• We are a multilingual website again. Read the notice about this.
  • Understand AI use at MyPTSD: all AI use is explained in our AI help page. AI use is by choice here. It exists if you want it, but does nothing unless you choose to use it.

Vigilance Is A Guard On The Wall Of Traumatic Memory

Status
Not open for further replies.
Awww...shucks, anni! Thanks for the kind words! *embarassed*

I was so proud of myself for NOT jumping down my dear daughter's throat for jumping out at me from the dark. My heart sure did that flipover thang! A few months ago, she'd have never thought it would even be ok to do that.
 
I wanted to add that once I discoverd my pattern it helped me avoid larger episodes. At first it took a long time to get myself out of it but the more I practiced being aware of myself the more I was able to get out of it sooner.

I am looking forward to the day that doesn't feel 10,000 hours long! I am seeing the pattern, and really getting hit in the face with the fact that I do have responsibility for managing the parts of that pattern I DO have some control over. The little kid in me is still rebelling at the 'taking care of myself' part.
 
There's definitely something there that I can't access that I need to know. How do we get to that place where it becomes clear?

I found that part of myself - at a women's 12 step meeting where another woman's pleas for help put me into a full blown flashback.

I was in full view of all the other human beings there. It was terrifying. Some of them have known me for more than 20+ years and had never seen my PTSD off-leash before. I didn't know that's what was happening. This was before diagnosis. Before I had begun to admit that I really remembered pretty much NOTHING of my life.

Being vulnerable and with safe people seems to have caused the memory wall to allow to be sundered. I started talking about it...just ever so little. Then a little more. ...each memory piece connected to it that I talked through with a trusted person has opened up the Pandora's box o' terrifying childhood experiences that I had NEVER shared with anyone.

I do think the anxiety pushed me through that wall. It hurt so bad. But...just like that...*THAT QUICK*...I understood so much of myself.

...and those friends who witnessed my weakness, and stood by me, and got me through that are so dear to me. They showed me compassion and acceptance, and made it ok for me to admit that I needed other human beings to find my way out.

As you no doubt will find your way. You already on some level know...as by your post it seems you are beginning to turn towards your pain with that curiosity instead of avoidance.

That seemed to be the turning point to beginning to seek healing instead of running.
 
That seemed to be the turning point to beginning to seek healing instead of running.

OM Gosh Bloom. That is it exactly. It hit me this last year have spent my life running from myself not realizing that is what I am doing. I thought "if I just change this I will be happy, if I just change that I will be happy (i.e. job, home, friends). Now there is nothing left that needs to be changed other than myself.

My T a couple of weeks ago that my anxiety was a positive sign. It means that I am connecting with my feelings, fears and also that I am moving towards more intimacy in my relationships. It's funny, because I always thought my relationships were close, but in truth, nobody knew all that I was hiding. Not even my husband! Geeze how could they when I had been so successful in hiding from myself.

I absolutely abhor anxiety. I don't have the startle response right now (at times it is thru the roof) and that is a blessing, but the churning in my stomach, shaking, heart pounding fear is too much to handle at times. My T is helping me to learn to ground myself, to be able to get to that place of calm faster and easier. I use visualization, but my is it hard to visualize when you are totally freaked out! I have to force myself to sit down, breathe deep and relax my muscles, then I can visulalize.

Sorry for rambling. It's just that hypervigilince is such a huge thing in PTSD and it does hit us in so many different ways. Recognizing it is the first step to learning how to control it~
 
Yes BloomInWinter it's so hard to be vulnerable and see you have survived it!
I think it (also) took me then oodles of times- days, weeks- to even be able to not view it as 'all bad' (to fall apart, so to speak).

I believe you are wholly-correct that it is the antidote to running, to be able to have enough courage or self-worth (vicarious again?) to not, come what may. And enough health/ sanity to realize that it either has to be done to face this or it has occurred (the vulnerability) and not to high-tail it.
 
In just my last session I said to my T that it was beginning to dawn on me that I didn't in fact have a problem with people at all. I have an anxiety problem. I love people and I always have. I find them everything from fascinating to amusing. I'm also a natural introvert (to the extreme end of the scale) which doesn't help with something like anxiety resulting from PTSD. But beneath that fear and anxiety - I revel in relationships and intimate/honest conversations, and one of my greatest loves is people. I just struggle massively in dealing with them in certain situations.
 
