Sunday, December 30, 2012

Goodbye 2012, Hello 2013: How, exactly, have I experienced C-PTSD healing this year?


 

One of the more difficult aspects of healing Complex PTSD is the fact that often it’s hard for me to follow my own progress.   Therefore, I have attempted to list some of the road marks along the way, the indicators that I can really put my finger on as points of healing.  These points are reference markers that I can use to prove to myself that I am healing.  Of course, seeing proof of my healing encourages me to continue my journey.  Perhaps sharing my list with you will help you develop your own list or will simply encourage you to keep on truckin’ if you already have a list. 

If I had not developed this list and used it to take inventory of my progress now and then, I might have grown discouraged and quit therapy long ago.  If I had done that, the lens through which I view my world would be much darker than it is now, and my field of vision would be much narrower.  Hanging in there, difficult as it has been, has paid off! 

  • For the most part, I have learned to manage the pesky “side effects” of Complex PTSD.  I have no car, so I use public transportation.  Now, when somebody gets on the bus and argues with the driver loudly and angrily because he or she doesn't want to pay for a ticket, I simply sit and think, “What an ass!”  I no longer space out into la-la land, numb out, or shut down. 
I attribute my improvement to all the hard work I’ve done with my ego states, bringing peace into my psyche by getting to know these ego states, helping them get to know one another, and bringing about harmony within my “inner family.”  For a very basic explanation of Ego State Therapy, see this site: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8480666  For more detailed information, search Google and read any articles by Helen or John Watkins.  Please note:  The use of hypnosis has not been a factor in my therapy.

I have more work to do in Ego State Therapy, but I’m well beyond the halfway mark now.
  • I am beginning to see beyond the labels that significant others gave me in the past, labels such as “stupid,” “ugly,” and all the other nasty, mean, vicious labels people gave me when they needed to protect themselves from whatever.  Since these significant others included my parents and my former husband, at one time extremely important people in my life, shedding these labels is a long, hard process.
  • I have closed the door on my marriage.  It’s taken me thirty years to do this, but that’s okay.  I was married in 1961 and separated in 1981.  My divorce became legal in 1983.  My former husband abused me sexually, emotionally, and mentally.  During my marriage, I learned that if I let him use me sexually, he was less likely to have a temper tantrum.  Sex seemed to soothe him, and keeping the peace at any cost was my goal.  After having no contact with him for over twenty years, I finally contacted him this year in order to get some photos from him.  I also wanted to see if he had changed.  From our exchange of correspondence, I discovered that he apparently has not changed.  To his credit, however, he did lend me the photos I wanted. 
Since contacting him recently, I can think of him without the fear, anger, and other emotions of the past.  Those of you who have come from abusive marriages and who are trying to heal can probably appreciate the relief I feel now that I have finally closed that door.  After some EMDR work on some of the traumas I experienced during my marriage, I believe I’ll feel even more relief and peace.
  • I am getting to know the part of me that carries my emotions and beginning to work on the task of achieving some sort of working partnership between my head and my heart.   For those of us who have spent most of our lives protecting our emotions by depending on our heads, our rational thought, to get us through our days, the thought of expressing our emotions is horrendous and can be terrifying.  For example, I can’t cry in front of another person.  Sometimes I can cry if I am where nobody else can hear or see me, but even those times are rare.  Maybe I’ll never be able to cry openly.  However, I’m going to assume that I can accomplish this. 
How did I get to this state?  From the time I was a tiny child, my parents laughed at me, jeered at me, when I would begin to cry.  They pointed their fingers and teased me, told me to get a milk bottle and fill it with my tears.  That started my education.  When I cried at my father’s funeral, my mother poked me in the side and said, “Don’t make a spectacle of yourself!”  
By the time I was married, I had learned that tears are a sign of weakness and vulnerability, so I did not cry no matter what my former husband required of me.  I dissociated, but I did not cry.  I would have been better off if I had cried, for my ex revealed to me that he ramped up his sexual violence because he “wanted to find out if there was somebody inside” my body. 

The points I have discussed above are the points that come most readily to mind.  These are the points I consider most important at this moment.  I hope they will help you to know that with the help of a competent therapist, you, too, can heal.

Here is a Scottish blessing to take into the New Year—


If there is righteousness in the heart,
there will be beauty in the character.
If there is beauty in the character,
there will be harmony in the home.
If there is harmony in the home,
there will be order in the nation.
If there is order in the nation,
there will be peace in the world.
So let it be!

My bet is that the journey of therapy leads to, among other rewards, “righteousness in the heart.” If so, then world peace is possible!  However, I’ll settle for “beauty in the character” and “harmony in the home,” my inner home.  Blessings for the New Year, Everyone! 

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Response to My Readers, December 15th, 2012

In Response to You, My Readers:  Questions and Answers Regarding Complex PTSD

When I looked through the search terms that have brought you to my site this week, I found some terms that have given me pause.  I would like to respond to some of these search terms—

·    How long does therapy take for Complex PTSD?

I am assuming that the person who searched for the answer to this question was trying to find out how long it takes to heal Complex PTSD.  The answer to this question is that the healing period varies.  I know this is not the reply the person wanted, most likely.  And I would like to reply by saying that the healing period takes two years or three years or four years, but I can’t realistically or honestly do that. 

From what I have learned and based upon my own experience, healing PTSD can take place over an entire lifetime, to one degree or another.  Now, this may appear discouraging, but let me explain. . .

For most of us, probably, becoming burdened with the condition called C-PTSD has taken a long time.  For me, it took the first 42 years of my life because I was repeatedly traumatized as a baby and child, the first 18 years of my life.  I went from a traumatic childhood, then, into a marriage in which I was repeatedly abused for another twenty years. 

Thus, it took about 42 years for the C-PTSD to build up and affect my life.  From 1980-1983 I saw my first therapist, and she helped me survive my traumatic marriage.  She provided support when I called the police to report my husband’s abuse of our daughter; she supported me as I picked up the pieces of my life and learned to be a single mom and lost my job, and she saw me through the final stages of my divorce.  Between 1983 and 2010, I saw a series of therapists who varied in their skills and abilities to help me.  They may have been, for the most part, supportive, but they did not really help me specifically heal from C-PTSD.  Then, in 2010, I began seeing the person I am seeing now and have been actively healing. 

