I've ended up doing a course of CBT since December, initially trying to help with (pretty much constant) severe anxiety (and alot more besides, but I'm being brief) which is/was pretty much ruling my daily life.
I'd put this down to just the way I was designed/the way my brain worked, at the same time not being terribly happy about it.
The fact that I suffered brain damage (with lasting physical effects I won't go into here) in a car accident when I was 7 (28 now) was to me largely irrelevant. Not saying it doesn't affect me daily, but "dwelling on" what caused it is ultimately futile. This is here, this is now, this is what's important, not that.
So I was a bit miffed when during the 6th session he gave me a "dissociation test" questionnaire to complete, and then out of the blue asked "Do you remember the accident? Tell me about it", and after I'd embarrassed myself by pretty much having a panic attack in response to his question (memories that I didn't think bothered me in the slightest, other than he caught me off guard by asking), he suggested ptsd. To be honest I laughed at him at first (Yeah right, I've had ptsd for 21 years and nobody noticed?). He then told me that I'd displayed about half a dozen symptoms of that on each occasion I'd met with him. Not in the slightest what I expected.
So....going through the whole "reliving the experience" thing (in the "I'm 7, and this is happening to me now" sense), and it's hell. I'm doubting my own memories of the event, which makes it hard to put myself back through it even if I wanted to.
I can remember absolutely everything about it. But when I remember it it's like it's not happening to me (I think that's normal from what I've read). Mainly I'm not sure how much I remember and how much I remember because at the time there were so many people asking me about it, and do I remember remembering, but not the memory itself?
I do have very vivid "snapshots in time", almost like I'm seeing a photo of the event and the 24 hours/week after it. These will come to me when I'm thinking about or doing nothing much in particular. Always have done, I've never thought too much about it. But my big issue is that when I try to put myself into that memory, it disappears.
I suppose what I'm asking here is,
Anyway since I'm not talking to anybody IRL about this whole thing, this has been quite cathartic :-)
thanks
I'd put this down to just the way I was designed/the way my brain worked, at the same time not being terribly happy about it.
The fact that I suffered brain damage (with lasting physical effects I won't go into here) in a car accident when I was 7 (28 now) was to me largely irrelevant. Not saying it doesn't affect me daily, but "dwelling on" what caused it is ultimately futile. This is here, this is now, this is what's important, not that.
So I was a bit miffed when during the 6th session he gave me a "dissociation test" questionnaire to complete, and then out of the blue asked "Do you remember the accident? Tell me about it", and after I'd embarrassed myself by pretty much having a panic attack in response to his question (memories that I didn't think bothered me in the slightest, other than he caught me off guard by asking), he suggested ptsd. To be honest I laughed at him at first (Yeah right, I've had ptsd for 21 years and nobody noticed?). He then told me that I'd displayed about half a dozen symptoms of that on each occasion I'd met with him. Not in the slightest what I expected.
So....going through the whole "reliving the experience" thing (in the "I'm 7, and this is happening to me now" sense), and it's hell. I'm doubting my own memories of the event, which makes it hard to put myself back through it even if I wanted to.
I can remember absolutely everything about it. But when I remember it it's like it's not happening to me (I think that's normal from what I've read). Mainly I'm not sure how much I remember and how much I remember because at the time there were so many people asking me about it, and do I remember remembering, but not the memory itself?
I do have very vivid "snapshots in time", almost like I'm seeing a photo of the event and the 24 hours/week after it. These will come to me when I'm thinking about or doing nothing much in particular. Always have done, I've never thought too much about it. But my big issue is that when I try to put myself into that memory, it disappears.
I suppose what I'm asking here is,
- Does this sound familiar at all?
- To what extent are my issues with memories (being able to remember but then again, not) normal for ptsd, and to what extent are they likely to be just plain normal?
- Assuming I can't "find" those memories during the reliving sessions, what happens then? (Probably not looking for a specific answer there, but it's just a thought)
Anyway since I'm not talking to anybody IRL about this whole thing, this has been quite cathartic :-)
thanks