October is wise to be wary. Healthy groups are out there for sure, I've known them, but you really have to watch and wait before you wade in.
Thanks, Storm. ((((hugs))))
I am not against sharing with others, but as you say, I would be very wary. I don't go out much, and I don't have many friends in contact at present, but the ones I do have are those people who are not embroiled in dysfunctional lives, or if they are, their dysfunction is not the same as mine.
I am not sure it would be healthy for me to spend too much time with others in my own kind of position, whether ptsd or anything else. I would start to think the whole world lives as I do, and that is not true.
If I go to see a friend, I prefer to talk about their family, or about theology, or world politics, or poverty, or gardening. Anything 'normal'.
When I used to go to church, one of the lay people there was convinced that if only I met a 'friend' of hers, who had an abusive, alcoholic husband, it would help both her and me. I declined several times, because I did not feel strong enough to carry this friend, (I tend to listen and support, and I did not have any listening left.

) So I kept saying no, then one time I was at church and the lay reader rushed over to say this friend was present, and would I say hello. That time I had to be rather more assertive in saying no.

But I did it. Then I ran.
It may be different for C, and for her sake I will try the alateen meetings with her. But I think the rest might not be for me. Or not yet, perhaps. If the leader of the major alcohol rehab project in this town, a very respected project, can blame me in this way, anyone can. And I am not going to let them get the chance. (This is a normal response of a ptsd sufferer; withdrawal/avoidance following traumatisation, to prevent further damage, possibly constituting retraumatisation. Enough of this is how you develop social phobia/agoraphobia.)
