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  #26  
Old Jan 01, 2008, 01:07 PM
freewill
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yes,,,, OCD can cause all kinds of things... yepper... I too have suffered from things like you describe your husband goes thru... and suffer is the word... it is not.. not.. "fun"... taking a med has helped me control some of the OCD... like this... so it is valid... there are other people... like your husband... me for one... that has the same problem....

I didn't know OCD... by it's name until a few years ago when I saw my first pdoc.... and thank goodness he was able to help me... with the med... and also by explaining it.. so I could finally know it by it's name... OCD... and that I wasn't alone....

so it may be worth checking out...

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  #27  
Old Jan 01, 2008, 03:50 PM
PTSDeez PTSDeez is offline
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Member Since: Dec 2007
Posts: 14
Uggh, this is about as worth listening to as Andy Rooney.

Look, I came onto this site looking for new therapy options, but obviously I've come to the wrong place. You folks are clearly more of a support group for a condition that you've resigned yourselves to having for the rest of your lives, and that's fine, but it's not for me.

Please do not try to play amateur psychotherapist with me, I've seen plenty of very good people with very strong pedigrees and the opinion is in consensus: I have acute PTSD, complicated by the simultaneous introduction of a mild brain injury. That's it, and that's all. I am not bipolar, I'm not obsessive compulsive, I'm not chemically depressed, I don't have an anxiety disorder, I'm not schizophrenic, I'm just your not so average PTSD case.
  #28  
Old Jan 01, 2008, 04:01 PM
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nothemama8 nothemama8 is offline
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Posts: 7,878
pedigrees -we are not animals
We have dx and are very human
this is a mental health support forum
could your dx be nuerological (sp)?
We are trying to support you but it does go both ways
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  #29  
Old Jan 01, 2008, 04:54 PM
heyjoe heyjoe is offline
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Member Since: Jan 2007
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Some of the people who have tried to help you have had a life much harder and more traumatic than anything you could ever imagine. None of these people have become resigned to what has happened to them or to their future and struggle heroically everyday to live life as fully as they can and to get better. They have tried many things over the years, some help them some dont. If you are going to be immature, obnoxious and arrogant, perhaps you need to find a new sandbox to play in.
  #30  
Old Jan 01, 2008, 07:29 PM
PTSDeez PTSDeez is offline
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Member Since: Dec 2007
Posts: 14
</font><blockquote><div id="quote"><font class="small">Quote:</font>
heyjoe said:
Some of the people who have tried to help you have had a life much harder and more traumatic than anything you could ever imagine. None of these people have become resigned to what has happened to them or to their future and struggle heroically everyday to live life as fully as they can and to get better. They have tried many things over the years, some help them some dont. If you are going to be immature, obnoxious and arrogant, perhaps you need to find a new sandbox to play in.

</div></font></blockquote><font class="post">

I have no doubt that most (if not all) of the people on here have had far more difficult lives than my own - the first 21 years of my life were absolute bliss, and I am more than happy to admit that. That said, I would put the last 5 years of my life up against anything that anyone's had to go through. That's not the issue here though, and I have no interest in making it an issue.

I have yet to read anyone other than myself on this site who has any sort of aspirations of doing away with their PTSD entirely, rather they hope to make their lives as good as possible despite their condition, as such I think it's perfectly valid to say that most people here are resigned to the continuance of their condition (this is not to say that they're resigned to not living a good life, they are just resigned to living the rest of their lives within the parameters that their PTSD allows, however wide those parameters may be). This is a perfectly fine decision on their part I'm sure, but like I said, this is not for me.

I apologize if my tone was caustic, but I have run afoul of about 3,000 amateur psychologists over the past 5 years, so I have little tolerance for people who want to craft nonsensical solutions to the trauma that my body is dealing with (like I said, this trauma is likely less than the traumas that most people on this site are dealing with, but it's still crippling my ability to live a life that's worth living, so I would ask you to refrain from undermining anything I've been through in the future).

In closing, if you are going to be immature, obnoxious and arrogant, perhaps you should take your precious sandbox and shove it up your pitooty.
  #31  
Old Jan 01, 2008, 07:38 PM
PTSDeez PTSDeez is offline
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Member Since: Dec 2007
Posts: 14
</font><blockquote><div id="quote"><font class="small">Quote:</font>
nothemama8 said:
pedigrees -we are not animals
We have dx and are very human
this is a mental health support forum
could your dx be nuerological (sp)?
We are trying to support you but it does go both ways

</div></font></blockquote><font class="post">

I apologize if it seemed like I was attacking you, I did not intend for that to be the message that came across.

I think it's pretty obvious that you folks are not being of great help to me, and I am not being of any help to you either, so I believe I'll just be moving along.

