15 SIGNS YOU HAVE CPTSD (COMPLEX PTSD) | DR. KIM SAGE

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  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,3 тис.

  • @BFNLEO
    @BFNLEO Рік тому +2019

    1. Living in a state of hyper vigilance
    2. Isolating
    3. Repetitive relational patterns
    4. Chronic health issues
    5. Chronic mental health issues
    6. Dissociation
    7. Depersonalization
    8. Derealization
    9. Perfectionism/ harsh inner critic
    10. Toxic shame
    11. Living in survival mode
    12. Feeling unworthy
    13. Emotional flashbacks
    14. Hyper- controlling
    15. Chronic distrust/ never feeling safe

  • @CandaceWebb
    @CandaceWebb Рік тому +1004

    Isolation has definitely been a coping mechanism I’ve used since childhood. I used to wander the farm fields, help myself to breakfast from the garden and climb the oil drum at the side of the house to be alone with a barn cat stuffed into my shirt.

    • @kimgordon3695
      @kimgordon3695 Рік тому +35

      🐈 meow

    • @perfectlyimperfect7373
      @perfectlyimperfect7373 Рік тому +79

      I recently realized that isolation has been my coping mechanism since childhood too. I used to think I was just an odd loner who would never fit in, but now I see how my isolation and dissociation have created additional hurt to myself and others. I’ve ruined so many relationships over the years with these “coping” behaviors. I’m so thankful to Dr. Sage, and others here on YT, for helping me learn and heal!

    • @shortmeister4321
      @shortmeister4321 Рік тому +80

      Candace, you sound like you would have been the perfect friend for me as a child. I was a "wanderer", forager child as well. Living in our own make-believe world where it didn't hurt. I'm 65 now and still kind of live there...

    • @sheilasmith1109
      @sheilasmith1109 Рік тому +41

      Oh YES! LIKE YOU & the others who've commented, I grew up then, on a farm. I hung out with the horses, cats and dogs! I took a flat head screw driver & hammer, and chiseled into the wood beams in our barns, "I Sheila, LOVE HORSES, CATS AND DOGS, MORE THAN PEOPLE"! I'd look at that in My older years and still could FEEL Why I had done it...I still can FEEL IT! Nobody will believe that I will still check out to be alone today! I'm known for being very social and was a very successful Sales rep! But I really related to you and the other people who responded to your statement! ❤

    • @maryking8834
      @maryking8834 Рік тому +37

      Wow! I used to walk the fields on our farm too- it’s amazing that so many of us coped this way

  • @crys227
    @crys227 Рік тому +303

    CPTSD due to bullying is really something that should be talked about more often

    • @JustForFun-mt9og
      @JustForFun-mt9og 11 місяців тому +35

      Especially if your father was one of your bullies when you were a young child. Like me.

    • @crys227
      @crys227 11 місяців тому +18

      @@JustForFun-mt9og yeah that’s for sure not talked about enough either :(

    • @KEROSENE9898
      @KEROSENE9898 11 місяців тому +23

      As a person who suffered bullying from 3yo with it becoming relentless throughout the 5 years of high school, I agree. Other traumas such as sexual assault pale into insignificance in terms of long-term impact on me when compared to bullying.

    • @elizabethash4720
      @elizabethash4720 11 місяців тому

      The entire world probably has PTSD after the bullying to have. The vaccine.

    • @willeton
      @willeton 10 місяців тому +17

      I had two narcissistic parents, bullied at primary and high school, and sometimes at work. Now I have no friends, no family, never married no kids.

  • @empressd7
    @empressd7 Рік тому +498

    I really thought I was the only one who stayed up to unreasonably late hours (like 4 AM) just so I could have some peace and quiet in the house. Even the sounds of my family walking around and closing doors gets to me. I am someone that needs time alone to recharge and the sounds going on in the house make it very obvious I'm not alone. It's been several years since I truly had the house to myself for more than a couple hours and it has taken a huge toll on my mental health. I just have nowhere else to go or can't afford to.

    • @leipzigergnom
      @leipzigergnom Рік тому +89

      That makes a lot of sense to me. I can't fully relax until everyone in the house is either gone or asleep. I'm too conscious of them being conscious of me, if that makes sense

    • @empressd7
      @empressd7 Рік тому +14

      @Leipziger Gnom Yessss that makes sense!

    • @LostNFound432
      @LostNFound432 Рік тому +33

      I totally relate to both of you! I've been a sahm(homeschooling, w narc husband) for 20 years since my teens and never getting a second alone is killing me(among other things). I feel like such a bad mom bc I want/need my kids to sleep in just so I can taste the silence at sunrise for a split second but I also know that if I don't get that time, I really will be a bad mom all day. I often just want to run away but unfortunately there's just nowhere to run😔

    • @empressd7
      @empressd7 Рік тому +18

      @Rachel Bee I don't think that makes you a bad Mom, that just makes you human with needs. It sounds like you could use a Mom vacation away from the husband and kids

    • @colleensullivan7377
      @colleensullivan7377 Рік тому +14

      I know you probably don't feel you want to or can't, but a walk in a park is wonderful.
      You can survive this !!
      I also understand l need my time alone and still do many decades after . X

  • @AlanaBananaCanada
    @AlanaBananaCanada 9 місяців тому +45

    I'm not a fan of a lot of psychologists just due to having very bad experiences in therapy for CPTSD, it actually made it worsen. But there needs to be more doctors like Kim, a lot of them only understand in theory what's wrong with the patient, but have never actually experienced it themselves, so they make critical life threatening mistakes. This is a very unique doctor, she should be highly regarded in my opinion.

  • @chelsea2711
    @chelsea2711 Рік тому +285

    The Crappy Childhood Fairy channel is a dope woman who shows you how to heal from this. Shoutout to all of us taking responsibility for ourselves and trying to get better. You deserve it 💪💞

    • @jennyferguson5583
      @jennyferguson5583 Рік тому +2

      Yes! And Necrology unscripted! And others on u tube

    • @chelseamccampbell6556
      @chelseamccampbell6556 Рік тому +9

      Yes! I love listening to Dr. Sage and also the scenarios from writers with The Crappy Childhood Fairy! They are amazing women who have really helped me become much more self aware of my why... accepting it and rebuilding. I also love Sven from the Badass Counseling program he has created and his approach.

    • @lisap9936
      @lisap9936 Рік тому

      @@jennyferguson5583. Narc ology!😅

    • @angelabay-jespersen6205
      @angelabay-jespersen6205 Рік тому +10

      Yes, I love both these women - Dr Sage and The Crappy Childhood Fairy! I have had so many lightbulb moments watching them and so many moments hen I finally feel validated and like somebody has heard me. After spending several years trying to explain these things I feel to others only to be met with either blank stares or worse the whole “you’re just looking for excuses” response.

    • @honeyslade9657
      @honeyslade9657 Рік тому +1

      ❤❤❤❤❤😊thank you!

  • @christineewing3492
    @christineewing3492 Рік тому +546

    Thank you Dr Kim. I am in my 60s now, I have had lifelong cPTSD, and finally I have a good trauma-informed therapist. A couple of things that I don't hear being talked about are people with cPTSD NOT having children because of chaotic and traumatising childhoods. That is me. I decided in my teens that I was never going to have children. I felt that I had no idea how to be a parent. A second point that is not often mentioned is the prevalence of addiction and substance abuse among people with cPTSD. I have also had a long and problematic "relationship" with alcohol. I now understand that drinking was a maladaptive way to try to soothe myself. I'm sober now, but it took a long time for me to make the connection between my cPTSD symptoms and using alcohol for relief.
    Recovery and healing are hard, but I'm in a much better place now. than I was a few years ago.
    Thanks for all that you do. ❣ P.S. I love your cat! 😽

    • @k.f.9875
      @k.f.9875 Рік тому +37

      If you go back to a younger time with your present knowledge about your CPTSD, would you want to have kids? I’m 40 years old, by far no marriage no kids, because I didn’t have a good childhood time, and I’ve always thought my children will suffer the same way.

    • @silaroo5320
      @silaroo5320 Рік тому +44

      What I’ve learned is we are not our parent so the outcome and results of raising kids is completely different. My kids have everything I didn’t. That’s just saying they have a mom and dad that support them, care and love them very much. If I do nothing else in this life but destroy the generational narcissism in our family then in my mind I will have succeeded.

    • @roses72141
      @roses72141 Рік тому +22

      @@k.f.9875 I wanted children. But bc I am in a toxic relationship for many years, I believe my body rejected having a child. The stress alone can really impact me. I am trying to release patterns from my Mom and this person. I find building a support system is the hardest. I now have tardive dyskinesia from being on antidepressants. So that adds to the isolation.

    • @BobbiGail
      @BobbiGail Рік тому +14

      I too decided not to have kids... and I have 2 of them. (I thought I would adopt children who were already "stuck" here! But ... I had the shocks of my life and two teens now! So now my goal is to do everything different than was done w me. So they will likely have DIFFERENT problems, but at least not the same ones I battle. ❤

    • @jds0981
      @jds0981 Рік тому +17

      For me, it was never getting married. As an adolescent, I used to tell my friends that I wanted the wedding but not the marriage. My parents were narcs, I thought that marriage would slowly kill me.

