From the Mayo Clinic site...
"Intrusive memories
Symptoms of intrusive memories may include:
- Recurrent, unwanted distressing memories of the traumatic event
- Reliving the traumatic event as if it were happening again (flashbacks)
- Upsetting dreams about the traumatic event
- Severe emotional distress or physical reactions to something that reminds you of the event"
Three years ago I wrote a book about my childhood. That was the best thing I could have done because after doing so I have much less of a problem with intrusive memories. I used to have flashbacks so frequently that weeks could go by where I wasn't aware of what was going on in my current life. I couldn't get out of the memories. "Severe emotional distress or physical reactions" I think vomiting and sobbing uncontrollably counts. Lots of things remind me of my traumas because I had so many.
"Avoidance
Symptoms of avoidance may include:
- Trying to avoid thinking or talking about the traumatic event
- Avoiding places, activities or people that remind you of the traumatic event"
I have lots of avoidance issues. If I have to drive to southern California (where most of my traumas [but certainly not all] happened I start freaking out. I avoid the small northern California town where many of my later traumas happen. At this stage I have managed to put my thinking time about trauma into a little box. I open it first thing in the morning, write all my terrible thoughts down, then I can close the box for the day. This didn't work very well until after I had written the book because putting things together in chronological order was huge for me. I finally felt like I had a story of myself.
"Negative changes in thinking and mood
Symptoms of negative changes in thinking and mood may include:
- Negative feelings about yourself or other people
- Inability to experience positive emotions
- Feeling emotionally numb
- Lack of interest in activities you once enjoyed
- Hopelessness about the future
- Memory problems, including not remembering important aspects of the traumatic event
- Difficulty maintaining close relationships"
Yeah, I pretty much think I'm a piece of shit. I have a really good life at this time but I spend a lot of time crying, thinking about harming myself, and feeling like I'm stupid for trying. No matter how many "successful" check boxes I can check off I think I am minutes away from losing everything because I am a monster who deserves to die. My relationships rarely last very long. My husband is autistic and I think that is the main reason he can live with my emotionally volatility. He barely notices.
I will say that I have unusually good memory for someone with PTSD. I do remember my traumas. I really wish I could forget.
"Changes in emotional reactions
Symptoms of changes in emotional reactions (also called arousal symptoms) may include:
- Irritability, angry outbursts or aggressive behavior
- Always being on guard for danger
- Overwhelming guilt or shame
- Self-destructive behavior, such as drinking too much or driving too fast
- Trouble concentrating
- Trouble sleeping
- Being easily startled or frightened"
I have trouble thinking about these as "emotional changes" because I have always been this way. I was put in court ordered therapy for massive abuse at age 3. I don't have a pre-trauma. I am incredibly irritable. I am an incredibly angry person. This has been a real problem for me. I get in fistfights way too easily. I count exit doors in every building I go in. I think just about anyone can and will screw me. Yes, I have overwhelming shame and guilt. I spend days locked into the fetal position crying because I feel so guilty about shutting my mother out of my life despite what happened to me. I am torn between wanting to defend myself with weapons and thinking that I deserve every bad thing in the world and I am not worthy of defense. I have been re-victimized a lot because I put myself in very dangerous positions.
Lots of trouble sleeping. Oh man. My startle reflex is through the roof. I have seriously injured people who startle me. My trouble with concentrating comes and goes. I can have incredible hyper-focus but I also have times when I can't at all.
For example: some years I can't read a single book. I just *can't*. Some years I literally read more than a hundred new-to-me complex scientific books because I'm in a phase where I can drink in the knowledge like water.
I had to adapt to PTSD just being the way I function in a way I don't think other people do. That's what I mean by not having a pre-trauma. I have always had PTSD. This is just my way of existing. So as a result I have learned some coping methods that allow me to be hyper-successful at times. But I bounce between hyper-accomplishing and lying in the fetal position for weeks alternating with bouts of intense self-harm.
I'm a hard person to deal with. I've been in therapy for more than 30 years (off and on) and I kind of doubt I will ever get to the point where I can function without it. I have better phases and worse phases. That's just how life goes.