That's a tough question, and I suspect that the inner critic is somewhere in the mix of the answer. It's essentially working against the grain of the PTSD wiring to outsmart it. Fighting back for a good cause.
I'd like to help but not sure if I can. I'll try. I'm sick with a headache, so this might come out kinda "off." My belief is you've been doing this your whole life and just need to do more of it in some branch out ways, I suspect. Having someone to say "I've seen a difference in how you're able to handle ___ over the last few months doesn't hurt either. It's nice to have positive feedback to stay motivated on the hard days when you want to give up.
I have a lot of fine tuning to do, my friend. Much of it for me is a
daily working on that "inner critical" voice so that it doesn't control me; I control it. This gets reversed when I'm sick, tired, over stressed, but I can get it back in gear faster than in the past based on failing and getting back in the saddle again. You can too. Having good support, cutting out toxic people, and limiting exposure to supportive or people also doing their inner work really helps.
It's just counterproductive to disrespect any aspect of yourself. You don't have to love everything, but having a basic respect for all aspects of yourself is a goal to commit to. And not accepting any unfair criticism for anything that is you is also part of it. Learning not to over-react to criticisms and slights is another topic/thread, for sure.
That's what I mean by radical self approval. You just decide "them's the new rules" and start holding yourself to only a fair/positive self-assessment at all times, total self-respect, not out of
deserving but out of
observing this new/better way of thinking. I read this kind of thing in Pete Walker, Louise Hay, and others.
For me, often in the past, and once recently, if anything went into a result I didn't like, I felt a huge failure, and it was like a slide downward in like 2 seconds flat to suicidal feelings. For a while, I was stuck in that mode for years, thinking of suicide several times a day. The 'inner critic' was always 24-7 either attacking me inside or lashing out, so I'd verbally attack the other person near me. Someone was always being gouged by this nasty inner critic.
Along with this inner critic, Surprise! I have control issues! I just try to work with it rather than hate on it. I try to balance with controlling what I seem to need to to stay sane, but also to practice letting go and handing control over regularly to those I trust, which is very hard until it works out well several times.
This is also a Trust and Listen issue for me. All of this stuff is intimately connected. So, as you can see, there is PLENTY, and I never run out of inner workouts to do.
Have you seen that commercial for "Daily Burn" that sends mini workouts to your phone? Or read that joke about not needing a personal trainer so much as someone to follow you around and slap junk food out of your hand. The junk food ninja? :ninja:
I feel like creating a C-PTSD app that sends reminders to my phone, like "Just trust someone for 2 minutes today! You can do it!" or "Listen to someone you disagree with for 2 minutes! You can do it!" or "Get in the car and go somewhere spontaneous and don't plan it! You can do it!"
The ensuing panic attacks when I feel lost or not in control are gonna happen, but I know how to handle them. I know I'm not the only person who goes through them. And I take them as a sign that I'm pushing myself maybe a bit too hard, or maybe a growing pain.
Boy I hope some of my ramble helps someone, but I doubt it! Don't feel well.
Take care! Hugs if you want them
@Dana1010 . :hug: