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Negative Self-Talk Gets in the Way of Finding Help for PTSD

July 24, 2017 Tia Hollowood

Negative-self talk can keep people with untreated PTSD from realizing they deserve help. Here's why negative self-talk shouldn't keep you from PTSD help.I have experienced a lot of negative self-talk around my posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Before my PTSD diagnosis and therapy, my daily life was filled with stress and feelings of worthlessness. I had lived with my anxieties, depression, and dissociation for most of my life. I had no frame of reference for what life could be like without these symptoms. I had to reach a point where I was unable to do anything but sit on the couch and obsess over imagined diseases and an untimely death before I sought out a professional. Even then, I had a difficult time allowing myself to heal as if I wasn't significant enough for help. Here are some things I wish I had known about negative self-talk and PTSD when I first began reaching out for assistance.

Low Self-Esteem and Negative Self-Talk Are Often Side-Effects of PTSD

Individuals living with untreated PTSD may feel weak or inadequate when in reality they are dealing with a variety of overwhelming symptoms expending significant energy just to function on a daily basis. A common experience among people with PTSD is a feeling of inadequacy. We are never quite good enough. We are never really worthy of anything comforting or pleasurable. This negative self-talk around PTSD is not helpful.

There is often a sense that we should be able to improve on our own and that if we can hide all of our inadequacies to the world, we might just fool people into thinking we are far more competent than we feel. In fact, many of us are driven to perfection to compensate for our feelings of inadequacy. It is entirely possible to present this front to the world while simultaneously feeling deep depression, anxiety, and hopelessness. However, it does nothing to aid in healing, and without treatment, it can end in a terrible crash, as it did for me.

Your Negative Self-Talk, Low Feelings and PTSD Are Treatable

If you or someone in your life has experienced trauma and is trying to make it day to day without help, it's time to look at the PTSD-related self-talk that is standing in the way of healing. Do any of these false beliefs sound familiar?

  • I deserved to be hurt.
  • I should be able to deal with these problems myself.
  • I'm making too much of what happened to me; I need to get over it.
  • No one can know how messed up and broken I am inside.
  • I will never be able to get a job (have a family, socialize, be respected) if I see a therapist.
  • No one needs me.
  • I'm not entitled to compassion.
  • I must appear perfect at whatever people see me do. If I'm not perfect, I am worthless.
  • I'm not worthy of praise, but I deserve punishment for messing up.
  • Everyone gets scared and depressed I'm just overreacting.
  • I'll never be enough.
  • No one will forgive me for my past.

While anyone can experience these thoughts at times, people struggling with PTSD symptoms live with an internal dialogue filled with these false perceptions. They are very easy to believe when perceived through the lens of a trauma survivor.

For those struggling with negative self-talk and PTSD, those who cannot accept how inaccurate they are, it's time to find someone with whom you can share these insecurities. You deserve to be happy, and there is no shame in having been hurt.

If you understand this struggle and are comfortable reaching out, please share your thoughts in the comments.

APA Reference
Hollowood, T. (2017, July 24). Negative Self-Talk Gets in the Way of Finding Help for PTSD, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, November 21 from https://www.healthyplace.com/blogs/traumaptsdblog/2017/07/negative-self-talk-gets-in-the-way-of-finding-help-for-ptsd



Author: Tia Hollowood

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Michelle
September, 20 2017 at 5:06 pm

I have survived the suicide of two loved oned, both of which I witnessed first hand. The term " survived " is a very generous term, because if this is survival, I can only imagine the dread failure intales. The overwhelming and persistent fear, worthlessness, and feeling that this is what I get for allowing those I held so dear to succumb to what must have been very similar feelings. I have developed other symptoms that have only contributed to my lack of self-worth.
This hole in can't seem to escape feels more and more like it is overwhelming my very will to go on.

Jenn Bovee
August, 14 2017 at 12:40 pm

I love how you begin to set the stage of honoring the negative thoughts...Not living in them, but honoring them and trusting others to defeat them.

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

October, 1 2017 at 9:34 pm

Thank you, Jenn.

Christina Eubanks
July, 24 2017 at 9:07 pm

Once again, spot on! Thank you Tia for sharing.

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

July, 27 2017 at 8:21 am

Thank you Christina.

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