Charleston: 3 WAYS TO TELL IF SOMEONE CARES FOR YOU
It’s difficult to know if someone cares for you in Charleston when you are dealing with PTSD in relationships.
If you have experienced trauma, some people just want to sit and hear your horror stories. Others want fodder for the gossip machine.
How PTSD Affects Daily Life in Charleston.
How PTSD Affects Daily Life in Charleston. When a man’s wife becomes his ‘caregiver,’ the natural order of marriage is destroyed. If a woman acts like your mother, it is impossible to be intimate with her.
PTSD Book for Veterans and Trauma Sufferers in Charleston
#DEALWITHIT is a PTSD self-help book for veterans, police and trauma sufferers in Charleston
Tips for Living with PTSD in Charleston
Tips for Living with PTSD in Charleston.
What Happens when PTSD is Triggered in Charleston
What Happens when PTSD is triggered in Charleston?
4 Things to Help with Trauma Flashbacks of Memories in Charleston
Charleston Lack of sleep will make you cranky and out of sorts. It will affect your memory, may lead to accidents, weaken your immune system and even make you fat!
Here are 4 simple things I do when I am struggling with PTSD nightmares and flashbacks.
PTSD Self-Care; Post Traumatic Stress Self-Care in Charleston
I looked out over the crowd in Charleston, a mixture of both veterans and nonmilitary personnel. I asked What About Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and Self Care? The room was quiet.
4 THINGS TO HELP WITH PTSD / CPTSD FLASHBACKS AND NIGHTMARES IN Charleston
Charleston Lack of sleep will make you cranky and out of sorts. It will affect your memory, may lead to accidents, weaken you immune system and even make you fat!
Here are 4 simple things I do when I am struggling with PTSD nightmares and flashbacks.
PTSD SELF HELP BOOK Charleston
Charleston: I think “#dealwithit – living well with PTSD” is a book for anyone who has lost it all. If you have been shot at, faced with sudden loss, blown up, screwed over (or in my case, screwed), this book is for you. I like to think of it as duct tape for the soul.” —Dr. John A. King