Has anyone here had any experience with Post Traumatic stress Disorder and its relation to "Blunted Affect" and Schizophrenia? I asked my PCP about PTSD and "Blunted Affect" and he said he knew what it was but suggested I see a psychologist if I wanted to pursue it further. I was just wondering if anyone has an experience with the phenomenon.
Examples: I have noticed in the past that things that should cause a great amount of grief (like my mothers death) did not bother me at all and I didn't shed a tear. When my miniature Schnauzer died, I grieved for years...and still do 11 years later. There are many more things that have happened over the years in which I should feel anger or sadness but I don't.
I felt so bad when my horse died..i still get upset now and cry over her and i definitely cried more for her than any family member....and i really dont know why?
I would have to look into the references to Post Traumatic stress Disorder and its relation to "Blunted Affect" and Schizophrenia and research and then give my opinion.
The brain is designed that we forget a little over time and those feelings of loss lessen over time. If our brains didnt do this, we would be in permanent grief..
But i also think we go into self protection mode....of course we are at more loss at losing a close family member but the grief feels different.
We all grieve loss differently.
I know that i cried for my horse so much because maybe i felt guilty?...i had to make a decision to have to have her euthenaised and that was something i felt so bad about..she was my baby...and her life was in my hands
Interestingly DJ sent me an email earlier about PTS so i wonder if he found anything that he can share?..but i shall definitely do some reading on the subject
Post by kilg0retr0ut on Dec 9, 2013 6:08:00 GMT -8
Hi Millard, I too have been diagnosed with PTSD. I don't believe that to be the case but your story relating on how you handle grief is almost the same as mine. I really don't understand the topic and almost prefer not to research it. The whole ignorance is bliss deal. Seems like when you go through something like a spinal cord injury your whole life gets magnified and all parties pick apart every bit of your being. I was always the loner, hermit, cave dweller so having my whole life in a fish bowl makes me uncomfortable.
Hey Millard, I've never experienced it myself but I've read on it and know how serious the effects are. I haven't really read much that relates to the "Blunted Affect" that you're experiencing but I'll look into it. The brain is a very strange thing!
Hi Millard, I too have been diagnosed with PTSD. I don't believe that to be the case but your story relating on how you handle grief is almost the same as mine. I really don't understand the topic and almost prefer not to research it. The whole ignorance is bliss deal. Seems like when you go through something like a spinal cord injury your whole life gets magnified and all parties pick apart every bit of your being. I was always the loner, hermit, cave dweller so having my whole life in a fish bowl makes me uncomfortable.
It is the same for me. I found it very difficult to write what I did and took probably an hour to do so. I just kept deleting portions of it over and over. I was definitely out of my comfort zone when I created it. I think I'll go back to the ignorance part and maybe leave it alone.
It is the same for me. I found it very difficult to write what I did and took probably an hour to do so. I just kept deleting portions of it over and over. I was definitely out of my comfort zone when I created it. I think I'll go back to the ignorance part and maybe leave it alone.
Good luck.
Wow, I would have never known that! Thanks for going out of your comfort zone and making the post Millard, I understand that it wasn't easy and I respect that you took the time to do it
Has anyone here had any experience with Post Traumatic stress Disorder and its relation to "Blunted Affect" and Schizophrenia? I asked my PCP about PTSD and "Blunted Affect" and he said he knew what it was but suggested I see a psychologist if I wanted to pursue it further. I was just wondering if anyone has an experience with the phenomenon.
Examples: I have noticed in the past that things that should cause a great amount of grief (like my mothers death) did not bother me at all and I didn't shed a tear. When my miniature Schnauzer died, I grieved for years...and still do 11 years later. There are many more things that have happened over the years in which I should feel anger or sadness but I don't.
Regards.
Millard,ive done some reading on the relationship between PTSD and the 'blunted affect' and mental health disorders.
Your doctor is at least correct in wanting you to be referred to a psychologist for assessment as PTSD seems to be a likely symptom of some specific mental health disorders.
At least you can be assessed and then have more knowledge about what could potentially be causing the lack of ability to be able to feel the emotions that are 'normal' responses to devastating events in your life.
I know a fair bit about Autism and it is often a typical trait to display a lack of appropriate emotional response to events that are normally very upsetting. This is due to lack of emotional connection.
Do you mind me asking if an incident happened prior to the events you talk of that could have possibly triggered PTSD?