So, to respond to question of how long does it take to heal, I can only say that it takes as long as it takes.  However, with each increment of healing comes a new sense of life without C-PTSD.  Therefore, each step forward in your process brings with it its own rewards.  For example, it took me a year of working with Ego State Therapy to get the flashbacks and other nasty symptoms alleviated to the point where they didn’t plague me daily.  If I had stopped therapy at that point, I would have been ahead of where I was when I began.  But I wanted to go farther, so I continued in therapy.  My goal is to do what I can do in therapy to prevent backsliding and to make my last years of life as productive as possible without the symptoms of PTSD.  However, I accept the fact that my healing process will continue, with or without therapy, for the rest of my life.  That statement is as tough to write as it is to read, but it is realistic. 

·    Complex PTSD and domestic violence

I’m assuming that the person who wrote this search term was trying to find information about the relationship between C-PTSD and domestic violence.  Here is my “nonprofessional” response:

In my case, I can see a direct relationship between the abuse I suffered as a child and the abuse I suffered during my marriage.  The childhood abuse taught me to turn inward and accept that I was stupid, I was worthless, and I was to blame for every bad thing that happened to me.  I deserved everything bad that was done to me.  Everyone else knew what was good for me or best for me better than I did.  I was the only person who had no power over me or what happened to me. 

You can see how the above lessons I learned in childhood taught me to be a good, compliant victim of a person who was determined to victimize me.  When I walked in on my husband as he sexually victimized our daughter, however, I awoke to reality and stopped the whole dynamics.  I thought of her and not of myself, and I knew she did not deserve to be abused.  Maybe I deserved to be abused, but my daughter did not deserve that treatment.  Then I called the police and reported my husband’s behavior.  By taking this action, I took my first step down the road to healing.  Not only that, but I helped free my daughter from the chains of C-PTSD. 

The above, then, is my view of the relationship between domestic violence and  C-PTSD.  I became a victim of domestic violence when I was a child, and because I had no professional mental health help as a child, I went on in life to become an adult victim in an abusive marriage.  Forty-two years of abuse=C-PTSD. 


·    Complex PTSD why now?

I am assuming that the person who typed this into the search engine wanted to know why C-PTSD might manifest itself at a time that may seem puzzling.  Maybe the person who wrote this has been happily married or happily retired, has a relatively non-traumatizing environment, and is in a situation where trauma may be the last thing he or she thinks about. 

I’ve been there!  I’ve wondered “why now?”  My marriage with its active abuse ended in 1983.  It was in about 2009 when I had the horrendous flashback that caused me to seek help this time.  My life had been fairly peaceful and productive from the year 1983 until 2009.  I’d had a career I loved, and I was retired and doing things I wanted to do.  Nobody was hassling me, and life was good.  Or so I thought.  When I had the flashback in 2009, I realized that something was going on that I needed to take care of in order to enjoy the last decade or two of my life, and that is what I am still in the process of doing.

I asked my therapist one day “why now?”  She could not give me a definite answer, and I can understand why she couldn’t.  Each person’s psyche is different, and each person has a different innate sort of PTSD “time bomb.”  At some point, if a person has not gotten effective help for the horrors of past abuse, the PTSD “time bomb” will explode and let the person—and perhaps everyone in his or her environment!--know that the time has come to do something about his or her internal situation.  Something will trigger the symptoms that may have lain dormant for years or for decades, and the person either denies the situation and doesn’t do anything about the symptoms or the person decides to get effective, competent help to heal.  For more about this, please see my own story on www.jfairgrieve.com. 

The above search phrases were the three that I felt were most in need of a response.  I’ve done my best as a nonprofessional to give you my responses.  I hope this helps. 

Perhaps these words will help:


“Come to the edge.”
“We can't. We're afraid.”
“Come to the edge.”
“We can't. We will fall!”
“Come to the edge.”
 And they came.
 And he pushed them.
 And they flew.

  Guillaume Apollinaire,   1880-1918
  French Poet, Philosopher



Friday, December 7, 2012

On Breaking Through to Myself: An Important Event in Healing C-PSTD

An update: The end is in sight!

As you are aware, Ego State Therapy as developed after the middle of the 1900s by such people as John and Helen Watkins, is a therapy in which the client identifies his or her ego states and then is helped by the therapist to bring these ego states into a state of harmony so they can work in the best interest of the client to improve the quality of his or her life.  (http://www.clinicalsocialwork.com/egostate.html) This process is much like family therapy, but rather than work with members of a family, the therapist works with the "family" within the client and also teaches the client how to do this internal work on his own.  This therapy is often a precursor to EMDR therapy, but even when used without EMDR, Ego State Therapy can bring about amazing relief from C-PTSD and its symptoms.

How do I know this?  I've been engaged in Ego State Therapy for over 2 1/2 years now, and I can testify to its effectiveness.  Wow, can I ever!!  

In one of my recent posts  (November 28, 2012), I mentioned the spaciness and feeling of being "unsettled" that can creep up on me at odd times but primarily before my therapy appointments.  Last week, I mentioned to my therapist that this feeling is very uncomfortable, especially when it makes me feel disoriented.  She replied that she would help me learn how to control the sensations.  I was amazed!  I had no idea that controlling the spaciness and other odd sensations was within my power.  She did not elaborate on her offer to help me, and we ran out of time, so when I left her office, I did not know any more about the "how to" than I did when I entered her office.

However, I left my therapist's office with one extremely important piece of information:  I have the power to control those psychic sensations that had been making me so uncomfortable!!   I had assumed that those feelings were beyond my control.  I had assumed that, like my liver and my kidneys, my psyche did its own thing on its own without any guidance from my conscious mind.  Boy, am I ever happy to know that my assumptions were incorrect!  Ever since my therapist enlightened me and I realized that I was in charge, I have had no episodes of spaciness and no peculiar feelings that have left me disoriented.  I am confident, now, that when/if I sense the condition beginning to come back, I can keep it at bay by recognizing and acknowledging its approach and negotiating within myself to keep it from coming on full force.  I'm sure this will be tested in the next few weeks, but I'm equally sure now that I can effectively keep myself clear-minded and fully able to function.

In addition to the above, I am now fully aware of my inner family and feel capable of negotiating with the various members whenever I feel the need to do so.  This is another amazing step for me.  I realize that anyone reading this might wonder how I could have been in therapy for several years without being aware that I can control what goes on inside my mind.  All I can say in reply is this: If you are in the throes of trying to heal C-PTSD,  you may understand.  Trauma damage, the major underlying component of C-PTSD, renders one's internal "family" dysfunctional.  Communication among the various parts of the psyche and communication between the "family members" and the person whose psyche they inhabit is often nonexistent.  Thus, despite the fact that I have been working for about two years to bring about harmony within myself, it's taken me this long to reach the point where I feel as if that "family" and I inhabit the same body.  But now I do!  

