First, I don't have a diagnosed somatic disorder. I'm seeing internal med. doctor, ob/gyn, a therapist, and have done (unhelpful) physical therapy... for eating disorder, chronic pain (localized in upper back but can take over whole upper body), bad bleeding and cramping and hormone disruption (assumed endometriosis but I canceled laparoscopic surgery), and complex trauma (seeing a somatic/SE therapist who considers it global high intensity complex trauma, related to various traumas, including assaults/abuse, but likely primarily rooted in early medical near-death and relational trauma). Pain creates meltdowns for me. I'm almost used to low-level pain and it allows me to isolate and keep life "predictable" but if pain tips beyond what I feel I can manage or tolerate, I get pretty crazy.
Supposedly the best researched therapy for this sort of thing is CBT, but I've found that to be unhelpful and even invalidating. To a point I certainly try to go about my normal activities, but I'm also trying to not ignore my pain because I tip easily into numbness and not noticing basic cues like hunger or tiredness, etc. CBT always feels like it's telling me to change my senseless thoughts and perceptions. The somatic and trauma approach feels more helpful because I have gotten better at staying connected and like I'm actually inside my body, and trying to respond to pain gently and prevent the meltdown scenarios. Along with anorexia, alcoholism, self-injury, pain, and the pelvic problems, I've had temperature issues, heart arrhythmia, and some breathing problems. These were all real (checked out at clinic or ER) but benign...not life-threatening and source unknown aside from presumed exhaustion or stress. It just feels like I'm crumbling. And there is a lot of emotional involvement in this, especially the pain. I become really disconnected, and it even feels like my pain is a separate part I can't get away from but cannot feel or respond to as "me".
Unfortunately, the therapy I am doing probably won't be covered by my new insurance and I won't be able to afford it all out-of-pocket.
So, my question(s), I don't know if it would make sense to seek a new diagnosis to either be referred to someone in-network (all "talk" therapies I loath) that might at least have some somatic or somatization specialization. ? Do any of you have a somatic disorder diagnosis? From the little I understand, it seems like one of those things that aren't even diagnosed. I've only seen a psychiatrist once since these symptoms became so problematic, and that was for the pill that would help me quit smoking. He creeped me out. But really, I've taken all the major psych meds in the past and that's all psychiatrists have done for me. My doctor and therapists have not pushed me to see a psychiatrist. Meds have always been bad for me (ended up hospitalized for a couple months after being put on an SNRI). But I don't think my therapist can diagnose things like this...maybe something a doctor and a psychiatrist figure out? I don't love labels or diagnosis, but I wonder if this would help possibly make a case to new insurance company so I can stay with current therapist. ?
I just don't know what to do. I can talk with my therapist some, but she can't help with most of this, and maybe I won't even be able to see her long. I need to figure it out with the insurance company and don't think I can make a case for somatic-type or somatization-focus therapy with just anorexia, pain, or ptsd diagnosis because to others those look like separate issues that have separate specialists within network covered by insurance (talk-centered e.d. or trauma specialists and physical therapists...have done all that for years and it was not helpful). I don't believe all of my problems are separate and disjointed and I don't want to see a load of specialists...just a good doctor and a therapist that understands the connection and can help me continue with somatic awareness, regulation, safety, and gentler and less disconnected responses to pain.
I don't really want (or think I need) some additional diagnosis. But I'm wondering how it has worked for others with somatic type disorders (if that's even what it is), if it's worth finding another route, or if there is even good help. I feel like I'm going to just be left feeling disabled for life. I'm trying to gather info and remind myself that I can keep working through this somehow. Sorry this is so long and probably hard to follow. Thanks if you read it.
Supposedly the best researched therapy for this sort of thing is CBT, but I've found that to be unhelpful and even invalidating. To a point I certainly try to go about my normal activities, but I'm also trying to not ignore my pain because I tip easily into numbness and not noticing basic cues like hunger or tiredness, etc. CBT always feels like it's telling me to change my senseless thoughts and perceptions. The somatic and trauma approach feels more helpful because I have gotten better at staying connected and like I'm actually inside my body, and trying to respond to pain gently and prevent the meltdown scenarios. Along with anorexia, alcoholism, self-injury, pain, and the pelvic problems, I've had temperature issues, heart arrhythmia, and some breathing problems. These were all real (checked out at clinic or ER) but benign...not life-threatening and source unknown aside from presumed exhaustion or stress. It just feels like I'm crumbling. And there is a lot of emotional involvement in this, especially the pain. I become really disconnected, and it even feels like my pain is a separate part I can't get away from but cannot feel or respond to as "me".
Unfortunately, the therapy I am doing probably won't be covered by my new insurance and I won't be able to afford it all out-of-pocket.
So, my question(s), I don't know if it would make sense to seek a new diagnosis to either be referred to someone in-network (all "talk" therapies I loath) that might at least have some somatic or somatization specialization. ? Do any of you have a somatic disorder diagnosis? From the little I understand, it seems like one of those things that aren't even diagnosed. I've only seen a psychiatrist once since these symptoms became so problematic, and that was for the pill that would help me quit smoking. He creeped me out. But really, I've taken all the major psych meds in the past and that's all psychiatrists have done for me. My doctor and therapists have not pushed me to see a psychiatrist. Meds have always been bad for me (ended up hospitalized for a couple months after being put on an SNRI). But I don't think my therapist can diagnose things like this...maybe something a doctor and a psychiatrist figure out? I don't love labels or diagnosis, but I wonder if this would help possibly make a case to new insurance company so I can stay with current therapist. ?
I just don't know what to do. I can talk with my therapist some, but she can't help with most of this, and maybe I won't even be able to see her long. I need to figure it out with the insurance company and don't think I can make a case for somatic-type or somatization-focus therapy with just anorexia, pain, or ptsd diagnosis because to others those look like separate issues that have separate specialists within network covered by insurance (talk-centered e.d. or trauma specialists and physical therapists...have done all that for years and it was not helpful). I don't believe all of my problems are separate and disjointed and I don't want to see a load of specialists...just a good doctor and a therapist that understands the connection and can help me continue with somatic awareness, regulation, safety, and gentler and less disconnected responses to pain.
I don't really want (or think I need) some additional diagnosis. But I'm wondering how it has worked for others with somatic type disorders (if that's even what it is), if it's worth finding another route, or if there is even good help. I feel like I'm going to just be left feeling disabled for life. I'm trying to gather info and remind myself that I can keep working through this somehow. Sorry this is so long and probably hard to follow. Thanks if you read it.
Last edited: