Welcome to Stress Guide | StressCrazy.Com
Stress Buster Article
. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.
You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.
Understanding Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
from:Posttraumatic stress disorder is a mental illness that has gained a lot of press since the Vietnam War. Despite the press, however, many people do not realize what this condition is and how many lives it can and does impact.
Posttraumatic stress disorder is one of several anxiety disorders. This particular condition is widely associated with military personnel who have seen live-action combat. It is, however, an equal opportunity offender and can sideline the lives of anyone who has undergone extreme trauma.
Who Gets Posttraumatic Stress?
This particular condition can strike men, women and children equally. It is characteristically found in people who have experienced and lived through a very serious event, such as combat, sexual abuse, serious accidents, natural disasters and even terrorist attacks.
What Are The Symptoms?
During an extreme event, such as a tornado or hot-fire battle, it is normal for people to feel very frightened, stressed, angry and even confused. This is very normal and quite expected. If the feelings persist beyond the traumatic event, posttraumatic stress disorder might have developed. Generally, if the feelings last for more than four weeks or cause extreme interference with life, this condition could be present. Other symptoms that characterize this condition include:
• Reliving the trauma. Many sufferers of posttraumatic stress disorder relive the events that caused them the trauma over and over again. Called a flashback, this can be a very real reliving to the person who has this condition. A soldier, for example, might think he is back in combat. A rape victim might feel as if the attack is happening again, in real time.
• Avoidance of triggers. People with this condition try to avoid all potential triggers at any cost. This can include watching movies related to the subject, going to places that remind them of the location of the trauma and so on.
• Numbness. It is not at all uncommon for people with posttraumatic stress disorder to have a difficult time feeling normal, healthy emotions.
• High tension. Sometimes sufferers live in a state of high arousal, always waiting for the next incident.
• Refusal to be away from loved ones. Children, in particular, express this symptom. After a severe event, they might cling to parents and refuse to be out of their sight. This can persist for a long time after the actual incident.
Posttraumatic stress disorder is a very serious condition that can sidetrack a life indefinitely. Fortunately, many people who develop the condition can and do overcome it over time. Typically, some form of therapy is needed to help a person work through the trauma and pick up the pieces of life.
Stress Buster Specific links
Looking For Stress Buster
- Let us help you find Stress Buster and more!
-- http://www.priceshopper.us/
Top-chart Ringtone!
- Free music download with only $9.99/month
-- http://www.ringtonetimes.com/
Stress Buster News
Stress buster for seniors - Battle Creek Enquirer
Seniors sometimes struggle to keep their checkbook balanced; plus insurance paperwork often adds to their distress. Assistance is now available through a local nonprofit organization that provides a trained and bonded staff member to help solve these ...
Read more...What We Don't Know - Wired
How did life begin? What's the universe made of? Why do we sleep? 42 * of the biggest questions in science. * OK, hitchhikers, you're right. This package contains only 40 great questions about life, the universe and everything. Got two more of your ...
Read more...Not all customers are good customers: Know when to let go - Inside Indiana Business
There's no way I can afford to lose my largest customer. Many of us have said the same. But in the larger picture, many of us can, and should, fire customers—especially ones that demand constant attention and end up costing us money. A little ...
Read more...Group raises awareness about schizophrenia - La Jolla
Participants in the Walk for Mind of America sponsored by the National Alliance on Mental Illness raised money for programs that increase mental health recovery and reduce the stigma of mental illness. A recent report by the National Alliance on ...
Read more...Letters to the Editor Aug. 20 - Record-Courier
I would like to express my heartfelt thanks to all those who either helped directly or supported me by word or vote in the recent election. The list of those who worked actively on my campaign is much too long to print here, and I’m reluctant to ...
Read more...