What an amazing feeling!  I actually feel "together" for the first time I can remember.  So this is what it feels like to be "normal"?  I must be healing!  Is that possible?  Is the end in sight?  

I've lived long enough to be skeptical, so I'm not jumping up and down and rejoicing and assuming that I've "made it."  No, I know better than that!  But I do know that I feel together, as in the expression "Get it together."  I also know that I feel empowered, at least I feel that I can manage myself.  I don't want to manage anyone else.  Beyond those statements I will not go at this point.  It's too soon.  I'm not planning to stop therapy right now, either.  I need to stay with it until I've adapted to my new self.  

Whew!  It's been a long old haul, but I think daylight is a lot closer than it ever has been.  My short message is this:  If I can do it, you can do it.  With the help of a competent therapist, you, too, can heal.  I'm looking forward now to a downhill journey rather than the uphill battle I have fought in the past.  

In the spirit of the Advent and Christmas season, I ask you, if you are healing from C-PTSD, to pass on the Hope to others.  Here is a quote from Winston Churchill that may inspire you:

"We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give." -- Winston Churchill

Friday, November 30, 2012

A Tribute to Two People Who Helped Me Survive Childhood


 Those of us who have suffered abuse as children and who have survived to lead productive and relatively "normal" lives usually have had somebody who provided support in some way when we were young.  In my case, I felt accepted and welcomed by two people in my church.  These were not the only people outside my immediate family who were supportive, but these two people, Rev. Charles Cotton and Mrs. Johnson, were always there for me when I was a child, and whether they knew it or not, they played a major role in my young life.  My childhood was not all bleak because I looked for the good in life and cherished it when I found it.  If you have read or have seen "Pollyanna," you know that Pollyanna always managed to find something to be glad about.  Well, Pollyanna had the right idea!  Somehow, when I was a child, I always managed to find something good in my life--even when pickings were mighty slim!  

In this essay, I give you a glimpse into my personal religious beliefs.  These are my beliefs, and they are what they are.  You may well have beliefs totally different from mine.  A lot of people do!  Believing in a "higher power," whatever that power may be, is, I think, important to one's spiritual survival or to the survival of the soul.  Now that I am an elderly adult, I look beyond the more literal beliefs of my childhood and believe that there is a force for Good in our universe.  I hope that one day my soul will become part of a Universal Good, whatever that may be.  In the meantime, I enjoy participating in the more earth-bound formalities and rites of the Episcopal Church, quaint as those rites may be at times.  Enjoy the humor! 
 
Thank You, Reverend Charles Cotton
As I grow older, I am able to see my childhood as a glass half full rather than as a glass half empty.  It has taken me a long time to reach this point because the collective pain of my childhood memories has overshadowed the joys for so long.  But you, Reverend Cotton, are a good part of the reason why I can now find joy in my memories.  You probably never realized how important a role you played in my young life, so now, sixty-some years after you left my childhood church in 1950, I am going to tell you.

You, Reverend Cotton, were there in 1943 to start me on the path of my lifelong spiritual journey.  When I entered the Sunday School program at St. Stephens Episcopal Church in Longview, Washington, at age three, you had developed the curriculum and had found a teacher for my class.  Despite the fact that it was wartime, you had somehow found the funds to supply us with full-sized crayons that had sharp points and smelled brand new, and you must have commissioned a squadron of cookie bakers, for each Sunday we helped ourselves to home-baked oatmeal-raisin and chocolate chip cookies heaped high on white porcelain plates.  Sometimes we were treated to Snickerdoodles, warm from the oven and sprinkled with sugar and cinnamon.  And on Sundays most of us went home with red moustaches after drinking cherry-flavored Kool Ade.  When our teacher talked to us about Jesus’ love for little children, I was able to comprehend because I felt loved and safe at your church.

Although my young mind may not have remembered all the fine points of the material you wanted us to learn, I remember that you and my Sunday School teachers were glad to see me.  I felt welcome at your church, and I had friends to play with at Sunday School.  Betty Martin was my best friend, and she wore her hair in a Dutch bob topped by a huge plaid taffeta bow.  I had long, boring pig tails tied with tiny plaid taffeta bows.  Betty smelled deliciously of bacon grease and pancake syrup, and I looked forward to sitting next to her when we colored and did craft projects.  I remember, too, the minty aroma of the white paste our teacher doled out to us on little paper squares.  Betty and I tried not to eat the paste, but sometimes temptation overwhelmed us, and then we would look at each other and laugh.  If I try hard, I can still hear Betty’s monotone when we sang “Jesus Loves Me,” and I can still hear her admonishing me to “stay in the lines” as we colored the pages illustrating Bible stories. 

To this day, Reverend Cotton, I remember the lessons I learned in Sunday School and, when I was an older child, during your sermons, regarding staying in the lines of moral and decent behavior and loving my neighbor.  Nowadays, those lessons may be regarded as old fashioned by some people, but in my experience, human decency, kindness, thoughtfulness, charity, and respecting others will never go out of style.  You and my Sunday School teachers taught me those values, and I have never forgotten them.  Those teachings, in fact, have guided my decisions my entire life, and I thank you with all my heart.

In addition to providing the safe nest I needed to begin my spiritual growth, you, Reverend Cotton, were the world’s greatest Santa Claus!  After our late afternoon Christmas Eve service each year, you disappeared into the sacristy and, magically, Santa emerged from the same room--it took me a few years to get it through my head that you and Santa were one and the same, but I finally puzzled out the mystery.  Not only were you dressed in a magnificent red suit trimmed with white fur, but you carried a huge brown sack over your shoulder.  And when you wound your way among the pews and down the aisle giving out the contents of your sack, bigger-than-life navel oranges and foot-long peppermint sticks, I saw a twinkle in your eyes just like the twinkle in the eyes of St. Nick in “The Night Before Christmas.”  When you smiled at me, I knew I belonged right there, in that quaint little Celtic church, and I knew you would never let anyone turn me away or tell me I was unworthy.  I didn’t know it then, but now I know that your assurance was the greatest gift you gave me, greater by far than all the oranges and peppermint sticks in the world.

