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So, i want to share that i no longer have ptsd

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I'm not sure there is a "cure" for PTSD... I've heard the term "in full remission" used frequently but I have yet to wrap my head around it. Any way you chalk it up I am happy for you and wish you the best in your future endeavors. I have so many success stories to share but all small victories, "little wins" if you will. I hope one day I am looking back and saying to myself that this is all just a painful memory but something from my past that no longer haunts me.
 
I'm not sure there is a "cure" for PTSD... I've heard the term "in full remission" used frequently...
People should not use either of these, they are inaccurate for mental health. You don't "cure" mental health, nor can mental health shift into remission, as that is defined as: "a temporary diminution of the severity of disease or pain."

Mental health can be treated. As such, you either have a mental health condition (meet diagnostic conditions) OR you do not (no longer meet diagnostic conditions).

That simple. So yes, you can no longer have PTSD by diagnostic definition, no longer meeting the criterion for a period of 30 days (criterion F: Duration of disturbance (Criteria B, C, D, and E) is more than 1 month)

If you no longer endure meeting criterion, month on month, then you no longer meet PTSD criterion -- thus you are considered treated and the causation healed.

Being susceptible to PTSD is the ongoing issue for future trauma, as you have had it prior, thus chances are further trauma in your life will inflict a more severe form the next time round.

That is the goal. To no longer meet PTSD criterion, thus you no longer have PTSD.
 
Hi - yes, I would love to hear of your success in successfully conquering PTSD. I was just wondering that - wondering whether I will have PTSD for my entire life. I have had it for years, but for so long it was undiagnosed. I believe I have had it since age 3, when my grandfather molested me. It was horrible, but then I "forgot" it. I think it just went deep down inside me, and continued to fester and destroy me from the inside out, subconsciously. Until my grandfather died, and my mom told me he died, I was 16 years old and EVERYTHING came back. All the memories, everything he did. What I was wearing, my white cotton underpants with the pink rosebuds. Seeing his penis when I didn't even know what a penis was - it looked like a one-eyed worm. I realize now he was uncircumcised. Even though I was only 3 years old, I knew what he was doing was wrong. I KNEW it. But I loved him, he was my grandpa. He was horrible, a monster. He raped his daughters, he raped my cousin. No one would talk about it. How could my mom let me out of her sight for one second? He was bald and brain-damaged from alcohol (he had a farm and made alcohol during prohibition.) Most of my uncles were severe alcoholics, including my dad. I remember thinking about suicide the first time at age 10. Now it all makes sense. But I'm 58 and just wonder if my life is as good as it will ever get. I want to be alone, on a farm, with chickens and rabbits, and not deal with anyone. I want to watch TV 24/7. I don't think I'll ever feel joy or be safe and secure. A.R.T. (accelerated reprocessing therapy) has helped reduce my fears. It's amazing to me that just looking at me, no one would have a clue what's going on inside. I can function now, have a fulltime job, drive, own a home. But that darkness will be part of me always, and I don't think I'll ever be free. So, after all that, I'd love to hear about how you overcame PTSD. I am really happy for you, and it gives me hope. Thank you, Lena
 
Thanks guys appreciate the feedback. Florian..well that is true & it's also not true. I put the same question to the 2 therapists who, in the end, where pivotal to getting me over the line. I chased them up..it had been awhile..& I asked, "So if I no longer have ptsd, then why is the mainstream take on the subject, one that it can't be done? Bearing in mind that this thinking is not just coming from sufferers, but they are being told this from qualified therapists?"
I had a couple of interesting conversations & the common theme between the two was this: the answers to overcoming ptsd do exist, however, while anyone can & is able to overcome it, probably not everyone will. One of them also said that personally he believed that for some therapists it is easier to believe that it can't be done, mostly because they just feel so helpless to help their clients. Personally I had experienced more than a few of them before I met these guys.
But here's what else they said. They do not like to use the term 'cure' in the industry, because you can't, nor should you, 'cure' a person's flight, fright & freeze responses, as with all the other sensory & self regulators that get effected through trauma. Their essential to every day living for every human being. But getting them back to 'normal' or 'proportionate' responses & mechanisms, you bet you can. But it's not easy. Bear in mind that not everyone who experiences what your have, or even worse, develops ptsd. That there should be enough to realise that of course it's possible to put the genie back in the bottle.
I strongly suggest that if you are working with a therapist that does not have access to or is not practicing according to research studies that include success rates, then maybe it could be time to start the search for one that does & trying to figure out how to access them (& preferably before you leave your current one ;)). The first of these guys for me was in Sydney while I live in Victoria (& free) & used online & phone (it was a research centre for ptsd) & the second was a 5hr round trip in the car (& way more expensive than I could afford) for face to face. I would also suggest nothing less than a Clinical Psychologist, the extra years of schooling definitely make a difference. But go with whatever you can, as something is better than nothing & this journey, in my opinion, is not one to be taken alone.
From my own experience I believe there a some 'internal' doors you're going to have to go through, in order to get to the other side, that could go either way for you. There is no guarantee. And in my experience & regardless of them having the answers, neither of these therapists were prepared to or did show me these doors or take me to them. And I believe this is the best practice & safety for the client that they do it this way. They did however equip me with the tools I needed & helped guide me onto a path that gave me the opportunity to come across them, in my own time & if I wanted to. I believe that when you are ready, you will see them & when you are prepared & willing to take the risk, you will go through them of your own accord.
I hope that helps. :tup:
 
Congratulations on getting to the other side - I know that’s taken a huge amount of work. Your Ts are right in that “curing” the natural post traumatic stress response isn’t possible or desirable - those reactions are there for a reason and aren’t pathological. It’s the “disordered” part that hopefully shifts with treatment, the part that gets stuck in the trauma, causes huge levels of debilitation over a long period of time and goes beyond the body’s natural defence and processing mechanisms.

I also think that recovery doesn’t necessarily mean an absence of symptoms, in the same way as recovery in physical health doesn’t mean an absence of symptoms, it mean the symptoms are at a manageable level and aren’t inhibiting daily functioning or causing high levels of distress.

I would also suggest nothing less than a Clinical Psychologist, the extra years of schooling definitely make a difference.

I think this one may be location specific - in the US therapists go through huge levels of training and have significant numbers of supervised practice hours, and in the U.K. a clinical psychologist may have very little experience in actually providing therapeutic support. I would agree about really checking out the formal training (eg qualification level, not a day doing “trauma training”) your therapist has done along with what their actual experience is - eg 5 years seeing 3 clients a week -v- 2 years seeing 20 clients a week.

I’m glad you feel you’ve come out the other side, enjoy what life has to offer you - and don’t panic if every now and again some random symptom kicks you in the arse!
 
Thanks for the input Anthony..i'm no academic..that's for sure. However, I have to disagree on the susceptibility though. I have been through a couple of significant events in the following years, that I remember really testing things for me. And there was one in particular where all of the pts symptoms produced subsided naturally & without forced effort on my behalf. It surprised me & it wasn't until after this time & realising it, that 'I' finally allowed myself to believe that I no longer suffered from ptsd. As far as I was concerned, if I was still vulnerable to any ptsd symptoms, regardless of the time between without them, then clearly I still suffered from ptsd & had more work to do. That's just how I looked at. Since then I have only gained in my strength of knowing that I will be ok, no matter what comes my way & have found that life gives you the opportunities to strengthen your resolve further & further as you go. And it's a good place to be & definitely worth it. That doesn't mean that life doesn't still put me on my arse from time to time, like it does everyone. ;)
 
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