I have anxiety. Simple. Millions of people do. Millions of people are worse off than I am. Millions of people have cancer, one of my oldest and dearest friend's sons died at 13, my best friend of 15 years has a son with severe autism who tries to hurt himself and others on a regular basis, and I have anxiety, a lot of it....
I can remember a time when I didn't have anxiety. Call it my halcyon period. I was about 5 when it all changed. The first time I remember paralyzing fear was the week before I entered Kindergarten. My family was involved in a car accident. We had just gone to Sonic, one of the only local fast food places in the late 1970's in our area. We were out for a leisurely drive; when B-A-M we were t-boned by a car driven by hippies. They say no one remembers an event the same way, and that the imprint of the event sears itself into our brain in the way we perceive it, and not necessarily the way it happened. My dad and I have very different recollections of the event, and my mom was injured in the accident and doesn't remember anything at all.
So here is my version of events. It was late summer 1978, and in the 70's no one cared where the kids were in the car. I was standing in the front seat between my parents eating french fries when the accident happened. I was thrown somehow from the front seat to the backseat. My mom flew forward and hit the steel dashboard of the car. When her head came back she was bleeding from her nose and mouth. My dad had jumped out of the car and ran to check on my mom. Simultaneously a beautiful young woman with long blonde hair opened the back door of the drivers side of the car. She had a soft lilting voice and in a sing-song manner said very clearly to me, "I'm sorry we killed your mommy." At that moment I believed my mom was dead. I remember her hippy eyes were huge and she reached her hand out to me as if to take me by the hand and out of the car. The man with her pulled her away and I remember her outstretched hand getting further and further from the car. Emergency vehicles arrived and my dad was talking to people and no one talked to me. I was in the car and my mom was silently bleeding in the front seat inches from me quiet...she was after all dead.
In what seemed to be hours a nice lady took me to her house and I watched my mom and dad get into an ambulance. No one told me where either of them were going and no one said anything about my mom being obviously dead. The lady was nice she had a traditional house with a piano and gave me cookies. I sat in her formal living room for days in my 5 year old head. Where was my dad? Would I ever see my mom's body again? Would they clean the blood off her face? Where was my dad? Who were these people with the cookies and piano? Where was my daddy? .........I wanted my daddy.
Fear, panic, paranoia; whatever you want to call it set in for the first time. I was too scared and numb to cry. How could I live without my mom? Where was my daddy? NEVER would he let me down. Was he gone too? Had something happened to him too? Where was he? Surely he hadn't abandoned me with the cookie lady.
Days later in my mind my dad walked through the cookie ladies door. I ran to him and he picked me up, thanked the lady and carried me outside to my uncle's car. Unbelievably to me there sat in the passenger seat my mom! She was ALIVE! She had massive bruises on her face and bandages on her head, but she was talking and alive. She seemed happy to see me.
Years later I would be diagnosed with a myriad of anxiety disorders, but this one has the distinct honor of being the first......PTSD.
I wasn't in Vietnam or the Gulf War, but my head is forever filled with landmines and traps of my own making, I started building these walls at 5, and now at 41 they are insurmountably high in most places.
The Pennsylvania School of Psychiatry website says this about PTSD.
(https://www.med.upenn.edu/ctsa/ptsd_symptoms.html)
Common Symptoms:
Intrusion: Recurrent recollections of the event
Dreams, intrusive memories, and exaggerated emotional and physical reactions to events that remind person of trauma
Numbing: Emotional distancing from surrounding people and events
Depression, loss of interest in activities, reduced ability to feel emotions (particularly emotions of intimacy, tenderness, or sexuality), irritability, hopelessness
Avoidance: Fear and avoidance behavior
Fear and avoidance of people, places, thoughts, or activities associated with the trauma, development of anxiety disorders (GAD, panic, specific and social phobias)
Arousal: Agitated state of constant wakefulness and alertness
Hypervigilance, sleep disturbances, difficulty concentrating
http://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/topics/post-traumatic-stress-disorder-ptsd/index.shtml