Although my parents were atheists, they agreed when friends of the family asked that I be baptized.  To this day, when I think about that Sunday in 1943, I want to throttle myself, and I can well imagine that you could cheerfully have done the job if you had given in to your baser instincts.  For some reason unknown even to me, I was suddenly and inexplicably afraid of you, the baptismal font, and the onlookers.  As I stood there in my little double-breasted sailor coat, clicking the brass buttons together, stomping my feet, and sticking my lower lip out, muttering incessantly, “I don’t like that man, I don’t like that man, I don’t . . .,”  you kept your cool through the final Amen.  What you did or said after my parents dragged me, screaming and kicking, through the front door, I don’t know.  I don’t want to know!  You may have wondered later if my baptism “took,” in fact.  Well, I will never be one hundred percent certain about that in this life, but I have remained in the Faith, if that is any comfort.

When you left St. Stephens in 1950 to become assistant to Bishop Bayne in Seattle, I was eleven years old, and I cried.  You wouldn’t have known how I felt when you left because I didn’t tell you.  I remembered you, however, and I remembered the journey and the path you showed me.  I continued my faithful attendance, was confirmed, and joined the adults each Sunday in taking Communion.  But my church experience lacked something without you there.  I missed you and the twinkle in your eyes and your welcoming smile.  Maybe someday I will see you again and tell you this in person.  Until then, I can thank God for you when I say my prayers.  Rest in peace, Reverend Cotton.  You deserve it! 


          






About this photo:

 If I were asked to pick a photo that brought back the happiest memories of my childhood, I would choose this photo of the St. Stephen’s Junior Choir, 1948.  I am standing in the back row, trying to hide, and Betty Martin is to my right,  ribbon in her bobbed hair.  When I look at this picture, I am taken back in time to the choir picnics at Spirit Lake decades before Mt. St. Helens blew, to “Fling Out the Banner” played on the huge pipe organ at St. Mark’s in Seattle as we processed on Cathedral Day, to the Christmas party at our chaperone’s home, and to all the other choir events that delighted my young heart.  

Most of the children in that photo are still alive today, although some of them may have lost the mischievous twinkle in their eyes.  The discipline of working for a living and personal tragedies tend to reduce twinkles in adult eyes.  Those little boys in the front row looked like they were up to something, and most of the time they were!  I wonder what they are up to now.  Would they remember the tricks they played on us girls?  Would the girls remember how they giggled when they ate cookies and talked about the boys? 

The lady in the hat is Mrs. Johnson, and she was our chaperone and "keeper."  I felt sorry for her the evening the boys got rowdy at her home during the choir Christmas party.  I'm sure she wished she had not taken us on.  She was, however, a “Church Lady” to the nth degree, one of those valiant souls with unlimited patience who could always be relied upon in an emergency and who would never admit defeat under even the most trying of situations.  And “trying” we were.  We were always trying something!

When I think about Mrs. Johnson now, I am warmed by the memory of her kindness and the enduring patience of her loving soul.  She paid attention to me when few other adults did.  She knew I walked the blocks to church and Sunday School every Sunday all by myself, and she knew my parents were not believers.  She sensed my loneliness and isolation, my feeling of not belonging, and she taught me how to be a proper little Episcopalian girl, proper by the standards of the time, that is.  She wanted me to fit in.

Mrs. Johnson taught me how to genuflect correctly, how to use a hankie to cover my head if I didn't have a hat, and how to take Communion without spilling the wine.  She also taught me to never, ever chew the Host.  Chewing the wafer would hurt Jesus, she explained, because He was in the wafer, and Jesus had borne enough hurts already. “We don’t want to cause Him more pain,” she would remind me tenderly, and I would agree. Although in my child mind I was not completely certain as to the connection between chewing the wheaten wafer and the suffering of Christ, I was certain that I did not want to add to His suffering.  To this day, I do not chew the wafer.  Catholic friends have told me I'm old fashioned, even pre-Vatican I, in their opinions.  But every time I take communion, I hear Mrs. Johnson telling me to "never, ever chew the Host!"  And I never do.  Lessons taught by a loving teacher are not forgotten or abandoned.

I believe that the most important thing Mrs. Johnson taught me, though, was to look within myself to discern what Jesus wanted me to do.  Mrs. Johnson was the leader of Junior Daughters of the King, and each month when we met, we said a prayer that ended in this question, “Lord, what wilt Thou have me to do?”  We reflected in silence to hear Jesus’ reply in our hearts, and then each of us in turn told the others what we had heard.  The following month we reported on how well we had done as we were bidden, and then we listened to the voice in our hearts tell us what we were to do in the coming month. 

To this day, I listen for Jesus’ voice when I want to know which direction my life is to take. Jesus never fails me.  As I said, lessons taught by a loving teacher are not forgotten or abandoned.
 

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Another Thread In the Tapestry of C-PTSD Revealed

Last Monday, I discovered another thread in my intricately woven tapestry of Complex PTSD.  I'd like to share this process of discovery with you simply to give you an idea as to how the process of therapy can go. 

First of all, when you have been seeing a therapist for a year or so, you may notice that the closer you get to the therapist's office as you go to your appointment, the more apt you are to feel "odd."  This seems to be normal.  At some place in my mind I am constantly processing my life experiences even though I'm unaware most of the time that this is happening. It seems that as I get closer to my therapist's office and the time for my session, the process makes itself more obvious.  When this happens, I often feel spacey or odd.  Remember:  this is just my own personal experience, and what I experience may not be what you experience.  But my experience is not unusual.

By the time I entered my therapist's office on Monday, November 26th, then, I was really spacey.  I didn't know the reason for this, but I knew that sooner or later, I would know and understand the reason.  And that is just exactly what happened.

I told my therapist how I was feeling, and she questioned me to determine which part of my psyche we were dealing with that day.  If you have read my older posts on my Word Press site (http://relievingptsdsymptoms.wordpress.com/), then you know that I have been working with Ego State Therapy, identifying the "parts" or "people" within my psyche that comprise my basic personality.  The part within me that has been greatly affected by my childhood traumas is Jeanie, my little girl self that is now finally beginning to grow and mature since I've been in therapy.  Jeanie is growing and catching up to "Jean," the adult.  Here is a web page that will explain the concept of ego states or "parts" or "selves" more thoroughly:  http://www.clinicalsocialwork.com/overview.html. 

