A syndrome called post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) can affect victims of sociopaths. The trauma of losing love, friends, family, possessions and of enduring psychological/physical abuse is the cause of this disorder. To fight the symptoms of PTSD, it is helpful to understand the symptoms and how they relate to loss and trauma.
As I read through the current literature on PTSD, I quickly discovered that there is a fair amount of controversy regarding this disorder. We can actually learn about the disorder by listening to the arguments. The first question on which there is much disagreement is, “What trauma is severe enough to cause PTSD?” There were several editorials by experts disparaging the fact that everything from giving birth to a healthy baby to a boss yelling at an employee is now said to cause PTSD. Most experts are in favor of reserving this diagnosis for people who have suffered truly unusual life experiences, like kidnapping, rape, war, 911, etc.
The problem is that many people do experience severe stress reactions to difficult life circumstances. It remains to be determined what we should call these reactions.
Those of us healing from our relationship with a sociopath often vacillate between accepting the trauma and minimizing it. Thus, the argument about what kinds of trauma are severe enough to cause PTSD has a direct effect on us. The argument can leave us feeling weak, like we should be able to get over this. After all it wasn’t as bad as 911, Iraq or Katrina—or was it?
The second question is “what symptoms constitute PTSD?” The following table shows the most common symptoms seen in a group of 103 British men and women diagnosed by psychiatrists with PTSD (Current Medical Research Opinion, 2003):
Symptom | Frequency (n=103) |
Insomnia | 98 (95%) |
Anxiety at reminder cues | 96 (93%) |
Intrusive thoughts, images, sounds, sensations | 94 (91%) |
Irritability | 93 (91%) |
Poor concentration | 93 (91%) |
Diminished interest in significant activities | 88 (85%) |
Recurrent dreams of trauma | 86 (83%) |
Avoidance of activities or places associated with the trauma | 85 (83%) |
Foreshortening of expectations about the future | 80 (78%) |
Detachment from others | 78 (76%) |
Avoidance of thinking or conversing about the trauma | 75 (73%) |
Poor appetite | 69 (67%) |
Hypervigilance | 55 (53%) |
Startle reactions | 46 (45%) |
Acting or feeling as if the event was recurring | 37 (31%) |
Inability to recall parts of trauma (amnesia) | 19 (18%) |
I put up this table because I thought that a number of you would also endorse these symptoms. Notice that “acting or feeling as if the event was recurring” was really not that common. But similar symptoms, like “Intrusive thoughts, images sounds and sensations,” were very common. Amnesia was also uncommon. Startle reactions were only seen in half of the subjects.
A feeling of a foreshortened future is a particularly debilitating symptom because it impairs a person’s ability to plan for the future and leads to a sense of hopelessness. I will expand on this further, but I strongly believe this feeling of a foreshortened future has to do less with our thoughts about our past, and more with our thoughts about our present.
As I look at this list of symptoms, I am struck by the fact that many, many of those writing into Lovefraud complain of these symptoms, particularly nightmares. There is something special about having had emotional involvement with an aggressor that seems to produce nightmares. Since so many have all of the most common symptoms, I think it has to be that the trauma of life with a sociopath is severe enough to cause this disorder in many people.
Here’s where defining exactly what trauma is gets sticky. Rachael Yehuda, Ph.D., said in a recent article published on MedScape, “One of the things that biology has taught us is that PTSD represents a type of a response to trauma, but not the only type of response. It is a response that seems to be about the failure to consolidate a memory in such a way as to be able to be recalled without distress.” Well, this is precisely the definition that is too broad. I personally have a lot of memories that I experience or re-experience with distress. Yet these memories are not accompanied by the list of symptoms in the table above.
For me what made the experience traumatic was the truly life course-changing nature of the trauma. The answer to the question, “Will I ever be the same?” for me defines trauma significant enough to cause PTSD. The trauma that causes this disorder redefines us in a way that is different from other emotionally significant experiences. This trauma strikes at the core of our identity.
