PTSD, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and NLP

What is Post Traumatic Stress Disorder?

Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (or simply PTSD) is categorized as an anxiety disorder. PTSD develops'post-trauma' which means the individual was exposed to life-threatening and extremely frightening incidents or situations both natural and man-made. While people are experiencing trauma long before the word was coined, PTSD was only recognized as a diagnosis in 1980. NLP has gained credibility as an effective therapy for PTSD as more and more people have benefited from it. When you have PTSD, your brain still continues reacting with nervousness even when the original trauma is over. PTSD is a delayed reaction by which the symptoms may manifest themselves after months of experiencing or witnessing the traumatic event. NLP helps the patients to better understand the changes that they may experience and to interpret their experiences in a positive manner.

Is it fatal?

A person with PTSD suffers both physiologically and Psychological. This means that the brain activities and functions are being altered somehow. PTSD sufferers are likely to become delicately sensitive even to usual life experiences. Nonetheless, sufferers tend to overlook the physiological effects as they are often mistaken as physical issues like headaches or dizziness. NLP therapists are able to provide help to the patients in a manner that they learn to change their brains' physiology back to normal. Psychologically, PTSD sufferers are likely to develop self-destructive behaviors, eating disorders and psychoses. NLP therapists are skilled in diagnosing and helping with the symptoms of destructive behaviors or other disorders.

Is it age related?

Anybody who is exposed to a traumatic event may develop PTSD, and so it is not really developed with age. Nevertheless, what you have experienced earlier in your life may affect your ability to cope with traumatic events in the future. People who experienced traumatic event in childhood are more likely to develop PTSD when an equally terrifying event or incident happens again. Thus, children and adolescent who experienced or had witnessed a traumatic event are at more risk of developing PTSD when they are older.

Is it gender related?

While more men experience traumatic events in their lifetime, women are twice as likely to develop PTSD. There have been incidences where men in combat suffer from PTSD after they return. NLP therapists use can use a gender specific therapy to help men and women as the reasons for PTSD may vary between them. While women are not exposed to these types of violence, however, women are more likely to experience sexual assault like rape and or suffer from domestic violence which explains the prevalence of PTSD among them. Further, women almost always describe their experience as a perceived life threat and extreme fright. On the other hand, women are more likely to cope with PTSD than their male counterpart. Women report about the disorder as an anxiety disorder but men commonly associate the disorder with external factors like substance or alcohol abuse. NLP techniques can help in better understanding reasons for the symptoms and hence in a better treatment.

Is it transmittable?

PTSD is very subjective since it relates to a specific life experience either experienced or witnessed by a person. However, PTSD may also develop without actually experiencing or witnessing any life threatening event. When a family member is harmed, for instance, another family member may develop PTSD. There are people who suffer from PTSD after watching movies or news programs which contain visual presentations of a terrifying event. NLP therapists need to explore the underlying causes as well as vulnerabilities in order to develop an accurate NLP approach for individual patients. PTSD is effectively treated by the help of NLP. NLP training enables the victim to rethink and readjust his mental coding about the traumatic event and to view it in a less hurtful manner. NLP therapy encourages the victim to tap into his inherent strengths and to face the traumatic event in a manner that renders it harmless.

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