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Former-Member
Not applicable

My new-ish diagnosis.

In the past 6 months I was referred to yet another psychiatrist in attempt to find me appropriate treatment, as my GP and I have spent the past almost 7 years failing to do so because of how the mental health system works. 

 

As a back story, I was raised from birth to 18 in various types of high and specialist needs foster care settings, and I have been a mental health "patient" or consumer since I was about 3 years old. I will be 25 in June. As a young child, my first diagnosis was classic reactive attachment disorder and that remained to be my primary and most longstanding diagnosis until I aged out of foster care. 

 

Alongside that diagnosis, at 10 years old I was diagnosed with major depressive disorder and even though it had never been an official label until recently, it was readily known and accepted that I have complex PTSD.

 

When I was 12, I was diagnosed with derealisation-depersonalisation disorder and my eating disorder (now known as OSFED)

 

Up until age 13, I received public mental health services provided by a specific organisation that specialises in foster children with extreme mental health issues that reside from prolonged trauma. 

 

At 13, I was transferred to the local CYMHS and remained their patient until I was at the cut off transitional age. As adolescence progressed, it was discussed regularly in stakeholder meetings that complex PTSD is basically just a "grown up" version of reactive attachment disorder, but as my mental health continued to be observed and to get worse, also how both of those can in some cases unfortunately lead an older teen or young adult to have a co-morbid personality disorder. 

 

By the time I was being prepared to transition to adult community MH services, it was well established that my likely prognosis as I started and continued young adulthood is that I would be one of those people who have a personality disorder, based on the severity and pervasive nature of my baseline mental health issues and the degree of treatment resistance I had. 

 

Adult community MH services declined to take me on as a client because of that, and ever since I have struggled to find any kind of mental health services that last, if I am not automatically rejected. My GP works at a Headspace clinic, but I am well and truly beyond their capacity as far as mental healthcare is concerned. 

 

I have spoken to countless psychologists, social workers, mental health OTs and psychiatrists since, and the local acute care team and I have a disgusting reputation and relationshit, yes shit, with each other, as a result of me having been mentally ill for so long and all of the long term hospital stays I had as an adolescent. They are extremely rude and disrespectful to me and I have ceased any and all contact with them. 

 

My GP has been left on her own to "manage" me, which is more than a GP should be expected to do. I have a lot of complexities, both mental health related and not. All of my mental illnesses are very severe and they don't respond to any kind of treatment. 

 

As noted, about 6 months ago I was sent back to the local gender psychiatrist who is in charge of all the psych clearances for medical transition for trans people. I was looking for his assistance to have a referral sent to the new service at the local public university hospital to have my reproductive organs removed so I can legally fix my birth certificate. That's a whole other story, though. 

 

Generally, he does not actually treat co-morbid mental illness in his trans patients. However, he can and often does make diagnoses and treatment recommendations as part of the holistic gender dysphoria/gender incongruence and overall trans mental health assessment. He does that because he believes it is important to not treat gender dysphoria, gender incongruence and trans people as a whole as mental health problems. He's just there because that is what the standards of care require. 

 

I spent almost 4 years with him during my teens, because at the time, teens were not allowed to medically transition in my state without family court approval, and when I went to have my Gillick competence tested, the family court declined because of me being under the chief exec of child safety's guardianship and not having a supportive environment or carers. That has done a lot of damage to my life, but is another story of its own. 

 

So he knows my case very well and worked alongside CYMHS for that time until I was 18 and he could give me the letter for testosterone therapy. I am very grateful for his existence, and the fact he had so little say in my care and so little ability to do anything for me for such a long time only increases my level of appreciation towards his humbleness. 

 

This last time, he told me that CYMHS was correct, and unfortunately I have become one of those complex trauma survivors with both a diagnosis of complex PTSD and personality disorder. He showed me the electronic version of ICD-11, which is the only medical text that recognises complex PTSD as a valid condition, and he went over the criteria for it to explain his diagnosis. 

 

Then he told me why it is inadequate in my case and did the same for going over the diagnosis of personality disorder. He explained why he gave me the specific diagnosis he did, which is not one of the standard personality disorders, but rather a severe personality disorder based on specific maladaptive and dysfunctional personality traits. 

 

He also went over the criteria and description for each of those individually and made sure I understood why he had come to that conclusion. He answered all my questions as far as "are you sure that isn't just my Asperger's or just part of complex PTSD?" was concerned. 

 

He also said this is why you have been treated so badly and with such a high degree of stigma and disrespect from services and professionals. This is why the mental health system doesn't work for you. And for the first time in all my years of being a mental health consumer, I was not being lied to and things were taken seriously and to account, for the first time, I was told it is not my fault that I developed and have these problems, I have them for a reason and as depressing as it may be to accept that having gone through what you have leads to this for others, it is not theirs to live with or make any judgements about, or to claim they understand. 