The final controversy surrounds the treatment of PTSD. Interestingly, there is no question that medications (SSRIs, particularly Zoloft) are very helpful. The problem is though that when a person goes to a physician and receives a medication, he/she is by definition “sick.” Assumption of a “sick role” or “victim identity” is one of the many factors that slow recovery from PTSD.
Many therapists are of the belief that “debriefing” or retelling the story is necessary for recovery. One group of researchers reviewed the studies on debriefing and concluded that there is no scientific evidence that it prevents PTSD. Instead, the evidence points to post-trauma factors like social support and “additional life stress” being most important.
How can we put this all together? Considering last week’s post, those who experience trauma serious enough to have stress hormone overdose as manifested by dissociation, are likely to also develop PTSD. An examination of the symptoms of PTSD reveals that at the core of the disorder is the fact that the person really doesn’t believe in his/her heart that the trauma has ended. PTSD is about ONGOING, not past, trauma. For those of us whose lives were assaulted by a sociopath, there is ongoing stress. The stress is the social isolation, financial ruin, and threatened further losses long after the relationship has ended. Those who recover from this without PTSD work hard to put the trauma behind them in every way.
Putting the trauma behind you does not mean you can’t take medication to help with the process. It does mean facing those bills, former friends, and other personal issues you want to avoid. Remember AVOIDANCE STRENGTHENS FEAR.
Above all, stop the ongoing trauma by ending contact with the sociopath. Do not assume a sick role, instead, work to stay healthy. Fight to be the person you want to be. Don’t allow this single experience to define you. Make living for today the place you love to be. As Louise Gallagher says in her recent post, “This is, in many ways, the greatest challenge of recovery — to accept the past is simply the route I took to get to where I am today, a place I love to be. The past cannot be changed. It cannot be altered. It cannot be made ‘better.’ It can only be accepted so that it, and I, may rest in peace with what was, eager to accept what is true in my life today.”
Also just because Prozac wasn’t right for you doesn’t mean that another SSRI or the like won’t be helpful. Many people who can’t tolerate one do well with another. Zoloft is the only one approved by the FDA for the treatment of PTSD.
To Southernman429: I know exactly how you feel because so many of things you are saying are so real and how I feel. The longer you have been married is the worse I believe because you have so memories. I know what it is like to try to get better and the feeling that it will never get better. The only thing I can say it is not your fault and that it is trauma. Validation of trauma I though would make it better. It has not for me since he took my children and financially ruined me. I pray daily for a future. But I feel completely dead. I have tried new things but found I was only distracti ng myself from the trauma which never goes away. Medication did not help and therapy validated but I seem to not move forward. I thi nk because it was so long and so many dreams to share with my children whom I do not see nor share their lives with and watching now how he destroys their lives. The past is the past but they are also are building blocks for the future. So you can’t forget if you are human and that feeling of love that you shared is wiped out. To be normal again no I think the trauma that I suffer from will not go away. Maybe if I had been younger and formed a new family it may have been differant for me. This is differant than a death because the people we love are still alive and yet you have really know one to share the pain of the recovery and friends and families are tired of it. Maybe if I found someone who was very understanding and could share that pain in an intimate way and grow new in a relationship it would lessen. Because sociopaths destroy us in our intimacy and rob us of our innocense then walk away and the standard line to them is “just move on”. Well that doesn’t work if you are truly human in our cases because we are dealing with a sociopath.
I sympathize with you. Please don’t feel that you are not living the life that God wants you to because I think He understands. Sometimes the way to God is in our suffering and not the peace we think we should have. I don’t know..but maybe if I get to heaven I will find out. Hang in there.
Arlene-
Very beautifully put. You have many gifts and understanding. God also isn’t finished with you yet.
Dr. Liane,
My contractors have been here everyday for the last two weeks and probably have at least another week of work. I am so tired when they leave in the evening I cannot think!