No, I don't mind you asking. Before injury, I was like everyone else. I didn't really have any traumatic events in my life until after my injury. I didn't notice it much at first but then when things happened that affected everyone but me, I started to wonder, "Why?" I had always been active in church but I couldn't make myself go back. Meetings and events I have to attend were okay but I despised them. When I applied for a job at City Hall, I told the City Coucil I was not interested in the job as City Clerk as I didn't want to dress up and go to meetings. I still help out sometimes with the city when they have a computer problem and I also help out our Police Dept. when they have problems downloading videos from their dash cameras and burning the DVD's. I guess I kind of like to work on the outskirts and not really get involved into a job or position any more. After 40 years of working, I just burned out...
When discussing this, as you noticed, I tend to ramble. Be careful what you ask...I may answer!!!
Ramble away Millard...we all do but in different degree ...
Ah then if your first traumatic experience was your injury and you had no significant distressing events prior to this then quite possibly your injury is the trigger?
The only time i can say that i may have felt the 'blunted effect' was when i was in hospital on the night of my op....I had spent 3 weeks in the most agonising pain with no sleep, durin this period i had gone numb, lost b and b control and lost the power to my legs.
No one listened to me, until this day that i was blue lighted to the neuro hospital for an emergency operation. I remember sitting on the bed just feeling numb inside..everyone talked to me and i was unusualy calm, i felt nothing and i cared none.
I just thought..' do what you want with me, i dont care'..its not the same but its the only comparison i have
I have never heard of this before, but it really think that I might have a mild case. Things that I would have been emotional about before my injury don't seem to bother me now and I never put two and two together till I read this post Millard, the only things that seem to affect me now are things involving my immediate family and nothing else really seems to upset me, even something that happened to my mother about a month ago would have had me very concerned before my injury, but I really couldn't have cared less when my sister told me about mums problem, very strange.
Has anyone here had any experience with Post Traumatic stress Disorder and its relation to "Blunted Affect" and Schizophrenia? I asked my PCP about PTSD and "Blunted Affect" and he said he knew what it was but suggested I see a psychologist if I wanted to pursue it further. I was just wondering if anyone has an experience with the phenomenon.
Examples: I have noticed in the past that things that should cause a great amount of grief (like my mothers death) did not bother me at all and I didn't shed a tear. When my miniature Schnauzer died, I grieved for years...and still do 11 years later. There are many more things that have happened over the years in which I should feel anger or sadness but I don't.
Regards.
Millard,ive done some reading on the relationship between PTSD and the 'blunted affect' and mental health disorders.
Your doctor is at least correct in wanting you to be referred to a psychologist for assessment as PTSD seems to be a likely symptom of some specific mental health disorders.
At least you can be assessed and then have more knowledge about what could potentially be causing the lack of ability to be able to feel the emotions that are 'normal' responses to devastating events in your life.
I know a fair bit about Autism and it is often a typical trait to display a lack of appropriate emotional response to events that are normally very upsetting. This is due to lack of emotional connection.
Do you mind me asking if an incident happened prior to the events you talk of that could have possibly triggered PTSD?
Millard, I think the above is excellent advice. I have been avoiding getting into this personally, but think I should probably take the advice as well.
Hi Millard, I also get a feeling of total detachment of what's going on around me, where as before I was very involved with things around me. I wonder if that's part of it as well.
Hi Millard, I also get a feeling of total detachment of what's going on around me, where as before I was very involved with things around me. I wonder if that's part of it as well.
Butiki..it seems that many of us experience this...i think there are definite links to our injuries and how we deal with what goes on around us now.
kilg0retr0ut, its true what you say about feeling as if you are in a gold fish bowl and everything becoming magnified. It does take you out of your comfort zone. I feel sometimes 'owned' by my injury and i work hard to rebel against this..and prove otherwise.
Lets me honest, for almost everyone this will have been the most traumatic experience of their lives. It isnt normal to live this way that we do now.
I did myself the biggest favour when i accepted that this is normal for me...but emotionally i have become slightly detached to some things and yet over emotional at others lol..no sense in it again
Post by dannygilman on Feb 19, 2014 16:34:58 GMT -8
PTSD is a serious health condition, do not ignore, and please seek help from a mental health professional. I diagnosed with PTSD in 2009....37 years after my SCI. The demons were taking a huge toll on my overall health.
Now, mentally I feel great, after two years of cognitive behavioral therapy sessions, anti-depressants, and knowing how to identify / cope with my stress triggers.