This web page also explains to some extent the "before" and "after" conditions of a person who goes into therapy for C-PTSD and who has a problem with psychic fragmentation, as I have had.  It's all related!  My PTSD symptoms have calmed down because my inner fragmentation has decreased, and this has come about because I have been working hard at Ego State Therapy. 

But back to Monday's session:  As my therapist and I worked at understanding what Jeanie needed that day, I went deeper into myself so I could access Jeanie.  Going inward into myself is not difficult for me because I am naturally introverted and have taken this path all my life when I have needed to cope.  When they feel threatened, some people fight and go outward; I've fled and have gone inward ever since I was a small child.

One more thing I need to mention is that I have always felt invisible, to some degree.  Perhaps some of you, my readers, know what I mean about this feeling of being invisible.  I learned very early that I was safer if my parents, especially my father who was given to violent rages, were not aware that I was around.  I learned to keep a low profile, to be invisible, in other words.  Later, I was invisible to avoid the impact of my husband's temper outbursts.  On this particular Monday, the day of the session I am describing, I was feeling invisible in addition to feeling spacey.

Somehow, during my conversation with my therapist, I connected to Jeanie and to the odd feeling I had that day and to the feeling of invisibility.  And at some point, I asked my therapist, "Am I easy to work with?"  She said yes and asked why I asked her that question.  In answering her question, I connected with Jeanie and her need to be invisible.  I also realized that I have always, during childhood and adulthood, tried to be easy to work with.  In fact, I've done everything I possibly could to be easy as a person.  Why?  Because, in my thinking, being agreeable, being easy, helped me maintain a low profile.  And if I maintained a low profile, then I would be less apt to be noticed, and if I were not noticed, then I would not be yelled at, raged at, or hit.  It's as basic and as simple as that.

My therapist asked me how I made myself easy for her to work with, and I told her that whenever I'm telling her something that I had told her before, I give her the background material so she doesn't have to work hard to remember it.  I did that for my first therapist back in the early 1980s, too.  I've accommodated these therapists because I've wanted to be easy to work with.  If I was easy to work with, then they would be more apt to like me and not want to yell at me or hit me.  Remember--I was hit by a therapist at one time, so my wanting to be liked and not hit has a legitimate basis.  Also, if I was easy to work with, then I would not stand out in my therapist's mind as being a client who was a troublemaker and, therefore, my therapist would be less apt to punish me by saying that she no longer wanted to work with me.  NOTE:  This process has been, like an idle computer program, running in the background, and I have not been aware of it until last Monday's session. 

"With awareness comes change," says a dear friend of mine.  Now I have identified one of the important threads of my C-PTSD tapestry, the thread of why I choose to keep a low profile much of the time and why I so often feel invisible--or why the Jeanie part of me so often feels invisible.  The identification of this thread is a major step in unraveling the threads that make up my diagnosis, C-PTSD.  So now that I have taken this step and have identified the thread, what am I going to do about it?

Short answer:  I don't know.  I've gone through 73 years of invisibility and maintaining a low profile, and I'm not certain that I can drastically change this aspect of my personality.  However, perhaps now that I am aware of the dynamics, aware of this thread and aware of the effect it has had on my life, maybe I can take small steps toward change.  In "real world language," what might these small steps look like?

This Sunday, for example, I've been asked to read an essay I had published in The Red Door, a literary journal put out by Trinity Episcopal Cathedral here in Portland.  I've been dreading this experience, just dreading it.  Why?  Because I will be required to be visible!  In order to do this, I must leave the anonymity of being a face among many faces in the pews of the cathedral and make my presence known by sitting before an audience and reading an essay I wrote.  I can't keep a low profile, and I can't hide. 

What will I do?  Well, on Sunday morning I'll find out.  However, I suspect that I will simply do what I have agreed to do and sit before an audience and read my essay.  I have the inner discipline to make myself do this.  Maybe, though, the reading won't be quite as difficult on this coming Sunday as it would have been last Sunday, the day before I had my insight and identified this particular thread in the tapestry.  Maybe I will actually enjoy doing the reading and enjoy giving the gift of my essay to the listeners.  If I think of the reading as giving a gift to the audience, I believe I can do this.  I say this now.  I hope I can say the same thing at 9:00 A.M. this coming Sunday at Trinity Cathedral!

Small step by small step, I'm unraveling the C-PTSD mess.  It isn't happening in a hurry, but then, the tapestry has been 73 years in the weaving.  It's reasonable to believe the unweaving will take a while.  Here is a Chinese saying to help you hang in there:  "Be not afraid of growing slowly; be afraid only of standing still."

Thursday, November 22, 2012

Flashback Healing: A Brief Note

When I looked at my stats today, I noticed a new search term, "flashback healing." Somebody was searching for information on how to get rid of flashbacks, evidently.  I don't know if that person will visit my site again, but there is information on healing flashbacks on my Word Press site:  http://relievingptsdsymptoms.wordpress.com/  I wrote about this topic in some of my earlier articles.

In short, I have not had a flashback since I began Ego State Therapy, the first stage of therapy with my present therapist.  Before beginning Ego State Therapy work, I often had flashbacks when riding the city bus.  Usually the flashbacks were brought on by loud, angry voices--a passenger arguing with the bus driver, for example.  Since working with E.S.T., however, I no longer have the problem.  It's possible that under extreme stress or distress, my problem could return, so I can't say that I'll never have another flashback.  But for now, I've been flashback-free for two years.  

That does not mean, though, that my PTSD symptoms are gone.  I still get spacy, numb out, and have some other mild symptoms, but I have not had a flashback for two years.  Without flashbacks, I can function well in my everyday life, so I'm a happy camper.  Flashbacks truly made my life difficult and caused me to be reluctant to leave my apartment.  I'm glad to be free from them.

I hope that the work in EMDR will turn down the intensity of ALL my PTSD symptoms!  However, life without flashbacks is a huge improvement by itself.  Therapy works, at least it's working for me, so if you are experiencing severe PTSD symptoms that are making your life difficult, then you, too, might get relief from therapy.  It's well worth a try.  See my previous post to find a web site that will direct you to competent therapists.  

Enjoy a peaceful and happy Thanksgiving!     Jean

 


Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Using EMDR to Heal Complex PTSD: Experience 1

On Monday, November 19th, 2012, I had my first EMDR treatment with my present therapist.  If you have read my previous two posts, you know about the bungling of my former therapist and my bad reaction to her misuse of EMDR with me.  Well, I'm really glad that I decided to try again!

