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Why Can't Some Of Us Talk On The Forum?

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For everyone here - I think thi smight help some understand where those of us asking for empathy and appearing to wallow are asking for.

it's short and really awesome

To the thread: Phrases like 'she's bringing it on herself' or anything that basically says 'you actions/attitude = you deserve to have people treat you unkindly' = victim blaming. It's really really negative to do this to anyone, no matter your status as a victim/survivor. No survivor deserves to be treated unkindly, talked over, and have their boundaries disrespected. Not unless they are actively harming other people/attacking people/acting out. Even then there are better ways to address behavioral issues than via victim blaming.

It would be awesome to see far less victim-blaming-mentality on this forum, and a lot less accusations of having 'victim mentality'. 'Victim mentality' as a phrase is being deployed in many forums (online and off) against people who identify as victimised and damaged.

I tell you this not to say you're like these people, but to inform you unless you aren't aware of this useage. It tends to be used by groups of harassers, like anti-feminists and racists, against less privileged groups, like women and people of color. It's very much become an oppressive term that allows people to ignore these folks and claim they are 'just playing the victim'.

So in this discussion it's felt like it's been deployed as a reason not to have to respect the persons boundaries. 'They're doing it to themselves/playing the victim/need to get out of victim mentality', although sometimes legitimate concerns, are also victim-blaming and silencing behaviors. It's important to think really hard about how and why you're using this kind of reasoning before saying these kinds of things.

I believe it's okay -- and needed for many vulnerable people -- to ask people to respect their boundaries when it comes to word usage and behavior. If 'pity party' and 'wallowing' are words and phrases that trigger and upset people, yes you can't be forced not to, but why would you choose to? Asking for boundaries does not = 'controlling the forum'. It = asking for boundaries.

Please remember - because I feel like there's more than a few people who don't - how you cope is not how everyone else does. That you feel you can recover does not mean everyone can. That you are not disabled or handle disability differently does not mean everyone who has the same diagnosis can or should recover the way you do. That you do not have, or handle differently, comorbid health or other mental health issues does not mean others do not or that they should handle it the way you do.

For many of us here, PTSD or CPTSD is chronic, lifelong, and debilitating. It's unhelpful and harmful to insist that we are, somehow, just not working hard enough and need to be okay with 'harsh' feedback and 'tough love'. That if we just were 'more positive' or 'didn't focus on the negative' we'd be able to recover. For many of us, there are real risks inherent in pushing ourselves that hard.

Most importantly - CBT is not the be-all and end all of therapies for PTSD. Many people with CPTSD (especially) do not respond well to CBT. It can be actively damaging. Judith Herman herself noted that, although PTSD tends to respond well to CBT, CPTSD does not.

Differing traumas cause differing ongoing issues and there are many of us who ARE defined, to a large degree, by our trauma and our MI, because our formative years included these things. Because there is no 'before' to return to. Challenging these core identities with a CBT approach can actually cause major instability. We still need to confront these unhelpful core beliefs, but there are more gentle, less distressing and destabilising ways to do so.

This thread has shown just how many folks seem to feel that CBT = best practice. I really think we need to keep in mind that psychiatry and psychology are fields which age, grow, and discover new things. There are some practices that are outdated, and some that don't apply to everyone. This is my story and why I feel this strongly:

I've had 24 years of therapy. My first T was a Freudian Psychiatrist who damaged me greatly, when what she was doing was best practice and accepted knowledge at the time. We don't use her methods of psychiatry anymore.

I was drugged when I was 8 years old with Mellaril, and antipsychotic now only used to treat adults with schizophrenia. We don't drug children that young anymore, and we don't use mellaril for PTSD anymore. Then I was tried on all the early SSRI's - most redundant now.

It used to be accepted 'fact' that people with PTSD also had DID. My Psychiatrist insisted that I had multiple selves, even though I told her I didn't. She insisted I had feelings I wasn't feeling. Told me that, since my disorder was supposed to progress a certain way and certain therapies were supposed to work, that I was feeling and experiencing things I told her I did not and was not. That if I wasn't responding to treatment it was because I was just not working hard enough.