  • @Flyingrabbit2222
    @Flyingrabbit2222 Рік тому +363

    The problem with trying to be myself in a relationships while healing from CPTSD is that 90% of my interpersonal personality is a response to trauma. I think most of us have that issue. The other 10% of me is made of solitary interests I've thought very deeply about for a long time. That is what I consider me. I have a wide range of interests but in most cases my knowledge of them is too deep to share in casual conversations. It would bore the other person. I start to tell someone what I believe on a topic and realize that my opinion comes from a year of reading related material and many hours of contemplation. For them it is just a passing topic. My life is my mind. I think that scanning also develops the intuition. I can feel when someone's mood changes and of course I think I did it. Relationships just aren't fun. Luckily I'm happy...and I don't long to be around others. I have quite a few talents to amuse myself with and enough things to learn to see me safely to the grave.

    • @Yearofthetiger24026
      @Yearofthetiger24026 Рік тому +38

      Gosh you could be writing about me! Just out of curiousity, do you know your enneagram type? I am an investigator and love living in my mind. My social anxiety, caused by childhood Cptsd has impacted every part of my life except for my alone time.

    • @Flyingrabbit2222
      @Flyingrabbit2222 Рік тому +31

      @@Yearofthetiger24026 No I don't. I think a big issue with tests is that I was trained to act in an extroverted manner in certain situations by my Narcissistic parent, but I'm basically an introvert. They punished me when I put on the wrong act so the situational questions often asked on these tests get conflicting answers. I have no problem lecturing to a large or small group. I was a professor. But ask me to hangout with a group of 2 or more people socially and I won't. On the Meyers Briggs scale I tend to score between multiple types. Because outward behavior is inconsistent so are the types. What is real and what is a learned behavior to certain situations?

    • @teddiwilson7958
      @teddiwilson7958 Рік тому +6

      Ditto

    • @laravladimir493
      @laravladimir493 Рік тому +14

      This is such a good summary , I'm the same !!

    • @Judybloom799
      @Judybloom799 Рік тому +24

      90% of my personality is a response to trauma 🤯
      I identify with ALL of that

  • @prettyzen2
    @prettyzen2 Рік тому +58

    i remember being threatened to be kicked out (from the age of around 8) by my narc mother and being the target of my fathers alcohol fueled moods. Because of this I used to run away frequently. I used to love the feeling of the dark quiet streets imagining a whole new life for myself somehow. Often I would walk by a happy sounding house and have tears in my eyes wishing I could be part of that family

    • @antor2471
      @antor2471 10 місяців тому

      you have a nice name

    • @antor2471
      @antor2471 10 місяців тому +2

      I hope you write a book

    • @FreeQueen-md7zm
      @FreeQueen-md7zm 8 місяців тому

      💔🙏🏾🤗

    • @user-dy2zy8rd2t
      @user-dy2zy8rd2t 6 місяців тому +1

      Yes--I get it. I used to go on service calls to homes for my company,and around the time of Thanksgiving and the holidays,I would hear families interacting with their relatives and all the happy chatter,smell the turkey cooking,and all of that.Then go home to the fighting and screaming.

    • @DomRou-intheBu
      @DomRou-intheBu 6 місяців тому +1

      Anyone else had a mother growing up who ruined holidays. Set up others (me) to make it look like “it “( whatever made up crap she could point to) had reached an intolerable state, and used these moments take away promises, earned rewards, or stop the celebrations? I still remember her setting me up with taking away a huge earned reward and announcing with that crazy smile on her face, “ we have a problem..” meaning I was the problem. My response. Whatever it was- was going to get me into furhter trouble. Cut off, cut out of the family. And me- “ no, there’s no problem…” finally learning in my 40’s the game! Finally!!!!! It was never a real opportunity, only control. Only pretend that she will give to take away later, future fake, all more pain. 😢

  • @silviasevilla239
    @silviasevilla239 Рік тому +71

    It’s so true. As a child I did not show any sign of being neglected, isolated and not cared for. I just felt I did not fit anywhere. Being ignored = rejected

  • @cdavis4857
    @cdavis4857 Рік тому +217

    Isolation…. Hmmm… I always called it circling my wagons. I pull away to ‘deal’ with something. Get strong enough to get back out there and try again. Nice to know I’m not alone. Thank you for your honesty and openness. Seeing you courageously showing us your own vulnerability is truly inspiring.

    • @HOAsSUCK
      @HOAsSUCK Рік тому +3

      CDavis, EXACTLY!!

    • @maybee...
      @maybee... Рік тому +3

      Circling the wagons is a great analogy, I always called it going within.

    • @Kingpheonix305
      @Kingpheonix305 Рік тому +1

      I do that to and shut down

    • @mollyf5616
      @mollyf5616 Рік тому +1

      Love that analogy, circling the wagons!

    • @grmpEqweer
      @grmpEqweer 9 місяців тому

      If I was alone I was safe, wasn't going to get screamed at or slapped.
      If I hear people moving around, I tense up a little.

  • @elkidee1
    @elkidee1 Рік тому +50

    I have most of these symptoms. I grew up having no memory of large blocks of time, I am hyper vigilant and startle very easily. I never truly feel safe. I have had two relationships both of which were abusive. I’m 76 and healthy, I go to a gym and am learning how to put myself first. I wish I had this information as a younger person, but I have it now and am trying to do some self care.

  • @joannacurtis9505
    @joannacurtis9505 Рік тому +175

    That sigh about 7 minutes in sent chills down my spine. My mother has been gone for 4 years thank goodness, but I don’t know that I’ll ever overcome my deeply ingrained fear of her.

    • @sonjawilliams989
      @sonjawilliams989 Рік тому

      I hated that sigh. The sigh Mother gave.
      Never around Dad though. Just towards my sister and I. Bitch

    • @bellaluce7088
      @bellaluce7088 Рік тому +19

      I can relate. My mother is shorter than me and an old woman now, but she still feels two stories tall in my mind. This might seem like too much for some, but something that helped me manage my fear of my father before he died was vividly imagining beating him up and calling him out. I'm not a violent person and tend towards the freeze response, so it was very healing for me and my inner child to experience standing up for myself that way---even if only mentally.
      Thank you for making me realize I should do some version of this with my mom! Good wishes to you. : - )

    • @Rachel-en5nt
      @Rachel-en5nt Рік тому +3

      I get this! For me, it's not so much that I'm still afraid of my abusive parent (for me, father), per se; it's more like, how could the generalized fear go away? It's so pervasive you don't even always realize it's there. He died fairly suddenly from aggressive brain cancer, and I actually went through a period of being intensely afraid of death. I wonder what *that's* about...

    • @pulidobl
      @pulidobl Рік тому +4

      Mine’s been gone since 2000. I’m still afraid of her…

    • @N3gativeR3FLUX
      @N3gativeR3FLUX Рік тому +5

      My father passed almost a decade ago. I'm 6'3" and he was 5' 10" and 130lbs soaking wet. I'm still terrified of him.

  • @aprilwhite3474
    @aprilwhite3474 Рік тому +219

    cPTSD runs so deeply to my core that I have dysautonomia (autonomic dysfunction). My body has been in such an intense “fight or flight” state for 38 years that it has literally damaged my nerves.
    Your videos help me feel sane, normal, worthy and important. Thank you 🙏🏻

    • @BreakerOfChains219
      @BreakerOfChains219 Рік тому +17

      Did I manifest as fibromyalgia? It did for me and I wouldn’t wish this on the most evil man in this country.

    • @Yinyara
      @Yinyara Рік тому +9

      Same here. 😢

    • @moreintimacy2084
      @moreintimacy2084 Рік тому +8

      My daughter developed misophonia at 13
      Which puts her into daily probably hourly fight or flight, and she developed dysautonomia a few years later definitely related very sad

    • @aprilwhite3474
      @aprilwhite3474 Рік тому +5

      @@Yinyara I’m so sorry! It’s a terrible disease. I hope you can find relief on most days.

    • @aprilwhite3474
      @aprilwhite3474 Рік тому +5

      @@moreintimacy2084 I agree. Definitely related!! I hope she can find things that bring her peace and relaxation 💕

  • @agnesg
    @agnesg Рік тому +53

    i find myself being so lonely, but being so so scared of opening up. and the few times i've found someone I feel is special and gets me, more often than not- they solidify my fears by leaving my life. i am giving my kids a stable, loving foundation, but my God i've been so tourtured the older I get- trying to hold it all together and carry the baggage.

    • @tammyhiatt1804
      @tammyhiatt1804 Рік тому +2

      I am right there with you.

    • @aliyahcreations4575
      @aliyahcreations4575 Рік тому

    • @grmpEqweer
      @grmpEqweer 9 місяців тому +6

      I feel like I'm always slapping myself together with duct tape and going onward.

    • @milliem8051
      @milliem8051 26 днів тому

      Same I’m lonely but I’ve gotten hurt trying to open up and had fake narcissist friends. I don’t have kids and guess I won’t since I don’t feel healed enough and am single at 39 years old. It’s lonely, I have my cats but I need human connection too but it’s so difficult for me

    • @ChessieChess
      @ChessieChess 26 днів тому

      Same.

  • @gab1203
    @gab1203 Рік тому +66

    I grew up in Europe. My grandfather was a WW2 vet with (in hindsight) severe PTSD. He was an Alcoholic, beat and abused my mother and grandmother. My mother in turn was a hot mess .Alcohol, rages, quick with her hand . My father, same mess, except single mother and also all kind of disfunction. He was more avoidant. My sister and I tried to do better with our Children, but I for one still dealt with a lot of the issues and wish I could have a do-over with my kids. Looking around my contemporaries a good chunk dealt with the same stuff in one form or another. I think, at least for my age group it's an epidemic.

    • @LoRaineyDay
      @LoRaineyDay Рік тому +14

      It's never too late to be honest with your kids.
      Tell them what you said here- it'll give them validation they need to heal and open the door to a future better relationship with them.

    • @filipemartins1850
      @filipemartins1850 Рік тому +1

      Jesus loves you!

  • @04Serena
    @04Serena Рік тому +20

    My blue eyed Ragdoll died a month ago. He’d been a wonderful companion for 16 years, and I miss him desperately. Coco’s face and eyes made me cry, both happy and sad tears. She’s beautiful!

    • @lolacookie453
      @lolacookie453 Рік тому +2

      I’m so sorry for your loss! Be kind and patient with yourself! Sending you much peace and light! 🙏

    • @04Serena
      @04Serena Рік тому +1

      @@lolacookie453 Thank you -- I still look for him every time I walk in the door. I loved him so much!

  • @janepoppet3843
    @janepoppet3843 Рік тому +98

    Literally all of this. It makes me so deeply sad that cptsd and the formulations of narcissistic abuse are still wilfully or ignorantly not acknowledge by our institutions - health, mental health and most importantly legal systems. Definitely not here in the UK.
    Sending much love to all of you. ❤

    • @rearrangingdeckchairs
      @rearrangingdeckchairs Рік тому +1

      I’m afraid that’s likely because those institutions are almost exclusively led by narcissistic individuals, seemingly by design, and I think they’d like to keep it that way.

    • @karinbernhardt8747
      @karinbernhardt8747 Рік тому +1

      We are "all alone" but i read you , feel you,and know it. Can only give you a big warm hug Jane and burn a litlle candle, just for you. Kind regards from Holland. Karin

    • @imah6249
      @imah6249 Рік тому +1

      ​@@karinbernhardt8747 inderdaad! ❤ ook voor jou. Er is hier nog maar weinig bekend over. 😢 Sterkte.

    • @karinbernhardt8747
      @karinbernhardt8747 Рік тому

      @@imah6249 Dankjewel Imah. Wens voor jou ook een goed en gezond leven. ❤👍✌🍀🌼🤗 Karin. o ja, misschien kunnen slachtoffers hun huisarts wijzer maken. Dat is wat wij kunnen doen.

    • @mattm.5436
      @mattm.5436 Рік тому +3

      Yeah that’s cause these archons are imbedded in the legal system themselves. I thought about it too as to how if the legal system would only lift itself out of its incredibly stubborn and archaic way are looking at situations and interpreting evidence and realized that more often than not a lawyer would only be arguing for the judge/jury to see from a perspective where they themselves are only too biased in favor of the abuser. In other words you’d be essentially asking relief from the very abusers that most likely in some way shape or form perpetuate it themselves.

  • @kibundle
    @kibundle Рік тому +38

    I am in my mid-60s, have been through the gamut of antidepressants, drugs for anxiety, etc., for decades. I have been in and out of therapy since I was in middle school. Only recently did I find a therapist who told me I have had PTSD since I was a child. Why this was a surprise to me, I don't know. I guess I thought PTSD was something for soldiers who went to war, not someone like me. So much of what I've been through makes sense now and I hope to heal. Having a label for what I've been through makes a huge difference. I wish I had known earlier.

    • @elainelouve
      @elainelouve 7 місяців тому

      Very true. I think even back when I was in therapy in like 2006-2007 there were very strict criteria for PTSD. I don't think CPTSD even existed, or at least I didn't know anything about it. PTSD I understood was only if you'd been to war, or a massive accident like a plane crash, or if you were a victim of rape.
      However I heard my therapist mutter something about PTSD when he was writing his notes. He just wasn't able to diagnose me at all, as he said, that my case was too complex. But it might be he just didn't have proper tools yet back then. No idea when CPTSD was added to the diagnostic manuals.

    • @moniclare4214
      @moniclare4214 4 місяці тому

      ​@elainelouve hugs from a 70 year old, having all the symptoms...its the never being able to trust the ongoing hypervigalence . I now find I need /want a few days of staying in bed

    • @mountaindesert34788
      @mountaindesert34788 3 місяці тому

      Omg I said these same sorts of things in a comment earlier today about PTSD, I didn't think an American who was a Vet could have PTSD. Once I found out, I didn't really relate as much to the PTSD diagnosis questions talking about "the traumatic event" because there was so much. Learning of C-PTSD was like a huge lightbulb, there's still only PTSD for diagnosing doctors though which is a shame in my opinion. Learning I had PTSD was a revelation then Learning I had C-PTSD was like a lightbulb in my head! Mainly healing alone as my therapist can't handle my kind of trauma apparently (adoption, neglect) but I've been learning a lot and hope I can find a therapist who actually is "trauma-informed" and understands like my social worker

  • @stormaurora5536
    @stormaurora5536 Рік тому +36

    My first traumatic event happened to me 48 years ago when I was 12 years old and I am still in that room. The abuse happened until I left home at 16 but my life has been hell since. I was diagnosed with cptsd in 2018 but still have never had any therapy or help. It's truly exhausting and scary.

    • @OrdinaryFemmale
      @OrdinaryFemmale Рік тому +9

      Hi Dear. I've been on my healing journey for some years now. I was once that 12yo and my abuse was chronic too, it last way too many years. Please, do something for yourself. Your abuser(s) won't do it for you, your partner won't do it for you, your family won't do it for you either. You are the only one capable and responsible for your healing. You deserve to live a life that is not exhausting or scary all the time. If there's any money worth of spending, it's money towards therapy. Look it up for therapists specialized in abuse, and go full force on it, be intentional with your wellbeing. I pray that God heals you and gives you the tools to help you live a bette life! Sending love and peace!

    • @ChampagneFabulous
      @ChampagneFabulous 10 місяців тому +1

      This is so me!!! Same age it began, 12, and I left home at 16. I am 49 years old now. I relate with what you say so much!

  • @DrKimSage
    @DrKimSage  Рік тому +81

    Hi Loves! I am re-making a few of my older videos, by updating them, adding a few things, and hopefully not talking 90 miles an hour! If there are some videos you love but I am just speed talking, please feel free to post below which ones you think would be great for me to update and remake...and slow down on...lol. Much love and healing to you all tonight and Coco makes a brief but stunned looking appearance at the end🤣💗💗

    • @Yearofthetiger24026
      @Yearofthetiger24026 Рік тому +2

      Toxic Hypervigilance and Silent Cptsd please.

    • @randomcrap4230
      @randomcrap4230 Рік тому +2

      Coco and her magical tail floof give me life! ❤

    • @Englishman999
      @Englishman999 Рік тому

      I have cPTSD, EUPD, GAD, SAD and Anankastic traits. I would love a video that gave tips for meaningful self help. There is no formal help here (UK) that doesn't involve accepting drugs, which I won't do - other than a never-ending wait list that leads to a watered down version of real help. Life is very lonely and pointless.

    • @Suiseisexy
      @Suiseisexy Рік тому

      The popularity of these terms has made them socially meaningless, meanwhile this mode of living is indistinguishable from a normal conservative lifestyle. It simply seems to describe every working class person's life and attitude whom I consider to have an IQ over 100. Psychological treatment is an extreme luxury afforded only to those society values most and that knowledge bars any possibility of accepting treatment. I've been through childhood with alcoholics who were at work most of the time anyway but also "disappeared" into being drunk the moment they got home, endless bullying, being rejected from my dream job by a racist, being rejected unfairly to the tune of actually going hungry because I lost a competition to someone else who was in no financial danger, home invasion ending in a family murder and the subsequent fakery of a district attorney with no interest in or real leeway to try a black minor in California which is utterly obsessed with "racial justice" despite the fact he's a monster who keeps comitting more crimes in prison and has an IQ of perhaps 80. Oh, did I mention the forest fire? Because I was the only one who knew the forest fire 2 miles away could be here in under 20 seconds but allowed my mother to take over an hour to pack just accepting that we would probably die and if we didn't I didn't want to deal with my traumatized mother to the point I said nothing and just went "we should hurry haha", so of course nobody understands why I get so upset when the car doesn't work and we're potentially stuck in any location unable to drive away from the giant inescapable death force field that can eat any part of California any time it wants and is only getting worse.
      There is zero possibility I will live a meaningful life or even escape the shadow of humiliation heaped onto me by my own society, literally to the point of it forgiving my father's blatant murderer because it values the murderer's life more than both mine and my father's put together. Because he's black. But, you voted Biden because you're a woman and will immediately find a way to excuse all of these injustices and continue the process of shutting me out of society for being a white male with the misfortune to be born in this utterly doomed communist polity that is literally trying to burn down my town because it would prefer that hill folk who vote wrong just not own property or literally die.
      Did I mention the DA was a woman and stopped speaking to me entirely when I accused her of being a liberal? Which you're about to repeat for me so that I can burn you in effigy.