On Monday, my present therapist helped me by "tapping in" the safe place I will go in my imagination if I begin to feel overwhelmed.  This was a very gentle experience, very different from my previous experience.  I simply sat with my open palms upon my knees while she gently tapped each palm in turn with her fingers.  She asked me to let her know if she was tapping too rapidly, and, at one point, I did ask her to tap more slowly. 

As my therapist tapped, I focused on my inner resource, my safe place.  I felt very relaxed each time she tapped.  She did about six repetitions during each round of tapping.  When she was finished with each round, she asked what I experienced in my body, and I told her.  

When I went into her office at the beginning of my session, I felt a lot of anxiety in the pit of my stomach, anxiety related to my anticipation of the EMDR experience.  When I left my therapist, I felt no anxiety related to the EMDR.  When I awoke this morning, I could remember the EMDR experience with my previous therapist and remember the reaction I had, but the anxiety, the emotional overload, was gone.   

Now, when I remember the previous therapist, I think, "My previous therapist did not properly prepare me for EMDR and did not follow the protocol outlined on the EMDR web site.  Why?  I don't know.  I had a very bad experience, but it's over now.  I need to move ahead and do the trauma-related work with EMDR so I can alleviate my over-all anxiety as much as possible."  

The odd thing is that when my therapist and I worked yesterday, we did not specifically try to neutralize the emotional impact of the bad experience I had with the previous therapist.  We were tapping in resources.  However, my subconscious mind must have been working on the bad experience because the emotional impact is gone, and I'm looking forward to more EMDR work.  

For more information on installing resources using EMDR, here is an article reprinted from the EMDR Institute's newsletter: http://www.dnmsinstitute.com/doc/rf-emdr.pdf.  Remember:  Each person is unique, and each person responds differently to EMDR.  However, I will try to give you weekly updates on my own experience as I go through the process.  

EMDR works! Remember, though, that each person experiences it somewhat differently.  Your experience will not be exactly like mine.  However, the outcome should be the same--reduced anxiety surrounding the traumas you have experienced.  If you are considering EMDR therapy, here is an important web site to help you choose a therapist and to help you understand the process: www.emdr.com/ . If you live in Oregon, here is a web site that is specific to Oregon:http://www.emdrtherapistnetwork.com/emdr-training-consultation-oregon.html

Have a wonderful Thanksgiving! 






 

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Response to My Readers: A Thanksgiving Post

Sunday, November 18th, 2012

Each day I check the stats for this blog, and recently I've been blown away by the sudden rise in my readership.  Wow!  That's all I can say!  

One area that I check carefully is the list of search terms you, my readers, use when you access this blog.  So far, most of the search terms you use include the words "complex," "PTSD," and "healing."  This tells me that you want information on healing Complex PTSD.  

Now that I know what you want, I will do my best to give you more information on my healing process.  I can't tell you about other people's healing, but I can tell you about my own.  I asked my therapist the other day if my experience is "generalizable," suitable to present to you as a "typical" healing experience.  She assured me that it is.  She has been helping people heal their C-PTSD for thirty years, so I consider her an authority on the matter.

A few days ago, somebody used "shadow people" as a search term.  Now, that term is interesting!  You may have read my article called "Shadow Girl."  I will give you more information on this topic, also, in future posts.  Please keep in mind, though, that the only experience I can relate is my own.  I can't tell you about anyone else's experience.  My shadows are going to be different from other people's shadows.  Each of us is unique, and our experiences are unique, but common threads run through all our experiences.

Thank you for following my blog.  My intent is to provide information based upon my own experience so that you can follow my healing process and so that you can know that C-PTSD is treatable and can be healed, often without the use of medication.  I have never taken any medication as I've worked on healing my C-PTSD, although for some people medication may be helpful.  Anti-anxiety medication, in particular, may be helpful for some people.  If I suffered from disabling panic attacks, I would consider taking medication, but I can usually work through distressing times by writing or by dialoging with myself--using my left brain to help my right brain.

Healing C-PTSD can be a long, difficult process.  Engaging in the process requires dedication on the parts of both client and therapist. If you can possibly find the time and have good mental health insurance coverage, I urge you to get help from a therapist who is skilled and experienced in helping people heal their C-PTSD.  Even if your insurance coverage is not good or is nonexistent, you may be able to find a competent therapist who takes payment on a sliding scale.  

If you are a victim of domestic violence or rape, and if you have pressed charges against the perpetrator, you may be entitled to compensation from a victims' fund in your state, or the court may require the perpetrator to pay for your therapy.   If you truly want the help, chances are that you will get it.  But you must be willing to go after it!  No perpetrator, in my experience, is going to want to pay for a victim's therapy, but perpetrators can be legally required to do that.  Paying for a victim's therapy is part of repairing damage done by abusive behavior.

Now, my friends, I am going to take a break for a few days and celebrate Thanksgiving with my children and their families--and their dogs.  Should be an interesting day!  I wish you a blessed Thanksgiving, and I send you my heartfelt wishes for healing and peace.  

"We who lived in concentration camps can remember the men who walked through the huts comforting others, giving away their last piece of bread. They may have been few in number, but they offer sufficient proof that everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms -- to choose one's attitude in any given set of circumstances." -- Victor Frankl

 

 

Friday, November 16, 2012

On Little Glitches in the Process




If you have been following my posts, you know that I’m entering the EMDR phase of my therapy.  In my previous post, I told you about the damage done by an inept therapist, a person who did not follow the protocol for properly using the EMDR modality.  I’m finding that the damage from her bungling was more extensive than I thought because now I am very anxious about starting EMDR, and that anxiety is slowing me down. 

One of the steps a client takes in the preparation process for EMDR is to decide upon a “safe place” where the person can feel a sense of protection and safety if he or she begins to feel overwhelmed.  This safe place is in the client’s imagination and is not a physical place usually, although it probably could be.  I have chosen my “safe place,” so that step has been completed.  

Another step the client and therapist take is to decide upon a method for delivering the bilateral stimulation of EMDR.  (For an explanation of this, please see the EMDR web site client pages listed in my previous post.)  I have chosen to sit with my hands, palms up, on my knees so that my therapist can tap on the palms of my hands.  I chose this method because it least resembles the high tech method used by the previous therapist.  I anticipate that as I sit and review a traumatic event in my mind, the bilateral tapping by my therapist will cause my right brain to release some of the highly-charged emotions from the trauma.  I know this simple modality is effective, as I mentioned in my previous post.  Now I need to take the next step, allowing myself to engage actively in EMDR.

