Poppycocteau
Bronze Member
Like everyone else here, I find going to see the therapist extremely difficult in lots of ways. I'm a little better with it than I was in that I don't feel nauseous for as many days before the appointment and cry the entire time any more, but still.
A fear I have that is unrelated to my PTSD is that of gynecological issues. Ever since I can remember, I have had a horror of the female reproductive system and the idea of pregnancy and childbirth. Even if I see a diagram of the female reproductive system or hear the word 'cervix', I get all squirmy and anxious and have to struggle to control my breathing and not descend into a panic attack. This particular fear has gotten worse with the advent of my PTSD, so I am trying to treat it as another thing that I must face. Not a trigger exactly, but an irrational fear that I want to learn to control. To this end, I was deliberately reading about IUDs (Intra-Uterine Devices, a form of contraception) on the internet, practicing breathing exercises, and trying to accept the idea as something normal. My ultimate goal is to conquer my fear and have one fitted. I'd be really proud if I could do that. This was a couple of hours before my appointment with the Therapist, which perhaps wasn't the best time to read about it, but I felt ashamed as I hadn't done any of the tasks she suggested for PTSD, like getting a box of cigarettes (a trigger) and simply keeping them in the flat. I had felt unable to face doing this. The reading about IUDs, I hoped, would help me feel more pro-active and less like I had stagnated with my PTSD therapy. It did make me feel better in a sense, but in another I ended up in tears and struggling with panic before I was even dressed to go to therapy.
The upshot of all of this is that I decided that I would run to the appointment, to work off the anxiety and adrenaline produced by reading the IUD stuff: I was really pleased to find that running both there and back seems to help a lot with the depression, fear and anxiety that usually plague me in such circumstances, and I plan to do this with my future appointments. Perhaps this is an idea that other people reading might try and also find helpful - I hope so.
A fear I have that is unrelated to my PTSD is that of gynecological issues. Ever since I can remember, I have had a horror of the female reproductive system and the idea of pregnancy and childbirth. Even if I see a diagram of the female reproductive system or hear the word 'cervix', I get all squirmy and anxious and have to struggle to control my breathing and not descend into a panic attack. This particular fear has gotten worse with the advent of my PTSD, so I am trying to treat it as another thing that I must face. Not a trigger exactly, but an irrational fear that I want to learn to control. To this end, I was deliberately reading about IUDs (Intra-Uterine Devices, a form of contraception) on the internet, practicing breathing exercises, and trying to accept the idea as something normal. My ultimate goal is to conquer my fear and have one fitted. I'd be really proud if I could do that. This was a couple of hours before my appointment with the Therapist, which perhaps wasn't the best time to read about it, but I felt ashamed as I hadn't done any of the tasks she suggested for PTSD, like getting a box of cigarettes (a trigger) and simply keeping them in the flat. I had felt unable to face doing this. The reading about IUDs, I hoped, would help me feel more pro-active and less like I had stagnated with my PTSD therapy. It did make me feel better in a sense, but in another I ended up in tears and struggling with panic before I was even dressed to go to therapy.
The upshot of all of this is that I decided that I would run to the appointment, to work off the anxiety and adrenaline produced by reading the IUD stuff: I was really pleased to find that running both there and back seems to help a lot with the depression, fear and anxiety that usually plague me in such circumstances, and I plan to do this with my future appointments. Perhaps this is an idea that other people reading might try and also find helpful - I hope so.