    • @Englishman999
      @Englishman999 Рік тому +2

      @@Suiseisexy That's a huge chip you choose to carry on your shoulders... I hope you find the help you so obviously need.

  • @PeaceFan1
    @PeaceFan1 Рік тому +15

    I am EVERY SINGLE one of those 15 signs of CPTSD and at 58 that blows my mind that I have lived with this for like 50 Years of my Life..ALL of those things you mentioned..I am Exhausted and NOWI know WHY!! Thank you So much for giving VOICE to my Trauma and its effects on my life!!!

  • @howardoverton4775
    @howardoverton4775 Рік тому +23

    Thank you. I am 83. I am just starting to understand myself and the relationship of my childhood to the way I view and behave in my world. Thank you. I will continue to watch and listen to your uncovering life's traumas.

  • @ValPhoenix7
    @ValPhoenix7 Рік тому +22

    I was molested by my father for years starting before I can remember. When it was discovered I was 10. He went to prison for a little while. My parents didn't divorce so I had to live in that situation. He stopped drinking and never molested me again, but my life, every aspect of it, unfortunately has been affected by the effects of the trauma. I was not put into therapy and I had to learn to process everything by myself while pretending I was ok and internalizing everything throughout my teenage years. My 20 year marriage was nice at first but the last 10 years was me trying to hold it together. Couple that with my overinflated sense of empathy and my life has been a lesson about learning to love myself enough to believe that I'm worthy to exist on this planet. I have attracted many narcissistic friendships and relationships because of my trauma and now it almost 44 I have finally learn to have proper boundaries in place. And it's a struggle everyday because when you go from being an extreme people pleaser to having boundaries it hurts because you don't really want people to be upset with you but you have to realize that not everybody has your best interest at heart. Thank you for your videos appreciate them. I never heard of c-ptsd until this year and it definitely fits me to a tee which sucks but it is what it is LOL at least there's help out there for people more readily available then in the past I'm really happy about that. Much more information about narcissist and empathic behaviors and how to get help for that. Thanks again

    • @elleumm
      @elleumm Місяць тому +1

      I always say that my sense of empathy is both a strength and a weakness. I can meet almost anyone halfway, put myself in their shoes and feel that recognition resonate bc I understand where they’re coming from. On the flip side, I see the potential for good in someone even if I know they won’t live up to that potential. I’m way too accommodating and forgiving. And yeah, boundaries are so hard, in part because of all that. Keep it up, I recognize the struggle and I think you’re doing a great job.
      Also, I hope that one day all of us people pleasers can sort it out and just start disappointing everyone instead 😁 Most people don’t deserve all our kindness and effort.

  • @robinjayne9556
    @robinjayne9556 Рік тому +54

    Finding this channel has been a giant blessing. I can’t afford therapy right now and you are truly helping me

    • @barbsinclair7352
      @barbsinclair7352 Рік тому +1

      Agree, even though I've talked to many therapists, NONE ever mentioned anything about CPTSD! Even after I told them about the vicious fighting my mom and stepdad did, it scared me to death, he would go on weekends benders with his paycheck and when he came home Sunday afternoon it was WW3! One year I missed almost every single Monday at school because I was physically ill and puking from their fighting! Once she took a bullwhip to him and cracked it on his legs where he had recently been shot and left for dead, all this stopped when my mom died of cancer at 41, then we just became ignored and no taken care of, when I tell a therapist about feeling claustrophobic and I have to flee certain situations 2 of them asked me if I was locked in a box as a child, WHAT! NO! Obviously its a metaphor for feeling trapped I guess with the fighting and then feeling of abandonment! Need a better therapist, one that understands CPTSD!

  • @judymccutcheon69
    @judymccutcheon69 Рік тому +19

    I’m 62 years old and this is absolutely 100% me!

  • @lissabunny6072
    @lissabunny6072 Рік тому +124

    I was diagnosed with cptsd a few months ago. It’s gone completely downhill. After my last therapy session I spiraled and I ended up having flashbacks for half of this month and I only came out of it a couple of days ago. I wasn’t aware it could get that bad. I’m terrified. I accomplished nothing those days. Thank you for these videos I’ve learned more from you than from anywhere else.

    • @rearrangingdeckchairs
      @rearrangingdeckchairs Рік тому +3

    • @Ashley-rp4ui
      @Ashley-rp4ui Рік тому +15

      Sometimes it’s best not to do talk therapy bc of flashbacks

    • @thomasbattle8894
      @thomasbattle8894 Рік тому +3

      What’s an alternative?

    • @steffanie7248
      @steffanie7248 Рік тому +20

      Hey! I've heard CBT based therapy can be quite harmful to those of us with CPTSD. Like you've experienced it can cause flashbacks and disassociative states. First, you need to make sure your therapist is trauma informed and understands PTSD and CPTSD. Next, you could benefit from EDMR based therapy as well body work therapy. The biggest thing is you need to find a therapist that knows about CPTSD and is trauma informed. Good
      Luck and I hope this helps!

    • @lolacookie453
      @lolacookie453 Рік тому +11

      The constant flashbacks came to me nonstop a few years ago. It was hard to function or get anything done. Found an EMDR therapist and finally processed the large traumas. Made a huge difference for me. Look for a therapist who specializes in EMDR therapy, you want to make sure you are in the most capable hands while processing. It can be rough, uncomfortable but it will get better.
      Wishing you the best!

  • @samanthad708
    @samanthad708 Рік тому +50

    I’ve developed CPTSD from my mother throughout my childhood, and it became worse after dealing with a narcissist ex whom I have young kids with and it’s such an odd feeling because I feel like I’m just existing on auto pilot everyday. I’ve always preferred to be alone and by myself. Life is so hard, and it’s difficult navigating through life dealing with trauma. Sigh

  • @espectroarcoiris
    @espectroarcoiris Рік тому +33

    I have been diagnosed with CPTSD, Major depression and Autism. It took me so long to realize the brutal abuse I endured and the splitting of my personality. Thank you Kim for talking about it. It always helps to hear other survivors point of view, it illuminates parts of myself and helps me so much.

  • @carolinewolf565
    @carolinewolf565 Місяць тому +2

    It’s never stopped! For the 1st time I have an opportunity to truly live for the 1st time when I’m almost 50yrs old is a lot to take. That you’re just beginning to live. Like a wild animal with the cage door open. That look in their eyes 😢❤💪🏻

  • @Rachel-en5nt
    @Rachel-en5nt Рік тому +16

    I've only discovered that CPTSD is a "thing" this week, which blows my mind because I've been to so many doctors with so many symptoms of exactly this, and tried so many different types of therapy for so long. Annnd it turns out that a whole bunch of "characteristics" of mine I always thought were unique, innate, impossible for anyone to fully understand, and impossible to fully address are all explained by this. All of it. Amazing! Truly amazing.

  • @marklambert4793
    @marklambert4793 Рік тому +24

    I can identify with a lot of this.
    And I definitely grew up in a household with very little open expression of affection.
    I am married, and have been for 30 years.
    But my choice of careers,
    solo OTR truck driver, and being extremely comfortable with it,
    might say something about me.

  • @jooliagoolia9959
    @jooliagoolia9959 Рік тому +12

    I scored an 8 on the ace quiz.
    It helped me understand why it's so difficult for others to fathom my childhood. It's unfathomable...
    What's surprising is, that information freed me.
    Seeing proof made me feel like a
    bad a**.
    My life has been the polar opposite of what I was raised in. They never changed who I was inside and that's part of why I am public enemy number 1 still in their eyes .
    I have been no contact for 29 years and never looked back.
    🌈 💜 🌈

    • @Terry-lh8cn
      @Terry-lh8cn Рік тому +1

      I scored an 8, too. I have issues, of course, or I wouldn't be watching this video. But given the extreme nature of my childhood, I'm doing pretty well, overall. I'm 66, it's taken a while.

    • @HDcreature
      @HDcreature 11 місяців тому +1

      I took the ACE test -- attached was findings from a study. 100% of people with my score or higher were put on mental health medication at least once in their life. And yep, I was. Sucks.