Now, staring at reality, the fact that technically I have completed the steps of preparation, I’m scared.  Why?  Because my mind can’t get past the horrible reaction I had to my last botched experience with EMDR.  If this is, indeed, the reason why I’m dragging my feet, then how will I get beyond the fear?  I don’t know.  What I do know, though, is that if I can't get comfortable with the prospect of EMDR by Monday, my therapist will help me.  Simply knowing that she can and will help me takes the edge off my fear and dials the intensity down a few degrees.  

In the meantime, I have to live my life.  I have writing to do and computer problems to solve.  What I will do this weekend is tell my mind to work on the EMDR problem in the background as I go about my real-world tasks in the foreground.  My ability to do this is a skill I have used for years.  You can do this, too, if necessary.  Just imagine that your mind is a computer, and run your right brain in the background much as you might have Chrome or Internet Explorer running in the background as you type an article in M.S. Word.  Your right brain is actively working to do its task, but you are not necessarily aware of this.  You are, however, aware that your left brain is solving a printer problem, trying to find the best way to word the second sentence in the introductory paragraph of an article, and trying to figure out why the toaster oven spews smoke when you turn it on. 

Eventually, your right brain will let you know that it has solved your problem.  Maybe you will find the solution in a dream.  When this happens, you will wake up in the morning, and you will simply know what you need to do and why you need to do it.  Maybe your right brain will whisper the answer to your question as you watch television or at another moment when you are in a light trance state. 

I do, however, practice one specific technique that often quickly but gently brings about at least partial resolution to an anxiety-producing situation:  I write through a problem--just as I am doing now.  And when I write, I ask questions and answer them in order to create the text in my article.  I use what I assume is my logical left brain to ask the questions, and from somewhere in my mind, the commonsense replies enter my awareness. See the following as an example:

My question to myself:  If I consider the process of my therapy as a whole, is the foot-dragging caused by my fear of entering this new part of my therapy a huge problem?   
My reply to myself:  While it may seem like a huge problem to me at this moment, the foot-dragging is really just one tiny part of the whole process.   

When I think of my process of recovering from C-PTSD as a whole, then, I can see this small part, the fear and foot-dragging, as simply another minor glitch as I move forward.   

“Minor glitches” are easy!  I can deal with minor glitches!  I have dealt successfully with a lot of minor glitches.  If I can keep that fact in mind, then by Monday I will be or may be ready and eager to take the next step. 

Now that I have finished writing the material above and answering my question about foot-dragging and minor glitches, I have recovered my perspective!  I may receive more insights that will make overcoming the fear even easier, but right now I am confident that on Monday I will do what I need to do and enter my first session of EMDR with my present therapist.  However, if on Monday I cannot comfortably do this work, I will do it another time.  As you can see, writing through a problem is one amazing method for regaining your equilibrium and centering yourself. 

For inspiration, here are a few words from a famous Scotsman, Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881):

“Go as far as you can see; when you get there you'll be able to see farther”
 



Saturday, November 10, 2012

Now That I’ve Closed A Few Doors, Which Door Will I Open Next?

Until I wrote the previous post, the one in which I discussed closing and locking the door to my twenty-year marriage that ended three decades ago, I had never thought much about doors, either the physical doors we encounter in our homes or the metaphoric doors of our inner lives.  However, since I wrote that post, I have given the matter of doors much more thought. 

As I have been reflecting upon the topic of doors recently, I have become more aware of them.  And now that I am about to open a new door, the door leading to the EMDR segment of my therapy, I am experiencing anticipation, eagerness, a sense of nearing the end of my present therapy—all good feelings.  On the other hand, I am also experiencing fear, the fear that goes with the uncertainty of doing something new and different.  In my case, though, my fear of starting EMDR work is also based on a previous bad experience I had with a different therapist.

Before I relate the unfortunate incident, though, let me say that EMDR works!  The Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing therapy goal is, roughly, to defuse the traumatic memories, leaving the memories but taking away much of the emotional pain associated with the memories.  For more about the technical aspects of this therapy, please see the following website: http://www.emdrnetwork.org/.  See especially the clients’ pages for descriptions of the therapy from the clients’ perspectives. 

The first time I experienced EMDR I had been traumatized by an incompetent therapist.  She had slapped me because I could not stop crying.  I did not return to her, and I thought I was able to forget the incident, but months later I found myself needing help processing it.  A new therapist used the EMDR technique with me, and afterward I could remember being slapped, but the emotional content of the experience had lost its potency.  I could remember, but I wasn’t upset by the memory.

The second time I experienced EMDR, I was treated by a person who should not have been treating me.  If you read the protocol, the steps of preparation listed on the website, you will see that the preparation for treating a person who suffered one traumatic incident can be vastly different from the preparation needed in treating a person who has C-PTSD. 

The therapist who used EMDR with me the second time evidently had not read the information on preparation.  There was little to no preparation, and when she put the apparatus on me, she turned up the dial to maximum potency and left me for what seemed like a half hour.  When she removed the apparatus, my mind was in a fog and I felt lucky to be able to find my way home.  Shortly after arriving home, I suffered a horrible reaction!  My mind was caught in a time warp, and I was back in my kitchen being forced by my husband to engage in sex; at least one of my children was present in the house and could hear me cry.  When I had recovered sufficiently from this reaction, I called my therapist and asked for her help, but she said she didn’t know what to do for me.  That was a Monday. By the next Monday, I had a new therapist, the one I am seeing now. 

My present therapist and I have been working for about 2 ½ years now to get ready for EMDR.  We are approaching this door very slowly, and I anticipate that we may open it with extreme caution, inch by inch, maybe even centimeter by centimeter. 

So this coming Monday, November 12th, I will begin opening the door to EMDR, which possibly will be the last phase of my treatment for C-PTSD.  I say possibly because in my experience, I can never be certain as to the course my treatment may take.  I suspect, however, that while I am undergoing EMDR treatment, I will also be working still at my Ego State Therapy.  The two therapeutic modes are intertwined.  I have come a long way in working with my ego states and getting them to the point where the parts work together for the good of all, but as the collection of personality parts that I call “myself” or “I” opens the door to EMDR and steps across the threshold of this new experience, I anticipate that more work will need to be done to insure that the ego states involved can continue to work together in relative harmony.  I may be wrong about this!  On the other hand, I may be right on the money.  I don’t know, for I have not yet even put my hand on the door knob. 

