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Worried About My Dog - She Vomits/shakes When I Have Flashbacks

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Interesting thread. I decided I would give my two cents since I do have a dog (pictured). I know that dogs especially sensitive ones like mine feed off our emotions. I know that when my temper flares, mine will choose flight over fight. As for Support dogs I am not sure yours could be responding to your symptoms as a result of feeding off you. (This is also something I learned from the "Dog Whisperer" I could be off base but felt I would share this in the hope that I am being helpful as I have been finding helpful advice here.
 
As for Support dogs I am not sure yours could be responding to your symptoms as a result of feeding off you.

What does that mean - "Feeding off of our emotions"? Do you mean responding to our negative emotions with a fear like response (Anxiety, lack of eating, etc), or do you mean something more than that?

Also I just booked a 11 hour day doggy daycare for her Monday - I had a free day left. I really hope it helps cheer her up. I feel terrible, I need to find a solution for her...especially after all she has done for me with emotional regulation for my PTSD :-(
 
Yeah,, 8, pretty much.

Canines are very sensitive to emotions. I even have a cat that is that way. On the rare occasion where my spouse and I have voices raised.... my Grace will get aggressive, at both of us... pretty much telling us to "knock it off".

Rather than feeling terrible... perhaps the best use of the realization is to initiate change?

Glad you're giving her some special care. She needs some peaceful and tender loving care times one on one with you when you are able.
 
As someone with PTSD, who has a pretty good track history in rehabilitating dumped and abused animals, my thoughts are this....

My partner has learned very poor methods of coping with stress. Certain behaviours he displays such as physical and verbal cues are indicative to my sensitive body that trauma is about to occur even though it's not.

(Please don't anyone start with is this healthy for you blah blah blah, we're in therapy and it's being worked on.)

My partner is NOT abusive in any way, and yet there are certain things that he does that my body unanimously decrees as dangerous and a precursor to "bad" behaviour, even though that "bad" behaviour never eventuates.

My thinking is that your dog is picking up on the not so subtle precursors, and so her behaviour is THE precursor to you really going off the rails.

Watch your dog, not yourself, and then you'll be able to watch yourself because you're watching the dog.

hugs, I know it's hard.
 
I worry about one of my dogs too. She's a nine year old German shepherd that my husband and I got from a rescue centre when she was about a year old. She has always been quite a nervous dog and likes lots of cuddles. I talk to her all the time. Over the past two months while I've been struggling with my PTSD, she has been badly affected too. She picks up when I am particularly upset or anxious but of course she doesn't understand what the threat is. If I am having a flashback and screaming, she runs out of the house and sits in the garden, shaking, for hours. She has also developed a real fear of our coal fire and runs out of the room whenever it spits or crackles. It has never bothered her before. I think she just needed to identify the new threat in our lives and latched onto the fire.

I feel awful for her. I wish she wasn't so affected by me. I am trying so hard to reassure her, but it's hard when I am so obviously not ok. She sees right through my false reassurances. I've taken to telling her good things that are true, so she can hear the honestly in my voice: I love her, she is beautiful, I even spent about ten minutes telling her that my jumper was green one day because it was the only true thing I thing think of to talk calmly about. She's been a little better lately.

Doing this has helped me to see the impact my behaviour is having on the world around me. I know it has impacted on my husband, my family, my work colleagues, my neighbours, and so on but seeing it in my dog has had the strongest affect. And calming her has calmed me.
 
I haven't told my story on here yet, but I too have a dog that freaks out when I either cry (which I do a lot) or even if my voice is not in its normal tone.

She is 2 and I have had her since she was a puppy. My 8 year old dog has no issues with my PTSD. My younger dog goes to the back door and rings the bell (I have a bell on a rope she rings when she needs let out). It is her way of coping with mom's trauma. So I let her out back. When I get my act together, I let her back in and give her lots of love. I have tried to rub her belly, just talk to her in loving tones and that helps her plus it also calms me.

When my husband attempted to murder me he put the older dog outside but left the younger one in. It traumatized her terribly. I love my fur babies. I am so thankful that others can relate to my dog's trauma as I have felt so responsible and just want her to be happy and feel safe in her home. I just love them through it and with her having a place to escape, she feels more confident. I have a nice dog house full of warm hay on the back porch where she can find comfort.
 
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