TheUltimateFixx
Bluelighter
.... which DON'T involve filling yourself full of lovely recreational chemicals, I mean.
(I realize I may be asking the wrong crowd XD)
(I realize I may be asking the wrong crowd XD)
Me tooYeah I deal with PTSD.
Yep that is usually what leads to disaster. Pretty much everyone I've ever come across with a REAL bad habit (myself included) got that way because they were using to cope with something / compensate for something. The worst motivation you can generally have for using anything, because then you come to rely on it. Hence why I worded my question like I did. I didn't work my way round to where I'm not taking drugs as a crutch to survive, only to start that shit over again.honestly I was looking for therapy in them
Yep, I know from experience that emotional exhaustion you referred to. And it takes away from your present life as well. It completely sucks.There don't seem to be any specify 'triggers' for me. Like it's not I hear a certain sound or smell a certain smell and that will set me off. Instead they just jump on me out of the blue, like my panic attacks. Bott happen more often when I'm generally stressed and I'm continuously stressed out to all fuck at the minute.
And when I get them it's like a 3-D hallucination - like I forget I'm in the present and I think I'm in the past with the thing happening over again. Is pretty emotionally exhausting.
I wanna know if there's ways you can pull yourself back from it and ground yourself in the present? Or at least ways to calm yourself down quicker after?
That is excellent. That's actually a mindfulness exercise. Mindfulness is perfect for overcoming anxiety and panic attacks.I force myself to look at something very small or specific near me and describe it in great detail, talking out loud to myself. especially good if it involves something like counting or calculating and I can make it as complicated as possible to distract myself
like: the floor is white. it is made of shiny ceramic tiles. there are 10 tiles across and 15 down (count them) … you get the idea … that sort of shit …
really tough coz it is much more easy and comfortable somehow to be pulled back into the flashback LOL, you have to fight it
Excellent suggestion. Although to clarify, prazosin is a medication traditionally used for high blood pressure (antihypertensive), and it was discovered anecdotally that it helped with nightmares. Now it's prescribed off-label for nightmares.Do you also suffer from PTSD nightmares? if so look up Prazosin, it's actually for PTSD nightmares and seems to calm you down even into the next day, but it's not a sleep aid