    • @jooliagoolia9959
      @jooliagoolia9959 11 місяців тому

      I wish I COULD take medication for it. My ACE score is 8....Freaked me out at first and then I thought...I've made it thru all the toughest stuff, I can do now without any of those people easily !!!!@@HDcreature

    • @ben_pettit_4264
      @ben_pettit_4264 6 місяців тому +2

      No contact for almost nine years now….NO regrets, only freedom! 😊

    • @donnablack6280
      @donnablack6280 Місяць тому +1

      @jooliagoolia Your comment just changed my life. Not knowing who I am has always been a problem, but you're so right. I'm not them. No matter how much physical and mental abuse was piled on me I never became like them.
      They didn't change who I am.
      Thank you. 🙏🌱

  • @francoisbroukx1244
    @francoisbroukx1244 Рік тому +36

    You sound and feel like someone with knowledge and experience. I'm an older man with c-PTSD, my daughter tel me I' m also HSP. I love what you do, you have, for me, the right attitude (tone, voice, body language...). Most of the time, when I listen to psychs, the problems seems always to come from the parents. In my story, I've been abused from 8y to 12y, by a friend of the family, in the same period I was bullied in school. I never had therapy until my 50. All that to say : my problem where not my parents, but all other people, I was quite violent when people tried to touch me, I still don't like it, and I'm nearly 70. In my head, the danger is the society, who wasn't there to protect me when I was a child, but was there to bully me because I was "not normal". Sorry to be so long, the question for the psy is: I can heal, that is the message, but what does that mean? to become like the "other"? those who judge without knowing?

    • @MichaelDemko
      @MichaelDemko Рік тому +13

      It does not mean changing who we are. Dr. Kim talks a lot early in the video about the state of the nervous system - healing is mainly about shifting our default state in the nervous system, spending more time in more relaxed, enjoyable states, and reducing the frequency, severity and duration of emotional pain in situations that are hard for us. It will help to change how we interpret a lot of the things we encounter in life, but the healing process involves, among other things, making the choices for ourselves what those new interpretations will be. There are generally a ton of options, at least from what I have personally seen so far.

    • @anna_ulrike
      @anna_ulrike Рік тому +5

      I send you hereby protection from my heart, I see you, I hear you, I hold you, I protect you , I love you, Always and forever, in time, space and reality ❤💎❤

  • @Jennifer-bw7ku
    @Jennifer-bw7ku Рік тому +200

    Psychedelics are just an exceptional mental health breakthrough. It's quite fascinating how effective they are against depression and anxiety. Saved my life.

    • @elizabethwilliams6651
      @elizabethwilliams6651 Рік тому +3

      Does anyone know any good source to get them? I put so much on my plate and it definitely affects my stress and anxiety levels, would love to give shrooms a try.

    • @APOLLINAIREBARTHOLOMIEU
      @APOLLINAIREBARTHOLOMIEU Рік тому +1

      Yes, dr.sporesss

    • @steceymorgan814
      @steceymorgan814 Рік тому +2

      Dr.sporesss is the best, he's been my go to for anything psychedelics.

    • @APOLLINAIREBARTHOLOMIEU
      @APOLLINAIREBARTHOLOMIEU Рік тому

      Yes he is. dr.sporesss

    • @twinfred3160
      @twinfred3160 Рік тому +4

      DMT was definitely the best trip I ever had. It was amazing!

  • @MarleneTrujillo-uc8bj
    @MarleneTrujillo-uc8bj Рік тому +17

    Hi I’m 58 years old and been having the worst nightmares every night since my abusive father passed away last November. All the dreams feature not only my abusive parents but everyone else over the years since I was young that mistreated me.

    • @hcf555
      @hcf555 Рік тому +7

      I have a lot of these dreams too. Every night someone will appear who I struggled with for many years. Not sure what my subconscious wants me to do with it all but it keeps reminding me!

    • @grmpEqweer
      @grmpEqweer 9 місяців тому +2

      He's gone. It's safe to remember now, IMO.

  • @debraannedimezza8075
    @debraannedimezza8075 Рік тому +33

    I have been in isolation for eight months and therapy and staying grounded. I was so emotionally battered that I needed this time alone. It’s been a blessing I had this opportunity.

    • @jacquelynn2051
      @jacquelynn2051 Рік тому +3

      I’m finally at the place where I understand now that I need trauma therapy. Your comment gave me hope. Thank you. I hope you are hanging in there and cooing well.❤❤❤

  • @terrapintravels3829
    @terrapintravels3829 Рік тому +17

    I have these symptoms of cptsd. My childhood was very chaotic, death,divorce, marriages, neglect, basically custodial care, parents with addictions, suicides and abuses. I've recently learned about the existence of childhood trauma and I can see where my adult life has reflected it. It's both enlightening and kind of maddening. I have no children which is good but I feel out of the loop even though I'm grateful. This is a very helpful video thank you.

  • @HudsonPomeranian
    @HudsonPomeranian Рік тому +12

    I found out recently that I have CPTSD. Now that there's a name for it after all these years. Most things you said resonates with me.
    It was so difficult raising my child after my divorce. I know I have to break my walls down and let some people in.
    Sometimes I tell people too much then think no, they might use what I said against me. Again being afraid telling too much to trust. My Pet's make my life of Happiness! Cats and dogs rock!!!

  • @jimrich4192
    @jimrich4192 5 місяців тому +4

    After a while in group therapy, it blew my mind to see or face the extreme wall of defenses, excusing or out right DENIAL of any responsibility for how parents DAMAGE their kids. Alice Miller taught me most of what i finally learned about MY toxic parents. Its so funny how the term BLAMING PARETS was tossed around by both Survivor and "ordinary" ppl back when I began therapy only to discover that many parents NEED TO BE BLAMED for what they did to their defenseless children. But I didn't get into therapy to blame or punish my parents. I went to understand & FIX the damages my parents did to me. The good news is that I have no kids to pass the poison on to!

  • @shyPandemonium
    @shyPandemonium Рік тому +31

    So glad you showed us your kitty at the end, I just had to see her when I heard that adorable meow. ❤ watching this video was so eye opening but also refreshing because I’m starting to realize I’m not alone and the way I react to things isn’t just because I’m “broken” or “socially incompetent.” But because I lacked a safe and loving childhood, the term eggshell parents perfectly describes my existence in childhood. Always trying to make sure I don’t set one of my parents off. I was the “good” child because I was able to best read and predict my parents and knew how to please them. My siblings not so much..

  • @annajohansson7116
    @annajohansson7116 Рік тому +4

    Every therapist I have met, have said that I should not focus on the past and that talking about childhood makes me stuck in the past. In their opinion, I should focus on what I can do now to solv the "wrong" thinking and acting that I do. That just makes me feel worse!

  • @walkintruth01
    @walkintruth01 Рік тому +9

    Im 28, and I feel like you've hit every point I've been struggling with almost all my life.
    In my last year of university, my health started to decline. I placed a lot of my worth in my education and success therein bc it felt (to me) that it was the only area my (separated) parents would show attention and encouragement.
    Being good at school made me feel worthy. When it became apparent to my body that i didn't have a sense of direction for my life after graduating; i got hit with an auto-immune disease and heart issues, anxiety and depression.

  • @trendygurl6852
    @trendygurl6852 Рік тому +16

    Oh I think you nailed me with this one. The worst part of it is I had no idea that marrying my ex would repeat the cycle and I feel awful that I had kids with him, one of which is really struggling with his mental health now and I don’t know if he’s going to be able to be alright. I feel very bad about that even though I do think my narcissistic ex was the biggest problem. The fact that I chose him put my future kids at risk down the road and now I’m dealing with the consequences of that.

    • @claudiashundeservice992
      @claudiashundeservice992 Рік тому +12

      Just be there for your kids.
      As a parent you were part of the problem, but now its your choice to be part of the solution.
      We can not change the past but be there now.
      I wish you and your child the best possible healing!

  • @eternalsunny
    @eternalsunny Рік тому +11

    Yes, I have CPTSD. I was told by a friend that I have it about 10 years ago. When I understood what it was, I understood that I did have it. Then I went to a psychologist/psychiatrist, and it was confirmed. I wish I was better. I wish that life in my mind was calmer. 🕊️

  • @jolesliewhitten6545
    @jolesliewhitten6545 Рік тому +10

    All four of us grew up to have chronic illnesses-different ones, but chronic.

  • @clintoni856
    @clintoni856 6 місяців тому +3

    Every day I have to fight the desire to give up 😢 complete hopelessness!

    • @ellec7276
      @ellec7276 5 місяців тому +2

      Don't give up! You can do this!! There's beauty out there in the world. And don't let yourself put you down, if that makes any sense.
      Be kind to yourself & remember always that YOU ARE AMAZING!
      YOU CAN!!! & You deserve kindness & compassion & ABSOLUTELY NOTHING but the BEST!!! Repeat that to yourself OUT LOUD, write it on post-it notes & stick em all around your home & keep it up until you believe it. I already believe it about you!
      Besides you're here so you're still getting up & dusting yourself off & going at it again! That's strength & bravery that most don't have!
      🤩🤩You are SPECTACULAR!!!🤩🤩 PERIOD.
      🤗🤗💕🤗💕🤗🤗

  • @BlueBamboo62
    @BlueBamboo62 11 місяців тому +3

    At 9 yrs old the only way to cope w my toxic environment was to self harm. Banging my head against the wall, using my hard heeled shoes on my head, was the only outlet available. Also, as an adult I have horrible 'flight' responses. Always on alert, easily over stimulated. Its hard on the people around me...I'm so glad that finally all of these symptoms are being acknowledged and named: CPTSD.

