Basically, my intentions in creating this thread were to make a place for supporters and sufferers to talk about the particular difficulties of their situations.
Sufferers (quite rightly) get 95% of the air space in discussions, in thread counts, in thinking about PTSD in general. There are a lot of places we can go to talk about our particular issues with PTSD .
Supporters don't get nearly enough space. The solution to that, in my view, is to create more space, and more discussions between sufferers and supporters.
It's not 'pie.' We need to make more of it.
It's understandable that the discussion will spark strong emotions of frustration and being misunderstood, which is why it's worth having in the first place.
I think it's important to remember that we're not the ones causing each other pain or difficulty in real life. For my part, what that means is I'll try to keep any frustration where it belongs, rather than directing it to any supporters who are brave enough to claim the title here.
Let's try to remember that even if we're not in the same boat, we're in the same fleet, heading to the same place. Adjacent boats, if you like.
@EveHarrington , yeah a place for sufferers and supporters to discuss issues.
I'd really love it if we could keep the ad hominem stuff to a minimum. It's not fair to direct pain or blame at each other, even though it's easy.
(/fin.)
What are sufferer thoughts on remission periods? What’s propping you up during that time and why do you think you’re better able to handle symptoms? What’s different, basically?
What's different to me seems that I don't have nearly as many symptoms "in remission." Like, my nights are fairly okay, I'm not HV so far gone I can't concentrate, I'm not dissociating all over the shop and I'm managing to get things done.
It's like mental health jenga. If I get really badly triggered, or have a new memory surface, it's like I've pulled out a block at the bottom of the tower and the whole thing has come tumbling down. It takes me weeks or months to build it back again. A trigger or an inconvenience can be in any position in the jenga tower - if it's a mild one, I only have to put a few blocks back, if it's a medium one, a few more back, but if it's at the bottom of the tower I'm stuffed for weeks.
For example, being startled? Easy block to put back. Right at the top.
Today with gardeners and ridiculously loud whipper shippers and HV? A few blocks down. Fixable by some quiet time. I left the house because it was just grating on me.
I recently had surgery on my hand, which is something that most people would shake off. The feeling of being drugged and not knowing what happened and waking up without my clothes?
All the blocks fell down. Still trying to rebuild the tower.
It's triggered a spate of nightmares, which are shit. Then I wake up with my stress cup like 80% full and it just goes downhill from there.
Spoon theory can be helpful too - the idea that the littlest tasks take "spoons", or energy, which varies daily.
If you imagine the amount of energy it takes to have a shower as one spoon:
Grocery shopping on a really good day is a 3-spoon job for me. Doing it with HV is like an 8 spoon job, and doing it when I'm feeling acutely unsafe is like 15 spoons.
Sometimes I wake up with like, ,30 spoons. Sometimes I wake up with 10.
Doing an 8 spoon job on a 10 spoon day... not so great.
Heck, sometimes having a shower is an 8 or 12 spoon job if the body memories are bad that day.
Hope that makes sense.