I'm still recovering from what she and my parents did regarding my early treatment, even though they meant the very best and were doing what was accepted as 'right' for the late eighties and early nineties.

I've been through multiple meds and multiple therapists and therapies since then, always doing better, always looking for what worked best for me. I've learned what best supports me and I've become safe enough with my T to start pushing boundaries. Because I'm supported to do so. If I'd, instead, spent years attempting CBT or exposure therapy I'd probably be dead.

Please, take more care in your assumptions about people, about trauma survivors, about 'victims', about treatment, and about the value of choosing your words so as not to do harm. We're all very different, with different traumas and from different walks of life. The safest thing is to listen with empathy and remember that everyone copes differently.
 
@DeathRay, I so appreciate your thoughtful and well-worded post. Many thoughts went through my mind as I was reading it but articulating all of them would take more time than I have right now.

I'll just say a little about one of the topics you brought up. Thank you for pointing out the limitations of CBT. There are things about it that have always rubbed me the wrong way, one of them being the very fact that it is seen by many as the gold standard or even the only legitimate treatment for PTSD. I've read a little about how it became so popular, and my mistrust grew. It reminded me somewhat of how allopathic medicine became the virtual monopoly it is today rather than one tool among many that people can use for their physical health. I know CBT helps a lot of people just as I know allopathic medicine is the best way to go in a medical emergency. What raises red flags in my mind is how it has grown to such a point that a combination of CBT and psychiatric drugs is the first line of treatment for some conditions instead of an approach that looks at what would be best for an individual.

Another hesitation I have, and I wonder whether anyone can relate to this, is that when I have done CBT, I end up feeling more discouraged than when I started because it seems the point of it is to tell me yet again that I am wrong. There has been more than enough of that in my life already. And even when I am able to work through why a belief I hold is incorrect and choose a better one, it usually doesn't make me feel any different, and again, knowing I am SUPPOSED to now feel different because I've changed my belief and the rules say it's supposed to have worked, reinforces the feeling of being wrong. I agree that sometimes the root of our suffering is erroneous logic. But always? I have a hard time believing that. I feel much better supported by modalities that respect an inherent wisdom and strength in each person and work with the person to remove the blocks getting in the way of expressing that. I would feel better about CBT if it were kept in balance and offered as one tool among many we can choose for our healing.

Okay, I'll stand to one side now, I'm sure there will be lots of opinions about this.
 
it seems the point of it is to tell me yet again that I am wrong
Doing it wrong... that's about the only thing wrong about it. CBT is not a blaming treatment, it is a cognitive bias reframing approach, nothing more. PTSD frames cognitive bias, in other words, negative thinking styles. What I often find funny, is that those who reject it are enduring the exact issues it helps you correct. CBT foundation has nothing to do with trauma... it is purely focused on reframing biases. You have expansions then, TF-CBT, EMDR, DBT, PE, so forth.
 
@anthony --

What I often find funny, is that those who reject it are enduring the exact issues it helps you correct

After reading people explain really good reasons why CBT isn't for everyone, you are stating that those who reject CBT need CBT?

One of the reasons I reject it, and that it does not resonate with me, is that I was abused by an organised pedophile ring who utilised similar techniques to brainwash and program me. I feel that you are re-affirming the 'all survivors benefit from the same treatment' point of view, and doing so while returning to assert that those who are not comfortable with it need it most.

Surely, as staff here, you understand that we're not all the same and we benefit from differing modalities? And that it's responsible to support people in pursuing more than one solution?

I have spontaneously recovered memories. The foundation that was formed to undermine victims/survivors like myself was founded by two perpetrators in response to their daughter's speaking out about her abuse. The Father of CBT, Aaron Beck, is on thier board of advisors. http://www.fmsfonline.org/?about=AdvisoryBoardProfiles#aaronbeck

I know that many people benefit from CBT and the expansions thereof. But there are many of us who have very good reasons to avoid it and be uncomfortable with it. For me that's because it's directly triggering and reminds me strongly of the methods used to abuse and torture me. It's also because the person who founded it has connections to pedophiles/abusers like mine. Not because I need more CBT. I've attempted it and it severely harms my stability and triggers severe symptoms. I've found other modalities that work better for me.

To assert that people like myself may be just misinterpreting CBT and therefore 'need' it to fix that is a simplification at best, and one that worries me coming from a staff member here.
 
I am purely curious as to how CBT could be used to brainwash and program you? CBT is not such a therapeutic process, and the fact is that only another person and yourself can brainwash you. I know that may sound harsh, but it doesn't make it any less true. Even hypnosis isn't proven to brainwash, because the person must want to be hypnotised for it to work, thus the person must be willing to such change.

That is not blaming, it is not to insult or state you did something to yourself, it is purely the facts of how the mind works. CBT is not a technique used for brainwashing though, and that is quite factual. CBT only allows rationalisation of a specific discussed attribute to remove the irrational for rational. If you are adding irrational (brainwashing thoughts) then that is not CBT, not its process.

If you were brainwashed and someone claimed they used CBT upon you to do it, a) I'm unsure why you would believe such from an abuser, and b) CBT doesn't have that scope or power to achieve such a result.

Only you can change your thinking. Cults use environmental factors, abusers also, to change your behaviour, perceptions and beliefs. None of that though is CBT.

Do you honestly understand what CBT is? Because you're saying that every proven effective therapy to treat PTSD, being TF-CBT, PE, EMDR, SIT and CBT basic principles, are brain washing therapies that were used to abuse you.

Sorry... show me the evidence that any of these techniques could be used to abuse a single person... because I now do not believe you and this is just ridiculous insinuations.
 
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because I now do not believe you and this is just ridiculous insinuations.

@anthony this comment is inappropriate in the extreme. I understand your queries and concerns, but this last bit is just really inappropriate on a forum for people with trauma. Especially people with CSA. Being believed is central to our healing process. I encourage you to step back and think about the damage you could do to someone like me with a comment like this one.
 
CBT almost drove me mad. It wasn't until I figured out I didn't have to do what the doctors told me to do insofar as healing that I was able to break free of it and do a self directed style of healing. That included EFT, talk therapy about current life issues, shamanism, and a hell of a lot of people believing in me and keeping me safe. I agree with @DeathRay , that healing is not a one size fits all nor should it be put across as such. Things that were supposed to work for me simply did not and actually did me damage. I may be in the minority, but as far as I am concerned I do count.
 
Please, take more care in your assumptions about people, about trauma survivors, about 'victims', about treatment, and about the value of choosing your words so as not to do harm. We're all very different, with different traumas and from different walks of life. The safest thing is to listen with empathy and remember that everyone copes differently.

Hmmm. This sort of flies in the face of my first consults with my former shrink. It is an unrealistic expectation for me (outside a therapeutic environment) to expect others to act, say, behave in a manner that suits me 24 hours a day/7 days a week/365 days a year. My shrink made it clear as he considered my case and agreed to take me on, that it was not the world's/community's/family's job to accommodate me and that he would be doing me a disservice should he encourage fostering my perceptions about that sort of thing. Rather, it was my job, to endeavor to learn and acquire the skills I needed to cope and live in the world as it is. I agreed... whole heartedly and still do. That little nugget in the first consultations is a core belief that has stayed with me and assisted me many times over through the past few years. If I want a sense of community and relationship, I will form the skill sets, perceptions and beliefs that support that endeavor and do the work. If I don't, well there are any number of mental gymnastics I can use to scan for the evidence I need to stay right where I'm at unless or until the pain of staying where I am is equal to or more than the pain of attempting to take action or initiate change.

So far as every coping differently, and everybody being different. We do and we are, however I would posit that there are a group of core skill sets that can and should be acquired should someone desire to live what I call a "generally beneficial life" peacefully and calmly. There are a number of other options other than CBT for example. I got a lot of traction from REBT (rational emotive behavior therapy, Albert Ellis) for example before I attempted CBT and then went on to some DBT (Dialectical Behavior Therapy) and ACT (Acceptance and Commitment Therapy). With childhood abuse and trauma, it was not beneficial for me to stand on my "specialness or differentness". It has been far more beneficial for me to read, study and attempt to apply a variety of techniques to get what I needed to move my outlying dot on the general population "normative human behaviors and skillsets" chart dot in closer and closer toward the most beneficial place on the curve.
 
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