25-04-2025 08:48 AM - edited 25-04-2025 08:50 AM
25-04-2025 08:48 AM - edited 25-04-2025 08:50 AM
Before I start, I just want to say…that I don’t feel comfortable in this space. It’s hard to be in the trauma and PTSD forum, but for me at the moment, I’m working through a level of acceptance.
I don’t have a diagnosis, I’ve never spoken to or seen a counsellor, or received any kind of mental health support. I have a very good friend who works in a healing space and has seen and experienced the impact my mental health and my triggers has on me. She has a lived experience of CPTSD and she knows a little of my story. She has helped me with resources and just by being a wonderful safe space for me to talk about what I’m experiencing. She suggested that perhaps, I could be experiencing the symptoms of CPTSD.
I completed a self-referral for the guided recovery program and have started that process. It has me straddling the line of acceptance. I have always had “anxiety” and have experienced panic attacks and flash backs and all of those good things. My first memories of my anxiety was when I was a teenager. But now, I accept that it isn’t entirely accurate.
My brain’s blocked out some of my memories of what happened to me. Logically, I know that it happened, but it was as if…if I couldn’t remember it all, then maybe I could live with doubt and maybe that doubt was permission to say…”you know what? Maybe It’s not real.” And if it didn’t really happen, then I don’t have CPTSD.
I will also acknowledge that I have been fairly avoidant with seeking help for a number of reasons, but one of those reasons is because I don’t want to talk about/acknowledge that what happened, actually happened.
I’m in a space at the moment where I know that the first step for me is actually owning it and accepting it. But, that makes me feel very vulnerable, and the acceptance feels “slippery,” I can’t quite wrap my head around it, as if a part of me is protecting me from it, if that makes sense.
Last year, a friend (who is no longer a friend) told me in an argument that I use my anxiety “as an excuse” and maybe she’s right - but not in the context she meant it. I’ve used my anxiety as an excuse not to acknowledge that there’s something else behind it. Is acceptance something that you let happen organically as you move through life, and counselling and all the processes? Or is this something that you push yourself through, knowing that it’s an important step? How do you work through this process of arriving at acceptance on multiple levels?
@Jynx @rav3n @tyme and I don’t know who else to tag, I’m sorry.
25-04-2025 09:05 AM
25-04-2025 09:05 AM
Hey @MissinTooth For me acceptance took a lot of work and a lot of therapy UNTIL one day it became apparent I was being re-traumatised so much that my GP and pdoc both agreed it was time to stop that trauma therapy with my psych. That day was a turning point for me. It was a day I also decided that the trauma work was getting me nowhere (actually holding back recovery). It was a day I also said - yes this happened but it is in the past and to move forward I needed to leave it in the past.
This was not easy - and if I had not done a lot of the previous therapy and also participating in DBT at the time, I would not have been able to do that. The therapy I had done allowed me to look at myself, my past and how immensely it affected me, change some things (which took time) and move forward as a result. Having support to do this was crucial (and SANE was a massive part of that). Ultimately, it is up to us how and when we do this but YES acceptance was a massive part. We cannot change the past but we can work towards a better future. I believe we can only do that though once we both accept and work on how past trauma has both affected and shaped us as a person.
25-04-2025 09:31 AM
25-04-2025 09:31 AM
@Zoe7 thank you for your reply, I appreciate it.
I can see how it's affected me and what impact it has on my life, but it feels like there's a difference between understanding it and accepting it.
It's like...oh...how can I explain this...
I can look at the impacts as if I'm looking at it from a removed perspective. I can look at it as if I'm looking at someone else, but actually accepting it as a part of me...
Is another story.
25-04-2025 09:44 AM
25-04-2025 09:44 AM
I do understand that @MissinTooth It did take me a lot of therapy to get to that place but also a lot of time to put it behind me as well. It was not enough just to know why I reacted in certain ways to different things but also to change those reactions. I am personally now in a much better place as a result. That does not mean I still don't have my moments when things are difficult but I am also much better at knowing what I need to get through those times. DBT was great for doing that but ongoing trauma therapy was not as I had already been over that ground SO much in the past. I do believe we can get through this with support - and I had a lot of that - going alone in that space was not helpful for me. I used to push everyone away or be very reactive to protect myself - now I am much more open to help and support when I really need it.
25-04-2025 12:18 PM
25-04-2025 12:18 PM
Hi @MissinTooth
I hear that you're not feeling comfortable within this Trauma and PTSD forum space, thank you for being open and honest in sharing that with us.
You're not alone and you won't be judged here. This is a compassionate, supportive space, where we understand the stigma surrounding mental health. Your vulnerability is seen and respected.
Coming to terms with our mental health an past experiences can feel overwhelming, sometimes ugly and confronting. Be kind to yourself. Healing is not something that needs to happen all at once. It's a journey and every step you take matters.
For me, acceptance of my own mental health challenges has taken time. There was a lot of denial, periods of severe dysfunction and several relapses. But through it all, I've leaned, grown and become someone I never imagined I could be. The pain shaped me.... But it didn't define me!
I connected to you saying, "blocking out memories, questioning reality, and if I don't remember... maybe it didn't happen." I've been there too.
I spent years disscociated, self medicating with alcohol, cut off from the trauma of my childhood. It took time and different kinds of therapy, some traditional, some not so much, to begin finding peace.
I believe healing is deeply personal and as we grow and experience life, we slowly build the capacity to make peace with our past and accept who we are.
You are an amazing individual on a journey toward peace, understanding and self acceptance. There is no shame in the path you've walked to get here. I hope you can feel proud of the strength it has taken just to be here and keep going. Your'e not alone, we're walking beside you.
Kindly Alisse
25-04-2025 12:31 PM
25-04-2025 12:31 PM
@Zoe7 I've very stubbornly tried to do it alone and it...is a really difficult path to walk. I'm grateful that I have people in my life to walk beside me through the healing journey.
@Alisse I can relate to what you said related to using traditional and non-traditional ways of healing. I had a Reiki treatment yesterday, for example. I am big on holistic healing, and energetic healing.
I'm hearing that acceptance takes time. I'm hearing that it's important to be kind to myself. I'm not quite sure how to do that yet, but I think I'm learning what that means and how it looks for me.
25-04-2025 01:23 PM
25-04-2025 01:23 PM
It is hard doing it alone @MissinTooth I tried that for years as well. To know and reach out for support is brave - and you have us here to walk with you too. ❤️
25-04-2025 04:01 PM
25-04-2025 04:01 PM
I think Reiki is a terrific form of therapy.
It's one of the many nourishing modalities that form part of my alternative and holistic approach to my mental health and wellness journey.
XX Alisse
25-04-2025 04:06 PM
25-04-2025 04:06 PM
@Alisse I love that!
It actually helps to know that you are pursuing similar holistic approaches. Thank you for sharing that with me.
I have been stuck in a bit of a spiral over the last two weeks. Last week was terrible, this week has been calmer with moments of dysregulation and Reiki yesterday helped me to calm my body and gave me a moment of...of peace, I guess.
25-04-2025 04:41 PM
25-04-2025 04:41 PM
I'm glad this week seems to have given you some moments of peace.
I think it's important to look after ourselves on all levels, mentally, emotionally, physically and spiritually, (in whatever form that is for you), so we can maintain a sense of grounded stability, that gives us the capacity, to then fully participate in our lives. I am lucky enough to live in a community that embraces alternative clean living and supports many of my practices and beliefs.
I hope you have a supportive community too.
XXAlisse
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