  • @agnesg
    @agnesg Рік тому +5

    i also struggle with forgiving myself. i want so bad to be "good" without excuses for failure.

  • @maybee...
    @maybee... Рік тому +5

    You covered so much that hit home.
    I have lived my whole life in survival mode.
    Generally unworthy. True.
    Trust has been an issue in my life. Isolating is to protect myself.

  • @anitawaclawik4286
    @anitawaclawik4286 Рік тому +20

    I find it helpful to hear about your personal experiences intertwined with psychology information. It breaks down the barriers in my understanding the information you present. I enjoyed seeing the cameo appearance of Coco.

  • @CarolinaMartinez-hc1if
    @CarolinaMartinez-hc1if Рік тому +18

    I need to show this video to all my loved ones. You put into words what my life is like on a daily bases.

    • @jmast1
      @jmast1 Рік тому +3

      What's the point? It only matters to you, other ppl don't actually care as much as you hope they do because it's not their problem. Harsh but true.

  • @stormyskiesahead5332
    @stormyskiesahead5332 Рік тому +6

    I've isolated from early childhood to present day, and it's so bad now that being around other humans is terrifying.. my animals are my world. I want to change because the anxiety is debilitating . I had a heart attack 7months ago and my fears worsened... Thank you for this video.

  • @carolync3163
    @carolync3163 Рік тому +5

    Would love a video on tips and tricks on how to avoid repeating the cycle.

  • @_de_nice
    @_de_nice Рік тому +4

    I’ve noticed that a lot of videos talking about C-PTSD are very fast paced. For me, it becomes a lot harder to digest everything that’s internally coming up during the video.
    Your video is refreshing because there aren’t jump cuts every 4 seconds and I’m able to digest everything you’re saying, thanks

  • @arniehanson8629
    @arniehanson8629 Рік тому +31

    I have 11 of these symptoms and have come to understanding it started when I was removed from a abusive family life at 5 years old. Bounced in the foster care system for a year. Landed in a Christian family however reflecting I was already dealing with most of these symptoms already. Now after ending a 19 year marriage with some high in narcotic traits I started my journey in healing. However I’m still attracting emotional abuse people. I have strong boundaries so they don’t get into my life. However I’ve self isolated to protect myself until I can figure out why this is still happening Gods good He got me out of the marriage and has brought many of my false beliefs to the surface. Please pray for me

    • @coleenhausler5668
      @coleenhausler5668 Рік тому

      Praying for you now.

    • @CapSunLeoMoon
      @CapSunLeoMoon Рік тому

      🙏🏼 lots of prayers sent your way!! God Bless! You got this!! 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼

    • @Aimee-sx3og
      @Aimee-sx3og 10 місяців тому

      My prayers

  • @katdenning6535
    @katdenning6535 Рік тому +14

    It took me a long time to recognize how deep my trauma River ran because like many people my coping mechanisms transformed into deeply-rooted personality traits. Coping mechanisms come in all shapes and sizes.
    I grew up with instability I had no control over, so my primary coping mechanism became one of environmental control and risk analysis. Developing a contingency plan for everything relaxes me but takes a lot of mental energy I don’t always recognize. It’s not like an exit strategy but more like a bucket full of rain day plans.
    My flavor of coping is productive and proactive, so it seems harmless.

  • @heatherhoye1054
    @heatherhoye1054 Рік тому +3

    Dr. Kim, if you had not spent so much time (real time) in this state, you would have never er been so spot on in your explanations. I can not believe that you are the FIRST person who can draw out the words I do not have to convey to others. How on earth is this happening? By the Grace of God, is the only explanations. God bless and PLEASE keep sharing you have changed the way I view the help I have never found. Thank you a million times.

  • @lithiumgaurd
    @lithiumgaurd Рік тому +10

    Wow, I thought I was having a month long dissociative episode after having to spend my vacation with them/, but it sounds so much like your emotional flash back. How did I make the episode stop? Telling my boss that I was worried I had burn out, and totally falling apart and embarrassing mgmt. when you said flashbacks lift, it sparked

  • @Everymanspeaks
    @Everymanspeaks Рік тому +20

    Thank you so much for the confirmation of what I've experienced. It gives me reason to pause and give myself grace.

  • @michelleivory
    @michelleivory Рік тому +15

    I am glad I found your channel. So much of what you talk about fits me perfectly 😢

  • @sammantil6342
    @sammantil6342 Рік тому +3

    Emotional flashbacks would explain SO MUCH. I’ve had so many shutdowns that I just could not figure out what the trigger was. It has become pretty demoralizing.
    Hopefully with this knowledge I can give myself a bit more grace and begin to take some steps forward.

  • @redhotpanicgirl
    @redhotpanicgirl Рік тому +13

    Thank you so much for this!!! I have complex PTSD from childhood that led to additional complex PTSD in adulthood. Now it is just crazy compounded. Other than chronic health issues, I suffer every single one of these!!!! Life can quickly feel overwhelming with the toxic shame and unworthiness. I isolate like crazy! I have to stay totally on top of my self care every. single. moment! But in reality I am a high thriver and honestly warrior because I am able to support other survivors in creating self-sustaining lives.

  • @redhotpanicgirl
    @redhotpanicgirl Рік тому +6

    OMG. I witnessed so much physical violence between my father and my brothers I spent large portions of my childhood in freeze and/or fawn. I am so glad we have moved past fight or flight because those NEVER fit me. And today, when I face confrontation, I totally freeze!!! Or I fight and rage when finally pushed to my limit of tolerance.

  • @loric4550
    @loric4550 Рік тому +15

    Congrats on 100K, Dr Kim. Good for you. Well done!

    • @DrKimSage
      @DrKimSage  Рік тому +1

      Thank you so very much!It wouldn't happen without you.❤️❤️🙏🙏

  • @christieprescott5450
    @christieprescott5450 Рік тому +5

    Yes! Survival mode is THE worst. So hard to unlearn too. Praying for you all 🙏🙏🙏

  • @jerrylopes2827
    @jerrylopes2827 Рік тому +4

    arrrr .. hello Coco... I am recovering from severe narcissistic abuse .. by my family and my partners.
    I have been married twice, both failures .. but i have also been diagnosed with ADHD and CPTSD ..
    I am on a journey of, not only discovery, but also trying to understand how i have abused myself .. its not easy. .. thank you for helping me to understand me , and the lack of love i have for myself xx

  • @joebloggs339
    @joebloggs339 5 місяців тому +2

    Thank you for this video Dr. Kim. I think the thing with feeling there is something wrong with us is that it is partially true in that we were not able to develop our self normally thru adversity and tribulations and so our skillset for living really is deficient. I think the anxiety is because we know that qualitatively, we are living with a false self which will alway feel defective and feel the need to prove itself

  • @leaharundell24
    @leaharundell24 Рік тому +22

    Is it possible to heal from CPTSD?
    Or am I always going to be like this? I'm so tired of fighting, I feel broken. I keep fighting though, I'm not sure how i keep going everyday.

    • @rileyhoffman6629
      @rileyhoffman6629 Рік тому +9

      I found Dr Ramani also of great, great help. Healing takes the rest of your life, but with practice it becomes the norm.

    • @SuenosDeLaNoche
      @SuenosDeLaNoche Рік тому +3

      Your pain is understandable. I've found that acceptance of the disease is a step towards learning to live with it. Distraction is also useful. To help me sleep, I listen to this sort of tonal health aid during sleep. It helps heal the most raw memories.
      ua-cam.com/video/O7ZFuhuyHKA/v-deo.html
      Blessed Be Leah.

    • @Sirlayachu
      @Sirlayachu 10 місяців тому +1

      I understand, haha I am also trying to find a way to live with this and personally speaking, myself. Sending you much love and energy ❤
      And may you find a place in your life that you can rest and recover to hopefully feel some ease in your daily life.

    • @elainelouve
      @elainelouve 7 місяців тому +1

      I think I have, at least mostly. Like the sigh she did in the video immediately sent me flashbacks. Other than that, I've started to trust people. I also don't feel constantly anxious anymore, and in general I feel happy and safe, not frightened of what will happen.
      This is a result of therapy, creative writing, journaling, being involved with people, getting support, and now lately also realising I'm neurodivergent. I'm 47 already, so it's taken many years, I've built up new traumas, but also gotten positive experiences.

  • @tihishajon
    @tihishajon Рік тому +3

    I'm so glad that I have finally found the root of my ADHD, but I could tell that I had PTSD. First being diagnosed with bipolar. I now know that it's not as much as ADHD or ADD/ODD that I suffer from and have all my life I'm thirty-eight and today I am just finding out that there are people out here that can relate to my everyday living. Thank you so much for bringing this to light. I can't wait to find a way to rid myself of it. I seriously thought it was a family curse that had been passed down on us from generations ago. I now know that my family just suffers from the same thing, some are much worse off than myself. But I have always been the more happy-go-lucky, nothing bothered me type of person until I got in my mid-20s. I'm 38 now and don't leave the house. They say that our childhood will affect our adulthood.. that's what I'm relating to right now. THANK YOU! THERE IS A CURE AT THE END OF YOUR VIDEO. GOING TO FIND OUT NOW 😁 HAVE A BLESSED NIGHT AND THE REST OF YOUR LIFE..

