- Child abuse, neglect, or abandonment
- Torture
- Slavery
- Domestic violence
- Genocide
- Childhood soldiering
- caused by repeated, inescapable, ongoing series of traumatic events over the long-term. The abuse may occur systematically (ie versus as a single, well defined event with a start, middle and end point). This is particularly the case with interpersonal relationships in which the sufferer feels disempowered and their sense of security is jeopardized. Offensive behavior is very personally directed against the sufferer. Needless to say, key terms include disempowerment, unsafety.
- The events may collectively create a life with a pattern of trauma like a rape at age a and then at age b, witnessing a murder at age c, being in a life-threatening accident at age d and then experiencing continuous abuse at work. (Many people only experience 1 event and even if they experience multiple events, they are usually able to fully recover from the first before others occur).
- People with daily activities that are potentially life threatening or otherwise dangerous may not only experience their own suffering but even their children who fear for the safety and life of their loved one each time they leave home. The children may have panic attacks, especially if the loved one has already had a real event.
- People who have already had major health issues that involve numerous traumatic events scares that can recur can suffer. For instance, during the course of treating an illness; patients might have relapses, medications might provoke bad reactions, the patient and caregivers may make mistakes and so on.
- typically occurs in childhood (a time of greatest vulnerability, especially if without a support system)
- usually more intense than PTSD
- often associated with oppression, racism, subsequent chronic mental and physical health issues like serious anxiety disorders, depression disorders, dissociative disorders, fibromyalgia, diabetes, heart disease, a compromised immune system, feeling intensely separate from others, digestive problems, perfectionism, limerence, addiction (to substances to numb and regulate negative emotions). There is greater functional impairment than in the case of PTSD. The brain structure begins to change because people suffering ongoing feelings of disempowerment lose hope.
- caused by one-off traumatic event like an accident, a terrorist attack, being raped as a one-off incident (ie versus repeated rape over several years, as by a primary caregiver)
- can occur at any stage in life
- usually milder than CPTSD
In addition to all of the core symptoms of PTSD (re-experiencing, avoidance, and hyperarousal), C-PTSD symptoms generally also include the following to a life-altering extent. (See video below about re-experiencing)
- Negative self-view, aka cognitive distortions, maladaptive thoughts, errors in thinking or irrational thoughts refer to very unpleasant thoughts that are extreme and arguably inconsistent with reality. As a result, such negative thoughts can negatively influence mood and lead to unhealthy behaviors (like isolation and other forms of avoidance because solitude is attractive over having to deal the dangers inherent in dealing with others). When child abuse CPTSD sufferers experienced such complete defenselessness and powerlessness, it is no wonder they feel like this.
- When one views him or herself negatively, their thoughts might be of helpless, hopelessness, guilt, or shame, feeling unlovable, feeling alien from others
- Constantly feels unsafe or a heightened preoccupation with safety. This is coupled with fears of the potential occurrence of absolute catastrophes. Tendency to create a routine that is planned to manage every detail with multiple backup plans to safeguard against adversity.
- Dissociative disorders and detachment from one's own experiences (emotions, health, etc). While these phenomena occur with PTSD, the incidence is much greater among those with c-PTSD. Consider the fact the PTSD symptom re-experiencing (aka intrusions) involves the instantaneous 'fronting' of a fragmented part of one's past self wanting to protect the main person. Consequently, complex trauma provides far more opportunities of this type of fragmentation to occur. Triggers can make a person disconnect from themselves (depersonalization) and the world around them (derealization) or some other form of dissociation. Triggers can make a person even forget their trauma (dissociative amnesia).
- A child who was repeatedly raped by primary caregivers and community members recognizing that child's vulnerability over extended periods is more likely to dissociate in order to survive daily life (ie in comparison with someone who was raped once by strangers or acquaintance but had support from family, friends and the justice system).
- numbness, ignoring or denial of illness which imitates lacking concern of authority figures during the abuse and their corresponding response to survive.
- Nervous system dysregulation. While a healthy nervous system is able to calm down shortly after some stress-inducing trigger, an unhealthy nervous system has a very delayed recovery period. See video on nervous system dysregulation.
- Two people are startled by something. Both experience abnormal breathing in the moment. While the one with a healthy nervous recovers normal breathing and reverts to an overall state of calm within seconds or minutes at most, the person with an unhealth nervous system continues to demonstrate signs of anxiety for hours or even days.
- Difficulty controlling emotions. Triggers can commonly provoke sufferers to lose control over their emotions in one of several ways, like explosive anger, persistent sadness, depression, and suicidal thoughts.
- Having been blamed in an overly harsh way for extended periods, always fearful of being targeted for ill treatment, left to fend for oneself as a child and so on, C-PTSD sufferers may handle conflict with inappropriate emotions and levels of emotion. The reactions may appear excessively aggressive to others.
- Long term concentration camp survivors may have excessively loud, anxious reactions if someone hits them unexpectedly from behind many years afterwards.
- Difficulty with trust in relationships. Relationships may suffer due to difficulties trusting others and a negative self-view. A sufferer may avoid relationships or develop unhealthy relationships because that is what they knew in the past.
- Major change in world view, aka 'loss of a system of meanings'. This can include losing one's core beliefs, values, religious faith, or hope in the world and other people. One's world view may become negative.
- The impression of how the world works and the lack of understanding of the sufferer's circumstances can lead sufferers to feel that there is no place in the world for them, that they do not fit in anywhere.
- You may no longer feel capable of overcoming obstacles but as if your hands are tied behind your back by external forces, like a racist judicial system, a corrupt authority figures and so on.
- Sufferers are more observant and aware of the potentially threatening stimuli in the world than the average person.
- EMDR is used for the reintegration specifically.
- Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT)
- C-PTSD sufferers tend to be avoidant of relationships while borderline personality disordered persons are more concerned with abandonment issues.
- C-PTSD sufferers tend to have a distorted sense of self while BPD sufferers have trouble with a sense of identity, something different.
- C-PTSD sufferers are less likely to be suicidal while suicide has a stronger likelihood.
- C-PTSD sufferers have an extremely strong likelihood of significant childhood trauma while this is hardly the case with BPD sufferers.
- Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and its key symptoms (re-experiencing, avoidance, and hyperarousal)
- Extreme empaths can inadvertently retraumatize themselves and cause C-PTSD
- Re-experiencing video: 'When Dissociation Gets Physical' by CTAD Clinic (Dr Mike Lloyd)
- Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (C-PTSD)
- Social psychology
- Food for thought