to break me down completely and done a good job of it. Whilst I was in another dimension as I was giving what I believe now to ketamine. I was in such a state I didn't have the faculties to negotiate myself to help the airport or anything. I spent two days where I wandered about in complete shock at a family's house of this friend.
I am describe this to explain to people that I do know what it is like to be in hell.
Afterwards I have suffered two breakdowns. One where I hallucinated e.t.c and relived the hell I had been through. Alone in a flat on the outskirts of the city. Where I had been temporarily housed. I had no help and got through it on my own.
Since then I have had all the s***. Anxiety. Panic in the dark. I used to not be able to sleep unless I was fully dressed and used to barricade myself in my bedroom.
I am in no way discount peoples feelings or their pain. I write a little of my own experience to say yes i HAVE BEEN THERE.
But really I am not keen to put my healing in the hands of shrinks who read books and dish out pills. As for these scientist who say PTSD can't be cured. I think it is a c****of S***.
Don't really see how science could have all the answers. As to what I perceive to be spiritual in nature. No I am not religious. But I know through experience that part of me left my body during trauma.
I'm sorry but I don't find it helpful to walk around saying I have a disorder so I don't. As for no cure. No I don't believe this. I think it is a pessimistic thing to say to people. Sorry but this is my opinion. Frankly I don't see why we can't discuss.
I found this blog with some intresting musings on PTSD.
http://healmyptsd.com/2009/10/meandering-micheles-mind-do-you-believe-ptsd-can-be-healed.html#
I will quote Jaliya in this post from the above blog.
Whew! — what a post. I want to jump into the fray and argue this; argue that … and then I remind myself of two things:
1. What does healing mean — both in a universal sense and to each individual person? The linguistic root of our English word “heal” is in the Old English “haelen” — “to make whole, sound, and well.” What does it mean to each of us to be whole, sound, and well?
2. There are definite and measurable physiological injuries that occur with severe shock and life-threatening events … and there are so many variables in each individual experience. One person’s experience of healing may be impossible for another person; some injuries *do* leave permanent, altering effects. At the same time, I believe that it’s possible to be “strong at the broken places.” There’s such a paradox about it all … As Leonard Cohen wrote, “There’s a crack in everything; that’s how the light gets in.”
No person has any one, or “the” answer to whether PTSD (or any injury/illness) can be healed according to one uniform definition … we have only our own experience, choices, understanding, and relations to go by. It is hard, hard work … I’ve been at this work for 27 years now, and I have salved and truly healed — made whole, come to rest and resolution with — some injuries. Others, no; not yet. I do know my intentions, though. Sometimes they work at cross purposes, and there, then, is the work to be done … at that particular moment.
A wise man named Matthew Fox once wrote, “We do not enter the world as blotches on existence, as sinful creatures. We burst into the world as original blessings.”
The original blessing — Life — is already, always within us. In that respect, I believe we are all healing and healed …
Really are the scientist the ones who have the answers. Because surely it is the people wha have been through it that understand it best.
:smile: