• 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.

Winning All The Battles, Losing The War...

Status
Not open for further replies.

Mallaky

Gold Member
I feel angry.

Twenty years of abuse and neglect caused CPTSD in me. This makes me sad, not angry. The anger comes from the fact, that I fought them. I fought the abusers, their ideas, their power over me. I worked on myself since I had the first bitter taste of hope when I was 14, 15. When I got the idea that life could improve, the idea that the adults in my life were bad, not me.

Because I changed "care-givers" (what a joke) when I was 6 years old I could come to this perspective quicker then those who were stuck with one set of abusers. I knew things could change, they already got worse, so getting better must be an option. Another thing that helped me get perspective is, that so so many people in my life died. I understood life is short and precious in elementary school.

Things did not get better, they got worse. When my dearest wish came true, that my abuser die and set me free, things got really bad. The kind of bad where not moving forward is not an option.

Moving forward I did, even found love, and for years now I should be okay. For years now I left them all behind, expect in memory. I won the battle and lost the war.

It is so difficult for me to accept my diagnosis, because it feels like inviting them back in. I feel like being haunted through time and space, defeated after the fact. Was it all for naught? All those years I clinged to the idea that "One day this will be the past. I will look back on it and be proud." I do not feel proud. I feel miserable and defeated. I feel deep, deep shame about my problems, about past strength that now seems like dellusional daydreaming.

For now I lost my will to fight and work. I am wallowing in self pity and regret and it feels good. I feel, that if my past self would see me now, he would be dissapointed. I cant help it, not now. Idealism turned to bitterness.

For now fighting is over for me. There are storms I cannot weather, not naked in the dark. So I duck and take shelter best I can and wait for it to blow over. Light a candle, snuggle a blanket and wait for the sun to come out. I cannot fight right now, but I can wait.

I fought ferocious, now I want to sit and wait. Is that okay? It has to be, because it is the only road infront of me. I feel like crying would help, but tears do not come. So I sit and wait, gracefully.

In order to climb down from the cross, one maybe has to get on it in the first place.
Thanks for reading.
 
It is so easy to feel defeated and get weary of the fight. But you have nothing to be ashamed about. You survived and opened yourself to love, yes this is something to be proud of but be gentle with yourself. Years of trauma takes years of healing. It's okay to take time to grieve and self soothe but please seek help from a professional if you aren't already. It's so important and helps keep from drowning in the abyss. I wish you comfort today in the storm and that the sun breaks through, even if just one stream of light.
 
There are a lot of times I have just been exhausted. I was emotionally, physically and mentally done. It didn't last for ever, but I have often hated myself thinking that it would. Sometimes when I got to that place I'd tell my therapist I don't want to do it any more. Sometimes I'd do like you, curl up and wait. Sometimes I'd pretend that I could move forward without further trauma recovery. Either way, it was okay. I really was doing everything I could. Quitting isn't always a negative thing. Its often about being exhausted.
 
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