  • @freeandfabulous4310
    @freeandfabulous4310 Рік тому +6

    I have most of these symptoms. Never considered they were rooted in the trauma of not ever feeling loved, in fact hated. Who I was and what I needed was mocked and ignored. I did marry a covert narcissist and have been Retraumatized for 22 years. I’ve done my best. Thank you for defining this.

  • @annab13
    @annab13 Рік тому +6

    I think I have the most severe case of this. My adrenaline is always going. I disassociate, it's like a fuse getting tripped and I'm out of it. I sink in my own thoughts. I've become happier there. I swear I'll be comatosed soon. Slowely leaving

  • @funniful
    @funniful Рік тому +15

    Im 59. And a lot of peculiar things have been coming up for me…feelings I’ve squashed down for decades. Your videos help me to understand what’s happening, and why. What I don’t know, however, is What I can do about it?

    • @kimgordon3695
      @kimgordon3695 Рік тому +2

      Just understanding that it's the past

    • @nancybartley4610
      @nancybartley4610 Рік тому +8

      It is confusing to realize late in life that something isn't right . I would like to know why it took so long to get to realize it. Are school and work so time consuming that we push down what is inside? Or is it that so much info is out there now that addresses the subject and helps us see what happened to us? Or is it the cumulation of failures in life that make us realize something is wrong? I think part of the answer in my case is that for a very long time I assumed I was born defective along with some bad luck. It took a long time to realize that my childhood was quite messed up. Or maybe the stresses accumulated until something gave inside and made me wake up and look for an answer. I really feel like I lived in a very unaware state for a long time.

  • @brigittewalden9226
    @brigittewalden9226 Рік тому +1

    This is all me 😮. It was actually so on point that i had to leave it multiple times. I did come back to finish it and read many of the comments, which left me feeling like I've found a whole tribe of 'my people ' out there that i didn't know existed 😢.

  • @carol-leelane721
    @carol-leelane721 Рік тому +4

    I used to secret myself under my bed and read 300 page fiction books at age nine knowing my parents never imagined I was there. I loved it. A psychological and physical retreat. A pattern that continued through out my adulthood. Reading alone in my bed.

    • @elenalatici9568
      @elenalatici9568 Рік тому

      Ditto. I eventually got a job as a professional reader for film studios. Best job I ever had. Still read for a literary agent, but it's not the same as reading for film.

  • @anyaroz8619
    @anyaroz8619 6 місяців тому +2

    Me! Thank you for putting it all into perspective. I kept looking for explanations (because I never experienced a big Trauma as a kid). Now I was shown a mirror and recognized myself. Thank you. I've lived always thinking that I am a crappy person and even animals don't like me. I will teach myself that I am an ok person. Would be nice to get help with that too. I'll look through your videos, maybe the instructions are already there

    • @ellec7276
      @ellec7276 5 місяців тому +1

      🤗🤗🤗 You've got this!!! Treat yourself with kindness & compassion. Negative self talk has been my worst enemy. I started correcting myself out loud when my brain started thinking I'm the worst person to ever live. I treat myself like I treat my daughter whom I've always been honest & open & validate her feelings...basically whatever the opposite of what my narcissistic mom would do...& if I wouldn't say it to her or anyone else, I verbally correct myself. Trying to incorporate as many senses as possible & I may sound like a loony to others b4 I explain but it's working & my negative self talk is nearly 0 now. It used to be 24/7/365.
      You can do this!!! You're strong! You survived & now you must mother yourself (your "inner child") & heal yourself with compassion & understanding that you are SPECTACULAR! PERIOD.
      Sending 🤗 🤗 🤗 🤗 🤗 & my strength to help support you.
      Never forget that YOU ARE AMAZING & deserve nothing but the best!
      🤗🤗🤗🤗

  • @mendingmandy869
    @mendingmandy869 Рік тому +18

    I've been diagnosed with chronic PTSD from childhood. In my emotional flashbacks, I go into an intense anger. Is that fear but masked by anger? Hahaha I love seeing you of course and little miss. Cocoa

    • @SecondFloor2311
      @SecondFloor2311 Рік тому +6

      I think I have cptsd as well and also emotional flashbacks. I go into intense anger/rage and aggression (usually towards myself, or suppressing it, even though I want to break down the whole house lol). I - somewhat unfortunately - can control myself relatively well but I am sometimes physically shaking out of anger/overwhelm. It’s often when I do something wrong, especially physically like doing something with my hands, and that rage can (seemingly) go from 0 to 100 just like that. In this example, for me it usually connects to feeling incapable, not good enough, like a powerlessness, or on the other side of the coin an anger/sadness that ‘the world’ does not accept and respect me for who I am.
      But I definitely see how it could come from fear too. Anger is the emotion that says “no more!” or “no further!” (physically or emotionally) so yeah it makes sense, depends on your childhood experience

    • @hcf555
      @hcf555 Рік тому +6

      I heard somewhere there's a theory that anger and rage in adulthood can relate to thwarted fight (from fight or flight response). Like you weren't able to have that response as a child so often that you repress it and it comes out later as this huge ball of anger or rage. All that flight trying to find and outlet. I really liked that explanation. Same theory said thwarted flight in childhood can feel like panic in adulthood. Totally relate to both of those. Maladaptive nervous system I guess.

    • @mendingmandy869
      @mendingmandy869 Рік тому +3

      @HCF wow... that makes so much sense. I grew up with a cruel guardian. I went into fight to protect my more vulnerable twin sister. She shut down. When I fought my guardian verbally she would crush me with narcissistic rage so this theory makes so much sense because eventually I'd not fight as much and I'd fight and then fawn.

    • @mendingmandy869
      @mendingmandy869 Рік тому +4

      @Second Floor I experience exactly the same things except my anger is directed outward but I think underneath it is self shaming. Like I'm angry because someone else made me feel worthless but it's my traumas that make me feel that way and the repeat event reminds my amygdala of my original abuse so all those stored feelings get spilled into me. I go into fight and then I want to just be alone away from everyone.

    • @hcf555
      @hcf555 Рік тому +4

      @@mendingmandy869 that sounds awful, I really feel for you. It's living with the ongoing neurological battles that makes me really angry too!

  • @shellyl.9662
    @shellyl.9662 9 місяців тому +1

    That was my childhood in a nutshell. And that explains why I made so many wrong decisions as an adult and chose wrong people to be in my life. Now I’m single and alone and I choose to be that way and thank you for sharing Coco. She is beautiful.

  • @mishellegarrett9243
    @mishellegarrett9243 Рік тому +5

    I love a cup of Coco! 😻 thank you for your help on this platform.

  • @ShaunaShuford
    @ShaunaShuford Рік тому +3

    I am 53 and just starting to heal from CPTSD. My husband doesn't understand it he lived in a completely different world than I did My mom was ultra controlling and even under her control even when I did good I still was hurt verbally every way I am surprised I made it out. I have a 31-year-old son who lived under that umbrella but now I have a seven and 9-year-old daughters. I want to keep them safe I never want to be like my mom. My son is proud of me last week he told me that I broke the cycle. He was afraid it would have to be him but he says I'm a really good mom. I'm crying right now. I get anxiety sometimes or I get upset because they say when I tell him to clean up the room I'm being mean and I'm like in my head my mom would beat me for accidentally dropping a fork in front of her. I'm trying to let it go but it takes time. I love watching your videos

  • @liebekatz1
    @liebekatz1 Рік тому +5

    I have always felt not good enough. I struggle with trying to be a perfectionist. I am always in survival mode. I have issues with flashbacks and try to push them away constantly.

  • @amylandry4108
    @amylandry4108 Рік тому +2

    Thank you so much for this video! 😢
    I literally made a list of your CPTSD - 13 boxes and had to check off every one 😮…. I’m struggling in my 51 year relationship with my husband of 47 years and it’s exhausting. I realized for the first time in my life that I need someone to take care of me 😢
    It’s frightening

  • @alx.g1009s
    @alx.g1009s Рік тому +4

    Beautiful cat, and thanks for describing my life exactly! 🤦‍♀Great video!

  • @singingsam40
    @singingsam40 Рік тому +10

    Thank you for this Kim. I have struggled for years with chronic mental health and autoimmune disorders, to the point where I am now registered disabled and oxygen dependent. I have every single one of those symptoms and it has sadly taken the recent loss of my mum (my best friend and only 'safe' person) to really try and understand why I have 'failed' so badly at life. I am now on a waiting list for specialist DV trauma counselling and look forward to being a little more able to participate in my own life. ❤

  • @mingtoiisaac4623
    @mingtoiisaac4623 Рік тому +3

    Thank you. Healing day by day, coming from childhood and toxic relationship/ divorce. giving myself grace and compassion. Still battling episodes of self sabotage and isolation.
    Coco is absolutely gorgeous ❤

  • @DrRinse
    @DrRinse Рік тому +53

    I got diagnosed with BPD but looking over the DSM-V criteria and it's subtypes, I'm not terribly convinced of that conclusion. I find myself much more aligned with C-PTSD. I'm with Bessel Van Der Kolk in that they are the same condition or at the very least, two sides of the same coin.

