Supporting and promoting the well-being of mental health carers and their families.
Mental Health Carers Austalia.
20-02-2018 08:51 PM
20-02-2018 08:51 PM
Hi @Bubbles3,
I am sorry you feel this way - sometimes Topic Tuesday can go quite quickly and it can be easy to dismiss this. Maybe you would find it helpful to read through this at your own pace a bit later or tomorrow to then reflect on it? Or read the most recent posts and take those in.
20-02-2018 08:51 PM
20-02-2018 08:51 PM
@Bubbles3I am getting confused too but am just reading long for now. Yes it is fast paced tonight but remember that this thread will be here tomorrow/next week. I think in a few days I will come back and read it at a slower pace and then do some of my own research on it. How does that sound?
20-02-2018 08:52 PM
20-02-2018 08:52 PM
Hey @Bubbles3, it's really hard to keep up with these discussions. I struggle myself so my apologies for not acknowleding your response earlier. Yes, what you describe is growth. And hopefully planting the seed tonight will give you a chance to recognise other things that might be too.
20-02-2018 08:52 PM
20-02-2018 08:52 PM
Although trauma is not an official part of my diagnosis (bipolar), I was an ongoing witness to violence in the home as a child, and experienced violence towards me on multiple occasions. I am interested that these are said to be the most difficult forms of trauma to grow from. It makes sense in my experience because I continue to find it difficult to find real peace from those experiences, though there are in some cases five decades ago. Whereas many other very negative experiences in my adulthood seem to have had less impact on me.
20-02-2018 08:53 PM - edited 20-02-2018 08:56 PM
20-02-2018 08:53 PM - edited 20-02-2018 08:56 PM
Excellent point @Former-Member
I've been working on opposites of feeling & thought (from the iRest program) for some months now.
I keep reminding mysef eg Despair has an opposite - Joy (for me)...
Adge
20-02-2018 08:53 PM
20-02-2018 08:53 PM
thanks for the response @Former-Member not sure it answers what I thought I was asking, but I'll ponder more upon it. Thank you for your time and input. Appreciated.
20-02-2018 08:56 PM
20-02-2018 08:56 PM
@Former-Memberwrote:I'm interested to know if others have ideas on what helped them to grow following trauma.
@Former-Member I seem to still be in the just-trying-to-survive stage. I've only been in this stage for 22 years, you can't rush these things you know.
20-02-2018 08:57 PM
20-02-2018 08:57 PM
20-02-2018 08:58 PM
20-02-2018 08:58 PM
I think I missed a really important point about whether it can be growth if others see it as a negative @Former-Member. I'm tempted to say no although it's a very tentative and qualified no. Just because the areas of growth that I listed earlier, which form part of the questionnaire to judge growth in the research, are hard to interpret negatively. Unless of course your growth involves joining a religion that doesn't sit well with loved ones! But the rest are pretty benign - feeling stronger yourself, appreciating life more etc.
Are you able to give an example of something you see as a positive but others interpret differently? I'm intrigued!
20-02-2018 08:59 PM
20-02-2018 08:59 PM
I seem to be in survival mode much of the time @Phoenix_Rising Despite possible PTG
I guess one doesn't exclude the other, as @Former-Member said earlier.
Adge
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Supporting and promoting the well-being of mental health carers and their families.
Mental Health Carers Austalia.
Our Mission
To be the voice of mental health carers to enable the best life possible.
Get In Touch With Us
We're here to support and promote the well-being of mental health carers and their families
Mental Health Carers Australia is the only national advocacy group solely concerned with the well-being and promotion of the needs of mental health carers.
Supporting and promoting the well-being of mental health carers and their families.
Mental Health Carers Austalia.
Our Mission
To be the voice of mental health carers to enable the best life possible.
Get In Touch With Us
We're here to support and promote the well-being of mental health carers and their families
Mental Health Carers Australia is the only national advocacy group solely concerned with the well-being and promotion of the needs of mental health carers.