My therapist and I have a lot to talk about regarding the EMDR facet of my therapy.  I will do my best to let you, my readers, know what happens so that you can follow my process.  EMDR defuses trauma energy.  That I know from my previous experience, for now I can remember the experience of being slapped by a therapist and also remember what happened in my kitchen when I was married, but the two experiences do not carry the emotional load that they once had.  Because I know the therapy is effective, I am willing to give it another try, this time with a therapist whom I trust to do her absolute best in making the experience effective and without “side effects.”  If side effects do occur, however, I plan to hang in there and continue with EMDR because I know my therapist is experienced and competent enough to know how to give me the support I need. 

So look for future articles on my blog describing my journey through EMDR.  Again, an ancient Gaelic blessing—

May Your Journey Be Successful ,
May The Wind Always Be At Your Back,
May The Sun Shine Warm Upon Your Face,
May The Rains Fall Soft Upon Your Fields,
And May The Roads Always Lead You Home.

We are all journeying home, home being that place inside us where we are the authentic people we were born to be! 

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Closing the Door Too Long Open

One reason it’s taken me so long to write a new post for this blog is that I’ve been busy closing a door that has been opened way too long, the door to my marriage of twenty years.  “But," you might ask, “that door should have closed for good in 1983, the year the divorce was finalized—why are you just now getting around to closing it?”  All I can say in reply to that question is that sometimes, especially if a person has C-PTSD, doors might stand open for a long, long time before they are ready to close.  When the time is right, the doors can be closed, one by one.  But doors cannot be closed until the “closer” is ready to do the closing. 

Believe me, I have wondered during the past twenty-nine years why I could not close that door.  After all, I separated from my husband in 1981 after reporting him for sexually abusing our daughter.  Why wasn’t attending his hearing and seeing him convicted for the felony enough to get that door closed?  I don’t really know.  Logically, one would think that seeing him convicted and then possessing a copy of his conviction papers would be all I needed to get unstuck and get moving forward with my own life without him.  But as you may already know, especially if you have C-PTSD, tossing a twenty-year marriage onto the midden heap, especially if child abuse and spousal abuse have been factored into the equation, is not a simple act.  Sometimes before that particular door can be closed, a lot of other doors must be closed.  That seems to be the way the healing process works, at least for me that’s the way it works. 

That day in August when I went to court to finalize my divorce, I was forty-four years old; now I am seventy-three years old and am finally closing that door.  What happened to all the years in between?  Did I spend those years steeped in bitterness and anger?  Did I try to lose myself and stop the pain by seeking out another partner and hoping to “do it right this time”?  

First of all, for those of you who have never had to clean up the emotional mess left by an abuser, I had no time to wallow in anger and bitterness, and I had absolutely no desire to risk going through the same experience again in another relationship.  I had a badly damaged daughter to finish raising, and I still had the prospect of my own life to deal with.  Once my daughter was on her own, then, what kind of a life did I want?  There was still time for me to start anew.  My daughter was thirteen when I reported her father in 1981, and I figured that she and I would be together for at least five more years.  Probably by 1986, I reasoned, she would be on her own, and I could start a new life on my own.  In the meantime, I had a lot to do. 

At the top of my list was repairing the relationship with my daughter.  I wasn’t sure how to do that, but I was determined to try.  Since my former husband was required to pay for our daughter’s therapy and also for mine, she and I saw therapists regularly.  That helped.  Time, patience on my part, a desire to develop a loving and healthy relationship, and a lot of hard work all went into the mix.  When my daughter “graduated” from living at home with me, I helped her learn how to pay her bills and how to manage all the other responsibilities of a one-person household.  I helped her for a year, and then I knew it was time to tackle the next item on my list, preparing for my own future.

Because I’d had a position as a teacher’s aide in the learning center at the local community college, I knew the direction I wanted my own life to take—I needed to go to graduate school, get a graduate degree, and then find a teaching position in a community college.  I loved my part-time work helping adults earn their GEDs and high school certificates, and I knew that only if I had a graduate degree could I get a position with stability and benefits.  So that’s exactly what I did!  I actually earned two graduate degrees, one in adult education and one in composition and rhetoric—just the right degrees I needed to teach remedial writing in a community college.  I loved my work and did it for about thirteen years.  Then I retired. 

About three years ago, shortly after I had turned seventy, my old PTSD symptoms became especially burdensome.  I found a therapist who specialized in trauma work, but our client-therapist relationship did not work well.  Then I did some careful research and was referred to my present therapist.  Our client-therapist relationship has worked well, and I am healing.  I can see daylight, now, and I think that within a year I will be finished with active, intense therapy.  I’ll be putting pieces together until I die, but I can do that. 

Recently, in the process of closing the door on my marriage, I found myself asking questions such as,  “How could he have done that to his own daughter?”  “How could he have called his own little boy a ‘stupid sh . .thead?”  How could he have cheated on me?”  How, How, How??  Well, as a friend pointed out, my former husband saw life through a different lens than the one I use for seeing life. When I was married to him, he saw the glass as “half empty”; I saw--and still see-- the glass as “half full.”  He regarded people with suspicion, wondered how they were going to “shaft” him, and was prepared when they did; I regarded most people as being well-intended, and when they “shafted” me, I was surprised—but I always recovered my perspective.  He was stuck in negativity, and I more often than not was positive about life.  My friend is right—my ex and I saw life through vastly different lenses.  Somehow, that concept helps me close the door the final few inches.  I may even lock the door!  Now, there’s a thought.  I may just do that, for I have that power.

The last three decades of my life, then, have been good, maybe even GREAT!  Once free from the negativity and the abuse of my marriage, I shaped my life into a life that I really wanted.  Taking statistics into consideration, I probably don’t have more than ten more years to live—at the most.  But those ten years will be good years because I can make them good.  I’m free from the painful environment of my childhood, free from the negativity and abuses dished out by my former spouse, free from the burden of working every day to keep a roof over my head, and I am freeing myself from the crippling symptoms of PTSD.  I am well on my way to climbing to the highest rung of Abraham Maslov’s ladder, the rung he called “self-actualization.”  Sounds good to me!  Maybe even fun!  Want to come along?  Work hard in therapy and heal your Complex PTSD!   The reward is worth it!  I know. . . 

Here, again, is the Scottish fisherman’s prayer to help you on your way--

Big Sea, Little Boat
Dear God, be good to me;
The sea is so wide,
And my boat is so small.

(Fisherman's prayer)