- Moderator
- #61
Sideways
VIP Member
What I personally dislike about everyone being given the ptsd label in order to somehow validate their suffering, is the stigma it generates about other forms of mental illness. Like, it’s as though saying someone “doesn’t have ptsd from that because there’s no Crit A trauma” is basically saying “Meh, they aren’t really suffering then”.Too many people are claiming PTSD these days, which just serves to water down the real diagnosis and give some people some weird excuse
Ptsd isn’t the only mental illness that a person can develop from trauma. And if a person develops depression, or an anxiety condition, or an adjustment disorder as a result of trauma? They’re all very real. The struggles that person is going through are real.
From my reading (and I could easily be wrong), actual threats to a person’s life create changes in the brain. There is no doubt in my mind that perceived threats can also create change in the brain, and very definitely create mental illness. But, so far, the science seems to indicate that the changes going on are different. Not better or worse or more or less severe, just different.
Criteria A, as far as I understand it, isn’t trying to say “there’s no trauma unless...”, but simply “This type of trauma creates this type of change...”
So, if someone has been in an emotionally abusive relationship with actual violence or actual threats to their life, that creates ptsd changes. If the threats or violence were perceived, then that could well cause mental illness. It doesn’t need to be ptsd to be valid as an illness, valid as trauma, or valid as suffering. It’s just different.
When people rush in to say “emotional abuse is traumatic”, hell yes I agree with that.
But to then insist that perceived threats causing mental disturbances must therefore be ptsd? Invalidates other forms of mental illness as something only for people who haven’t suffered ‘real trauma’. Which is garbage. If perceived threats have created a mental illness, it’s not invalidating that person’s suffering to seek out a correct, other-than-ptsd diagnosis.
But to say “That was traumatic and you’re suffering so it must be ptsd”? IMO, invalidates people who “only” get diagnosed with something else. Those “other” mental illnesses are just as real as ptsd. So let’s get correct diagnoses and not insist that it’s ptsd or bust.