 

I am glad that I was told the truth because it gives me the power to be educated and properly informed, and the right and freedom to understand why I am the way I am, regardless of if other people approve or not. 

 

Yes, I have a personality disorder, and no I am not like the stereotypes. No, there is not something wrong with me, no I am not a bad person, and no, I am no longer ashamed of having such a diagnosis. I have functioning problems, but I as a whole am not dysfunctional, I function in ways that are to be expected when you come from where I have come from. 

 

I understand, but do not agree with why I am not taken seriously and why I am treated like a waste of resources. I deal with chronic risk every day of my life and have for so long that I have no memory of not doing so. 

 

I accept who I am and what contributes to it, even if others do not and find me disturbing. I am the one who experienced what I have, and still experiences what I do, and I do not need anyone else to believe me because I know what the truth is and isn't. 

 

Sure, I have what others refer to as an ugly and too hard basket diagnosis. All I can say to that is that is what you get when your existence has been ugly and almost impossible to continue. 

 

I think "is this even an illness, or is it an injury" a lot of the time. I think it is more an injury than a legitimate illness in my case, but it is what it is regardless. I know I am far from the only one, even if it is made out to look that way. 

 

Whilst I despise existing on my best days and would rather not remember what was done to me to force me to be alive on my worst, and whilst I morally disagree with forced survival with every fibre of my being, I am still here and whilst I think that sentiment that it is a good thing is a pile of shit, and disrespectful towards my lived experience, I am here so it must count for something, somehow. 

 

 

84 REPLIES 84

Re: My new-ish diagnosis.

Hey @Former-Member I just wanted to you to know I think you are brave and you are not alone
Former-Member
Not applicable

Re: My new-ish diagnosis.

Thanks I guess, but I don't care about being alone, I would rather be alone actually. Being alone is not an issue for me. 

Former-Member
Not applicable

Re: My new-ish diagnosis.

Anyone else experience what I have after their diagnosis, where it was just like "too little, too late" and "I already know this information"? I read all the time about how receiving a diagnosis finally can almost be carthartic, or at least of some benefit. But for me, it is really just a reminder that no one who was supposed to raise me and actually care did. 

 

Like no shit Sherlock, of course I am mentally challenged, and of course there are major gaps in various parts of my development, anyone can put 2 and 2 together to make 4. Like these types of diagnoses are just par for the course. 

 

And part of the reason why they are so horrible is because they wouldn't be there without those reasons and people who basically created them. Like I am the result of some morbid and FUBAR experiment, which when you look back on the type of systemic and all kinds of other abuse and neglect I have endured, isn't that far from the truth. 

 

The disorder itself, or whatever you want to call it, that, to me is just whatever. Its everything else on the outside that is the problem, incuding how people expect me to be disturbed by it and treat me like I lack self-awareness and insight because I'm not and can discuss my history as if it is just a normal thang. 

 

Well, it was and so is the fact I am left this way because of it, and they always have been. You can't understand unless you have been where I have. You can't know what it is like to have things like that normalised. So don't act like you can or like I'm the fool for not responding how you expect. 

 

That includes professionals, who always seem to expect me to be some completely wild and almost feral person with no impulse control and major anger problems that are externalised. Like "the typical borderline" so they say. That's just rude and ignorant. First, that isn't even my diagnosis, and second borderline personality disorder comes in a very large variety of presentations just like all personality disorders do. 

 

You don't have to be that way to have a real problem. My personality disorder is not like that, doesn't mean I don't have one. I could write a novel about the stigma and misconceptions about having a personality disorder, but I'll spare everyone the digusting treatment details, they probably aren't allowed here anyways. 

 

Former-Member
Not applicable

Re: My new-ish diagnosis.

And BPD isn't the only personality disorder. I am sick of being undermined because of the idea that it is. Anyways, rant over. 

Former-Member
Not applicable

Re: My new-ish diagnosis.

OK then. Crickets are fine too. 

Former-Member
Not applicable

Re: My new-ish diagnosis.

So much for this being a place of acceptance, help, support and connection.

 

 

Re: My new-ish diagnosis.

@Former-Member I'm sorry I only saw your post now. I hope that what ever comes for your future goes well.

Re: My new-ish diagnosis.

Hey there @Former-Member, 

 

I'm sorry to hear that the forums haven't felt like a supportive experience for you. If you would like to work with the forums team around this, please email team@saneforums.org so we can try to assist you to use the forums in a way that supports you and the community. 

Take good care of yourself, 

Tortoiseshell 

Former-Member
Not applicable

Re: My new-ish diagnosis.

@Tortoiseshell After some thought, I have decided to stay, however at least for the time being, I won't be asking for my own peer support. I will be here to provide it in areas I have the knowledge, and so long as it is appropriate. Thanks, BeenThereDoneIt. 

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