ms spock
VIP Member
So very anxious like I can't go on. I can barely move today.
I went to bed early last night and got up at 7am this morning.
I went to bed early last night and got up at 7am this morning.
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Hey just wondering what medications did you come off of? I just came off one as well.
I know exactly what you mean. Every conversation I have with people, every human interaction I have, I am hypervigilant. I notice everything - every inflection of words, every nuance, every facial expression, and my internal dialogue is filled with constant dissection of what people are saying: 'Are they angry with me?', 'Are they irritated with me?', 'Are they going to hurt me?', 'Are they going to verbally attack me?', 'Are they going to misunderstand me and what I'm saying?', 'What did they mean by that?'. It's exhausting.Hypervigilant. Annoyed. I'm taking everything personally today and reading into everything and it's driving me nuts. I'm so annoyed with myself. Why can't I just have a normal conversation without being so hypervigilant.?
I know exactly what you mean. Every conversation I have with people, every human interaction I have, I am hypervigilant. I notice everything - every inflection of words, every nuance
This is, in my opinion, why correct diagnosis is so important. When you have the symptoms but no definition of what the symptoms mean, then treating or even just addressing the symptoms goes around and around in circles. But if you have a definition of what the symptoms mean, then there's structure, there's a goal, there's a way forward, there's understanding of why the symptoms are there, and having structure and goals and understanding and a way forward, when everything else is so chaotic and out of your control, is so important. It helps make more sense out of the big mess going on inside your head. No, it doesn't make it easier; it just helps it make more sense, which makes things more manageable. That's always been my experience, anyway.Now it has a name it makes some kind of sense
Yep. Exactly the same for me, too. They don't even need to have said anything - all they need to do is give a facial expression that I automatically interpret to mean something (because I was raised having to guess what everyone was thinking because no one in my family ever TALKED about things, everything was always a huge secret and a constant test of "intelligence", and if they did talk about things it was to accuse, berate, scold, abuse, and so I was left with just facial expressions to try and work things out - and if I guessed or assumed a facial expression incorrectly and acted accordingly, there was always verbal and emotional hell to pay), and I start inwardly panicking over what the facial expression means, I start assuming the worst, and then everything starts snowballing into near catastrophic paranoia and fear and shame and guilt - all things which my family and my abusers programmed me with.I think the worse part is getting myself SO UPSET at what I THINK the other person is saying that I start reacting to them as if they had actually said what I thought they did. And they didn't! Then they're all confused as to why I'm all but accusing them of behaving one way or another.
Again, yep. I have lived with this near crippling social anxiety and hypervigilance for over 20 years, and it's only in the last few months (I'm 32 now) that I've been able to work out why. The hard part is working through it to better manage it... which I've come nowhere close to achieving. But I also know it's going to take years of work to untangle the mess my abusers have made in my head.I realized out of everyone I know I was the only person doing it. I seriously thought I was some kind of insane. Literally. I had no idea what it was or what it was called or why it happened. I beat myself up like crazy.
I feel better today