In answer to your question……. An M.D. prescribed DHEA after testing (unconjugated DHEA blood test). I cannot take it, however, because it runs up my blood pressure. I am in my early sixties. Now I am taking a nutritional formula with no animal cortex. I does seem to help. I have a vegetable juicer and I always feel better when I juice.
My heart goes out to everyone on this forum in the midst of these painful and difficult struggles. Taking care of oneself through these dark times is critical to recovery. It is hard when we lack support from family an friends and cannot muster much comfort from within either. We do have to find the strength to be our own best friend sometimes.
I know from my own life experience that finding and building strength in one area of our being can spill over into other aspects of our lives. One positive thing can lead to another even though that progress may be slow. Feeling well physically seems to be so important for me. It helps me cope better.
I have just gotten discarded from a five year relationship with one of these men….it has been horrific. I am sure I am suffering from PTSD and Depression. I just cannot think HOW I could be the same again. This man is the coldest person I could ever imagine and at the end I was made aware of things I did not know…the callousness is astounding. I’m not even sure anymore that I want to go on like this.
I feel like I’ve been run over by a truck and am still laying in the road!
I lost my financial stability, my home, my mental, emotional and physcial health I have at least TWO surgeries to face this month coming and maybe three. AND my DS is graduating high school with ALL my family coming for that. I just don’t think I can COPE with all this. My home is a disaster area when I used to keep it especially welcoming and “homey” now I”m ashamed to have my DS have company here. I don’t have company because the one thing I didn’t list that he stole was all my friends! AND he went on a marvellous smear campaign….no one speaks to ME now as if I did something. I can’t even get an email response.
This is by far the MOST devastating experience I have ever had with anyone…and that is saying something.
I DID NOT have a “history” of this type of relationship and in fact was married to a decent man for 18 years before this. We just grew apart over time and while that was sad we remained friends….NOTHING Like this! NOTHING could be like this and I had NO IDEA that there were people out there such as this man is.
I feel as if he stole my life and waltzed off with the life I used to have!!
I just cannot figure out my way out of this dark place I am in.
Gear MRose,
There are many of us that have had these same thoughts. In the beginning, I got by by keeping busy and by doing one good deed for myself and someone else every day.
Try to enjoy the graduation. Don’t let him win.
I am 61 and 20 years away from a long imprisoned marriage to Mr Mean. (20 years)I have a good life, successful career, good church but the dreams and memories still haunt me. Is it unusual for PtSD to last 20 years? I take cymbalta and before that celexia. I have tried to weene off and control moods with positive thinking and prayer but within a week I fall into depression. He is dead and it isnt fair that these annoying experiences haunt me. I really don’t dwell on them. I stay so busy I nerly drop with exhaustion sometimes.
I’m 58 and still have PTSD that can be triggered relating back to an attempted rape when I was 20. If a setting resembles that one, I’m right back in the moment, quite against my will, with my heart pounding, etc. It doesn’t happen very often so I just shrug my shoulders and get on with life. I think there are new eye movement treatments EMRD??? I’m forgetting the initials! But anyway, the treatments help with old traumas that you recall while your eyes follow certain movements. Done with a therapist.
Southerman,
If you are out there… check our your comments oh so long ago. It sounds like you are doing better based on your recent comments.
Anyway, once again, I related a lot to your thoughts.
I always feel silly saying that I have symptoms of PTSD.. like it sounds like drama..but I do have a physical reasction that always follows a distressing thought. I have a friend that wants to help me with this using something called Emotional Freedom Technique. I will give it a shot and see what happens.
:o)
Dear Carolyn,
My Dad has had some symptoms related to PTSD and his Doctor told him it was related to being a Vietnam Vet. Apparently many vets have had this turn up late in life. So, I think it is quite possible to have PTSD last quite a long time until one feels totally resolved about what happened.
That’s my uneduacted guess. Let’s see what the Dr. says.
:o)