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Deleted member 17302
Recently the stress of the situation with the woman who was my fiancee has caused some interesting effects on my ability to process things logically. Considering I do not have PTSD (I don't think I have it at least...) and the stress has screwed with my ability to keep a stable perception of what is going on and what I should do, it seems like a tiny tiny window into what those that have PTSD might experience during their episodes caused by stress. When stressed it seems that you can get pretty upset which causes you to see things in a negative light and thus act on it negatively as if you are pretty dang angry. Then the anger drains you and you become a bit less energetic which causes a bit of kindness and perceive things a bit friendlier which makes you feel more friendly acting. The situations are the same, but the perceptions float quite a bit. You act on perceptions so that makes a lot of sense that you get that rage and such. Everyone has been depressed at one time as well so it is understandable that you can't see things in the same way and pull back when feeling that way.
Considering it is only a tiny bit of these things are seen during stressful situations for people without trauma causing it, I imagine that PTSD feels quite a bit like a nightmare that you can't seem to stabilize very easily. Emotions are driven by chemicals in the body which have to be processed and are not something that can be removed by logic alone but by being able to cope better so as to not have the emotions triggered with such intensity.
I have a stress condition that took me years to figure out how to stay somewhat stable with but it doesn't cause nightmare effects in life. Just some strange effects. So it seems that PTSD is much more scary than I would have imagined it being to have.
I've seen the terror in the woman I was engaged to when she was in her more lucid state of mind. She said she could feel the shifts and couldn't really control it very well. Terror like knowing at any moment your real personality was going to be taken away by something you can't get rid of by just thinking it away.
At one time I had to take a pain medicine for a few weeks. It made me super moody and I could feel it happening but couldn't really change it because it changed how I was seeing things which made it pretty hard to act any differently. Sort of like walking on unstable ground would make you feel unstable but you still would have to try to grapple with the shifts to stay upright. You wouldn't be super stable, but you would be alive still and upright.
This is not to say PTSD should not be worked on by those suffering from it, but knowing tiny bits of what it may feel like, it seems a lot more understandable how difficult it must be to do things about it on your own or even with people you care about.
I would like to say that during the times when you could be stable enough to get help, that is the time to jump on it and do something about it before the next shift comes where you are just trying to stay ok. It seems a lot like if you were in debt and unemployed. You have to fix one problem before you can get to the next. You have to get employed before paying off the debt much like you have to get to a stable point before you can actually know or aquire the help you need because otherwise you are just falling down.
It would be nice if there was a free or home version of EMDR therapy and other PTSD treatments a person could utilize other than just reading a book. You can read a book on how to play a guitar, but playing it is much different similarly to reading about what is going on with the PTSD and how treatment for it can work.
These are just some observations. No idea if this is going to be useful or not to anyone but figured it couldn't hurt to share.
Considering it is only a tiny bit of these things are seen during stressful situations for people without trauma causing it, I imagine that PTSD feels quite a bit like a nightmare that you can't seem to stabilize very easily. Emotions are driven by chemicals in the body which have to be processed and are not something that can be removed by logic alone but by being able to cope better so as to not have the emotions triggered with such intensity.
I have a stress condition that took me years to figure out how to stay somewhat stable with but it doesn't cause nightmare effects in life. Just some strange effects. So it seems that PTSD is much more scary than I would have imagined it being to have.
I've seen the terror in the woman I was engaged to when she was in her more lucid state of mind. She said she could feel the shifts and couldn't really control it very well. Terror like knowing at any moment your real personality was going to be taken away by something you can't get rid of by just thinking it away.
At one time I had to take a pain medicine for a few weeks. It made me super moody and I could feel it happening but couldn't really change it because it changed how I was seeing things which made it pretty hard to act any differently. Sort of like walking on unstable ground would make you feel unstable but you still would have to try to grapple with the shifts to stay upright. You wouldn't be super stable, but you would be alive still and upright.
This is not to say PTSD should not be worked on by those suffering from it, but knowing tiny bits of what it may feel like, it seems a lot more understandable how difficult it must be to do things about it on your own or even with people you care about.
I would like to say that during the times when you could be stable enough to get help, that is the time to jump on it and do something about it before the next shift comes where you are just trying to stay ok. It seems a lot like if you were in debt and unemployed. You have to fix one problem before you can get to the next. You have to get employed before paying off the debt much like you have to get to a stable point before you can actually know or aquire the help you need because otherwise you are just falling down.
It would be nice if there was a free or home version of EMDR therapy and other PTSD treatments a person could utilize other than just reading a book. You can read a book on how to play a guitar, but playing it is much different similarly to reading about what is going on with the PTSD and how treatment for it can work.
These are just some observations. No idea if this is going to be useful or not to anyone but figured it couldn't hurt to share.