Hello all,
I don't know if this is the proper place to put this message; I'm not very experienced with blogs or forums or threads ... but I just have to say that finding this site just a few minutes ago and reading some of the messages on it has come as a tremendous relief. Wish I had discovered it seven months ago when my PTSD started. Finally, a group who GETS IT.
I have a question for anyone who might be able to answer it. My PTSD stems from being ordered to the scene of the fatality of one of my co-workers last November. It has been a long road back to something like my previous healthy state, and I'd be glad to share any insights I may have gleaned through this process or answer any questions anyone has for me.
I had been cleared by my personal physician and also my therapist to return to work back on May 9. But my appointment with the company doctor (a physician not a psychiatrist) who will make the final assessment is this coming Tuesday, June 30.
I thought I was recovered, but a week or so ago I tried to go back to work just to stop in and say hello to the folks, and before I could even get out of my pickup I suffered one of the most severe panic attacks to date. A great deal of my recovery thus far I have attributed to the daily practice of meditation, and after this last panic attack, through meditation I have come to the conclusion that there is no possible way that I can EVER return to my job, which is at a railroad, an inherently dangerous occupation. I feel quite at peace with this realization, but fear that the company doctor (who is paid by the company to put employees back to work) will not take into account my recent panic attack associated with the work place, and will just order me back to a position where I know my chances of relapsing into severe PTSD will be about 99%.
How can I impress upon him that I am not ready to go back to work and will probably never be able to?
I feel like Yossarian in Catch-22, where if I say I'm not mentally fit, he will interpret it as me being mentally fit, because someone who is not mentally fit would not be aware that they are not mentally fit.
The easy answer is to just quit my job, but my PTSD was a work place injury and it just doesn't seem right forefeit my disability benefits and medical benefits (which are indispensible right now) for a condition that, quite frankly in regard to me being ordered to the scene of a fatality, came about as a result of gross mismanagement by company officials.
I would be interested in any thoughts about this.
Thank you.
I don't know if this is the proper place to put this message; I'm not very experienced with blogs or forums or threads ... but I just have to say that finding this site just a few minutes ago and reading some of the messages on it has come as a tremendous relief. Wish I had discovered it seven months ago when my PTSD started. Finally, a group who GETS IT.
I have a question for anyone who might be able to answer it. My PTSD stems from being ordered to the scene of the fatality of one of my co-workers last November. It has been a long road back to something like my previous healthy state, and I'd be glad to share any insights I may have gleaned through this process or answer any questions anyone has for me.
I had been cleared by my personal physician and also my therapist to return to work back on May 9. But my appointment with the company doctor (a physician not a psychiatrist) who will make the final assessment is this coming Tuesday, June 30.
I thought I was recovered, but a week or so ago I tried to go back to work just to stop in and say hello to the folks, and before I could even get out of my pickup I suffered one of the most severe panic attacks to date. A great deal of my recovery thus far I have attributed to the daily practice of meditation, and after this last panic attack, through meditation I have come to the conclusion that there is no possible way that I can EVER return to my job, which is at a railroad, an inherently dangerous occupation. I feel quite at peace with this realization, but fear that the company doctor (who is paid by the company to put employees back to work) will not take into account my recent panic attack associated with the work place, and will just order me back to a position where I know my chances of relapsing into severe PTSD will be about 99%.
How can I impress upon him that I am not ready to go back to work and will probably never be able to?
I feel like Yossarian in Catch-22, where if I say I'm not mentally fit, he will interpret it as me being mentally fit, because someone who is not mentally fit would not be aware that they are not mentally fit.
The easy answer is to just quit my job, but my PTSD was a work place injury and it just doesn't seem right forefeit my disability benefits and medical benefits (which are indispensible right now) for a condition that, quite frankly in regard to me being ordered to the scene of a fatality, came about as a result of gross mismanagement by company officials.
I would be interested in any thoughts about this.
Thank you.