Yes, I should say, it wasn't 'all bad'- the initial 'accomplishment' of doing it and the relief/ 'newness' it brought was wonderful. Later, my own thoughts/ esteem were (are) the culprit.
 
................ I didn't in fact have a problem with people at all. I have an anxiety problem. I love people and I always have. ..............beneath that fear and anxiety - I revel in relationships and intimate/honest conversations..........I just struggle massively in dealing with them in certain situations.

I remember several years (and therapists) back, I had a T that was very concerned of my total lack of desire to try to maintain friendships. She thought I was totally without a support group because of it, gave me the "homework" of trying to find someone to trust and share my problems with.

One of the reasons I no longer see her is that she just couldn't get that I trusted no one for good reason.

When I first went to a counselor and was diagnosed with clinical depression, a blood test showed I was carrying hepatitis C around too. I shared this with my two closest friends, guys I had known and trusted for years. It must have been too much for them, they disappeared and left me flat.

I did a six month treatment that was hell on earth and voila! no more Hep C, non detectable, no threat.

After my friends stopped calling me , I minimized my contact with society in general to the point that the only people I ever talked to outside my family were gas station attendants, my doctors, the people I work with, librarians and grocery clerks.

Anyway, this therapist was concerned that with no friends to use as crying shoulders, I would only get worse. Our joke was that I should get out and try to find people that had a look of distrust in their eyes, but a longing for friendship in their hearts. Those were my people and I needed to connect.

Superjen, I think I have finally found you!;)

Seriously, I think one of our human instincts is to try as hard as we can to fit into a set of standards laid down by the groups we find ourselves in. It meant survival or death in our dimly lit history, getting voted off the island was a death sentance, our relationships with others kept us alive. Thats pretty deep wiring, and our heads (and therapists) can't ignore the desire to have friends.

The more I learn about this new PTSD diagnosis, the more I see my triggers, and maybe I am starting to agree with your point just a little bit, it's not people I fear, it's my own anxiety and my response to the trigger of rejection I fear.

Hypervigilance is most definitely the wall that keeps us from being hurt by traumatic memories, and from being hurt by repeating the same mistakes. Thats OK, in fact, I would be more concerned about not being hypervigilant when we have trauma in our past.

I think triggers bring back the awful memories and remind us to be careful, just as natural and wired in as hunger reminding us to eat and cold weather sending us back to the fire.
 
I am looking forward to the day that doesn't feel 10,000 hours long! I am seeing the pattern, and really getting hit in the face with the fact that I do have responsibility for managing the parts of that pattern I DO have some control over. The little kid in me is still rebelling at the 'taking care of myself' part.
It can still feel really long but the bottom line is that they are actually shorter and I manage it better. I went back and started thinking about this and I think I am just going to have to find someway to remember to write down my pattern as it is happening. Luckily I am not having hypervigilance that turns into full blown panic or memory loss at the moment. Knowing how and when it is coming on has been such a huge help. It would be nice if all of that were gone forever. I can live with occasional hypervigilance.

I had the rebel kid in me for a long time too. If you can't quiet that "voice" maybe you should try a different approach. Maybe instead of viewing it as taking care of you or having to be responsible for control. Try to trick that kid with an "I'll show this thing who is boss" attitude or try to think about not hurting or upsetting other people if you can't make yourself #1. I think that perspective has saved me a million times. I am light years from where I started and it has taken work that I do not regret. I am not done yet and being aware of myself is the best tool I have. I'm happy you are seeing your pattern. Keep it on hand and keep trying to beat it and those 10,000 hours will shorten.
 
Still working on the vigilance...and it's beating me up.

I'm looking forward to being able to step down the vigilance sooner. Hasn't happened yet.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Donation drives

2026 Donation Goal

Goal
$1,800.00
Earned
$910.00
This donation drive ends in
0 hours, 0 minutes, 0 seconds
  50.6%

Trending content

Featured content

Back
Top Bottom