If anyone comes along in the future who is looking for things that they can actively do to try and cure their symptoms, please feel free to have them PM me. Though I'm not entirely out of this mess just yet, I have found some therapies in the past couple of years that have been exceedingly beneficial for me, and I'm certain that these therapies could be of great help to others as well.

Adios.
  #32  
Old Jan 01, 2008, 10:07 PM
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Cyran0 Cyran0 is offline
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Member Since: Oct 2007
Location: Minnesota
Posts: 1,464
Well, because people I care about here may be upset by this thread, I'd like to point out a couple of things even though this person has gone his merry way.

1. He asked for people's own stories and they offered them. It's unfortunate that it wasn't what he was after but that doesn't justify insulting others. And if people offered advice or insight he didn't like, he could still respond with civility and respect.

2. This is a support site. That's all we do, support. We aren't here to provide answers but rather encourage each other as we try to deal with very complex illnesses.

3. Judging other people's attitudes and their approach to healing is inappropriate for the same reason as listen in number 2, this is a support site and most people here have trained professionals guiding their recovery. It's not his place to say what people's goals should be or to state that anyone here has resigned themselves to anything.

4. Ill or not, being nice to others isn't that hard to do. Since he doesn't seem to care about his tone when dealing with others, I agree that this site is not for him.

My two cents.

Cyran0
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Dx: Generalized Anxiety Disorder, Major Depressive Disorder, PTSD (childhood physical/sexual abuse), history of drug abuse.

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  #33  
Old Jan 02, 2008, 03:42 AM
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Kiya Kiya is offline
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I'm just shocked by the whole thing. It's true, sometimes people don't realize the tone in which things come across and how wording is all we have to see past the email screens.
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  #34  
Old Jan 02, 2008, 09:04 AM
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Perna Perna is offline
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Member Since: Sep 2006
Location: Maryland
Posts: 27,289
I have known people with head injuries and know how their personality can change as a result. It saddens me but does not surprise me. Too, I don't know that PTSDeez spent much time here on PC getting to know the type of community it was or getting to know anyone. He has only posted in this one thread. I would not take his comments "personally" because he doesn't appear to want to know any of us in that way.
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  #35  
Old Jan 02, 2008, 11:42 AM
Cyran0's Avatar
Cyran0 Cyran0 is offline
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Location: Minnesota
Posts: 1,464
Agreed, Perna. I just wanted to leave that post to reassure a couple people whom I could see were upset and one in particular who PM'd me directly.

Cyran0
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My blog: http://cyran0.psychcentral.net/

Dx: Generalized Anxiety Disorder, Major Depressive Disorder, PTSD (childhood physical/sexual abuse), history of drug abuse.

Meds: Zoloft, Lorazapam, Coffee, Cigarettes


"I may climb perhaps to no great heights, but I will climb alone." -Cyrano de Bergerac
  #36  
Old Jan 03, 2008, 06:31 AM
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kimmydawn kimmydawn is offline
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Member Since: Oct 2004
Location: ohio, us
Posts: 15,446
A success story was asked to be shared and several were...even if that success to an individual means partial healing or just "making it".

Success might have several different individual meanings, and when we make a public post, we should be able to accept the responses given with good intent.

</font><blockquote><div id="quote"><font class="small">Quote:</font>
I don't care what it looked like (catharsis or something more gentle) or how you came to find this resolution, I just want to hear about someone making it out. Someone waking up one morning with a completely different body and mind than the one they woke up with the day before.

</div></font></blockquote><font class="post">

I'm a success story. I am one who is seen as "making it out. Someone waking up one morning with a completely different body and mind than the one they woke up with the day before." I've seen much healing, but to achieve what I consider success, I also had to accept that events in my life had changed me. I worked to heal what I could, then accept and manage what I couldn't. I don't know that you'd want to read about my success story, though, considering it was BOTH healing and acceptance then maintaining that saw my success.

It seems that you possibly only want to hear about what can be healed by an eradication of all symptoms, as opposed to maintaining what it is you're dealing with presently as best you can.

I'd say that would be just one form of success...one not often seen with PTSD as it's created by life events...life events change us emotionally, mentally and physiologically, and become a part of who we now are. Almost everything that we do, or that happens in our lives change/affect us in some way...in lasting ways...from the simple, food we put in our bodies or change in exercise, to the complex, traumas.

Due to the unsupportive comments in this thread, I will be closing it.

In the future, when publicly posting, please look to the intent of the poster (which is to share and give support), take the sharing/support that can be taken into self and leave the rest that might not apply *without* attack or clearly unsupportive comments.

I appreciate all who contributed to this thread, and thank you for the contributions.

KD
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