    • @valentina6429
      @valentina6429 Рік тому +11

      Unfortunately CPTSD is not mentioned in the DSM-V manual….
      Doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist…😢😢😢😢😢

    • @joelthomastr
      @joelthomastr Рік тому

      C-PTSD is like the metric system of mental health. Everybody recognizes it except for the Americans

    • @scarred10
      @scarred10 Рік тому +9

      BPD doesnt need to involve repetive trauma and are far more unstable in self concept and behaviour than Cptsd patients

    • @alexandrugheorghe5610
      @alexandrugheorghe5610 Рік тому +1

      ​@@valentina6429at least it's in icd-11

    • @christinebrowncudney1195
      @christinebrowncudney1195 Рік тому +1

      Happens a lot...

  • @bradcamp2363
    @bradcamp2363 Рік тому +1

    Thank you! I’m 62 and finally I have been diagnosed with childhood CPTSD

  • @SuenosDeLaNoche
    @SuenosDeLaNoche Рік тому +12

    I appreciate your cPTSD related vids.
    Although the foundation of that disease was in my childhood, the most crystalizing events occurred after 18 years old. Any Healing I achieve on my journey I use to help others. Thank you for All your efforts helping Us. Blessed Be

  • @ellis2097
    @ellis2097 Рік тому +2

    Looking at the list of 15 symptoms, I currently or have had them. As a survivor of significant physical, mental/emotional abuse, it has limited my quality of life. I refuse to be a victim now, but I do have to acknowledge my history. Despite living in terror every day of my life since my earliest memory, as I got older (7/8) and the physical got significant. I was beaten with a wrench routinely, I still light up like a Christmas tree with x-rays. Everything this person is explaining is spot on.

  • @sophiafarah8246
    @sophiafarah8246 Рік тому +25

    I’m so happy that in the day in time we are living that a traumatized life and mental illness and other issues are now accepted and talked about. Talking and sharing helps rid the stigma and embarrassing moments we all use to have to deal with on top of our symptoms. It’s a good thing these days

  • @kavitadeva
    @kavitadeva Рік тому +1

    Hello Dr Kim. This was validating on a deep level. I was Diagnosed with severe C-PTSD. My mother was Diagnosed as a very severe Narcissist. I was the scapegoat in our family. Living inthat house was incredibly Traumatic. The abuse was horrific. I always wanted a Twin Flame. That never happened. Now I am 65. I am Chronically ill and mostly bed-bound and I'm basically disabled. I get disregulated, and overwhemed so easily. I've been to every kind of therapy imaginable. Nothing has really healed the wounds that occurred. I know I am broken. I realize things are not going to get better. It's reality. I have no desire to have a partner. THANK GOD.
    Living everyday is physically agonizing and mentally agonizing. I ask myself the question every morning barely able to move,
    WHY DO I ALLOW MYSELF TO LIVE IN SUCH DESPAIR, WHY? I feel so blessed to have found your channel tonight. Subcribed, Notifications to all. Thanks for validating how difficult
    C -PTSD can really be.

  • @sandrabailey2433
    @sandrabailey2433 Рік тому +3

    I've got in to the same bad relationship physical and mental abuse and have been frozen in it for 20 years and the pandemic really brought it to a place of fight and flight to where I almost had a break down I've been frozen for the last few years not being able to do anything to live i just found your videos thank you for this 🙏

  • @JenniferSinclair-o3m
    @JenniferSinclair-o3m 9 місяців тому +1

    This explains my mother to a T. We went to family therapy for several years and my mother was diagnosed with twice by two different therapists. So she quit family therapy twice.

  • @terisimpson1915
    @terisimpson1915 Рік тому +3

    My Mother said 4:00am is the hour of depression, death thoughts, and despair. She was right!

  • @StephaniRoberts
    @StephaniRoberts Рік тому +1

    It’s so refreshing to find someone who’s talking about all of these things! The intersection of our own childhood wounds from fathers, making unconscious choices with unsafe people, and having children with them. 😮
    Then having to figure out how to raise children alone after divorce who are emotionally healthy when we’re struggling ourselves. And seeing them have to face these unhealthy scenarios daily/weekly.
    When we don’t have healthy ones in place via uncles, brothers, grandfathers. It’s extremely challenging, and I think about it all the time but until you today, I haven’t found anyone talking about all these things and the impact on us and our children. Thank you so much for all your doing!!! We need more of this, and so do our kids!! 🙌🏼💯☺️

  • @millie9814
    @millie9814 5 місяців тому +3

    I had a narcissistic parent, a narcissistic sibling, was born in a cult, and was bullied in school. How do you come back from all that? Can you?

  • @kellyseager8163
    @kellyseager8163 Рік тому +11

    I am incredibly grateful that I have found your channel. I can tell that you have been through a very difficult journey, and your courage to face that and to share with people on here is so admirable. Your words and insight, along with your own personal experiences are hugely insightful and helpful. I thank you!

  • @leungkamhong
    @leungkamhong Рік тому +4

    ♥🙏Thank you Dr. Kim Sage for this brilliant and most helpful video that I have just watched a few times to help promote my understanding and memory of the ’15 Signs’ for my future reference.
    Thank you ‘BFNLEO’ also for the most kind & helpful sharing of the list of the ’15 Signs’ that I have just used as the framework for the preparation of my ‘Study Notes’ - & adding the ‘Timestamps’- which I am hereby sharing that hopefully may help others to benefit from Kim’s hard-earned wisdom & extraordinary kindness.
    1. Hyper Vigilance (03:00)
    Living in a highly wired state on constant alert - always tirelessly looking out for dangers
    Polyvagal Theory (Dorsal Vagal Responses (Flight, Flight, Freeze & Fawn) & Continual scanning state of ‘Hyper-Vigilance’
    2. Self-Isolating (08:42)
    3. Repetitive Toxic Relational Patterns (09:48)
    4. Chronic Health Issues (10:50)
    e.g. Poor Sleep Hygiene - Staying up late at night that is perceived as the only time of SAFETY
    5. Chronic Mental Health Issues (11:44)
    6. Dissociation (13:21)
    A mal-adaptive response to survive the ‘un-survivable’ * to escape painful FEELINGs - via AVOIDANCE, DENIAL, Spacing Out, Day-Dreaming, Fantasies, etc.
    7. Depersonalization (14:27)
    Don’t feel that one is within one’s body
    (Kam’s note : What Gabor Mate said about separation of ‘AUTHENTIC SELF’ from ‘BODY’ & ‘FEELINGs’ re ACEs)
    8. Derealization (14:32)
    One does not feel that things are real and one is in a surreal state or just hovering over them ….
    9. Perfectionism / Harsh Inner Critic (14:50)
    Busyness, Workaholic, … Never feeling good enough, …..
    Recommendation: Pete Walker’s Book: “Complex PTSD - From Surviving To Thriving”
    Amazon Books Web Link : www.amazon.co.uk/Complex-PTSD-Surviving-RECOVERING-CHILDHOOD/dp/1492871842/ref=sr_1_1/
    10. Toxic Shame (15:35)
    A deep-rooted core belief of being ‘UNWORTHY’, ‘UN-LOVABLE’ and never good enough
    11. Living in Survival Mode (16:17)
    12. Feeling Unworthy (17:24)
    Feeling never good enough & must constantly work extremely hard to earn love, acceptance, …
    13. Emotional Flashbacks (18:09)
    Extremely common cause of ANXIETY that is triggered by deep-rooted fear re ACEs
    14. Hyper- Controlling (20:30)
    A belief & strong urge to avoid a repeat or perpetuating old childhood traumas with the illusion that one must always have extremely high standards & control EVERYTHING - An extreme hyper-compensation response for the absolute lack of control in one’s Toxic & Traumatising Childhood.
    15. Chronic Distress & Never Feeling Safe (22:38)
    A deep-rooted ‘Distrust of People’ - A core belief that people are always ‘unsafe’ and cannot be trusted but ironically often repetitively choose ‘Unsafe Partners’ (e.g. Narcissists) that lead to reliving traumatic ACEs.

    • @shariwheeler3575
      @shariwheeler3575 Рік тому

      Thank you for taking the time to put this summary together - with links and time stamps, no
      less❣️

  • @annrenee3265
    @annrenee3265 Рік тому +1

    Great analysis & explanations here. So much of this is cultural. Bullying blaming shaming is endemic in our society. Childhood trauma our parents childhood trauma.. it goes back. Aren't we all traumatised to a lesser or greater degree?

  • @andi.grke00
    @andi.grke00 Рік тому +3

    Thanks for your calming and comforting voice.