Sweet Nicolette.
How wonderful that you care so much for the people here. I have wrote in the 'Goal for the Day' thread and must admit I hadn't thought at all about what I put. I used it as a 'to-do' list and not as true goal setting which, in retrospect, is wrong of me. I believe I need to set myself some challenging goals but that thread isn't the place for it as they would be long-term goals not daily ones.
I understand your frustrations, I have a Son who is stuck in his own rut and will do nothing to help himself out of it. He throws it all on me and heaven forbid if I try to help him out of it! It is about making choices, of wanting to get better and pushing yourself. The difference between a pig and a sheep. If a sheep falls in a muddy ditch it will bleat and bleat until the shepherd comes and gets it out but a pig will sit and wallow in it. My son is content to wallow, I am not. I appreciate that for some people what seems like a small achievement to others could be a big move for them but I also agree that you have to make those small goals a little bigger each time. I have set myself some big goals before and fell flat on my face because I expect too much from myself, I'm a perfectionist and I punish myself for failure. Goals have to be reasonable and balanced to the need of each person.
As a nurse I quickly realised that one patient would respond to treatment while another wouldn't and needed a different treatment and longer to recover. We are all different as are our goals; it is not setting any goals at all that defeats us and keeps us down. Believing that we cannot achieve anything and will always be this way.
Here is my answers to some of your questions Nicolette, I truly hope they help. I appreciate you for who you are.
.do some of you actually put yourself in the third person and read your own posts?
Yes! I'm not always keen on what I have written but I do attempt to push myself past anything negative that I have wrote. Challenging my own behavior.
Are some of you your own worst enemy?
Definitely! There is no one here to encourage me, I have to encourage myself. If someone says something negative to me I can choose to accept it or not. But if it is 'me' being negative on myself what then? I think that is one of the things I have learned from the Forum...to choose to be positive and to change my perspective. To like myself and to not be so hard and self-punishing as I was. I still get down on myself and sulk but at least I know I'm doing it and get out of it quickly. I'm never down for long these days.
Are your supporters limiting you by accepting that this is the best you will ever be or become?
I love my husband and lads very much but I have to agree with what you said here Nicolette. You are a strong, motivated supporter for Anthony and would challenge his behaviour. My H loves me and is supportive but his own problems tend to leave me to figuring things out for myself. If I discuss anything about my PTSD with him he tries to understand but it just sets all his stuff off from his childhood and then I end up helping him! (He doesn't have PTSD but he does have problems). He cannot switch off his 'stuff' in order to care about mine. He is terrified of change and that means I am in this all by myself (except for the Forum), no family help, no close friends near by.
My Son's are 19 and 22 and are both stuck in a rut. The youngest suffers chronic anxiety and social phobia and wont even apply for unemployment benefit or disability. My eldest has just failed his 3rd year at Uni and doesn't have a clue what to do next. He is terrified of even making a phone call and neither lad will answer the phone.
My 'supporters' are not accepting that this is the best I will ever become but they do not encourage or challenge me either. I'm trying to be positive in a very negative household. Money has dried up so I have had to stop therapy.
Why does PTSD make some people so defensive when someone is standing in front of you with their hand out saying I will support you but I will call you on your sh*t and pity parties?
It is a self-defense mechanism built into all of us in some ways. Trauma magnifies it 100%. One of my nursing tutors once told that I put up defensive barriers. I did not understand what she meant until I went through therapy. One thing I have learned is that it is not only people with PTSD it can be anyone. I have know people who seek attention, complain about everything, are very defensive and self-pitying. I think the answer here is that people can become bitter from experience or better from it. During hopelessness and despair it is difficult to see any light and often the way towards it is having someone who won't give up on you no matter what :poop: you throw at them or how defensive they are. Hurt people have often had their trust broken and it takes time to learn to trust again, to reach out and grasp the hand that is being held out towards them in love and friendship instead of anger and hate. I have never thrown my PTSD at my H and kids nor used it as an excuse. Would they be more supportive if I did? Would it wake them up to the hell I have been living? I never would, but it is a thought.
I wonder if my 'supporter' hat here creates fear in PTSD Sufferers and they are scared we may just get a slight grip on what they are struggling with and work out what to look out for?
Not me Mrs! Sometimes I can't see the wood for the trees and I need someone to point it out. The Forum is a great place for that and often I get lots of different advice that I can read through and study before applying. I don't like being challenged but I know it is necessary for growth. I can choose to be offended but that doesn't make the statement offensive - just my reaction to it.
Oh and by the way...people do listen to Anthony of course but we don't need another Anthony...one is enough!:eek:;) We do however need a Nicolette with her sensitivity to people and her love of fun. :tup:
I know my sister would be better if she had removed herself from the toxicity of the same situation.
Yes she would. It took me years to realise this but like I said, sometimes we can't see the wood for the trees and sometimes, like someone else said in this thread, it is the fear - the fear of fear itself. The fear of change. Some people will accept the crappy state they are in and do little or nothing to change because they are so bound up in fear. The 'what if's' of life. Those on this Forum who have made changes have found the courage to face that fear and push through it. I'm still learning.
I know someone who does not have PTSD but will avoid going to a certain place because something bad happened there. As I said, it is not just PTSDers it is just people, their personalities and the choices they make or don't make.
Much love and hugs to you Nicolette. x:hug:
(Loving the new emoticons:tup:)