No therapy will remove memories. No therapy will make them tolerable. These solutions are inside the person. This is how we got the term PTSD. It defines those that cannot control the irreversible memories. I use the "roll top desk" method. My life is stored in a roll top desk. I can open the desk and select whichever small drawer that I want. My hard times are stored in those drawers. I can open the drawer and review the contents until it becomes disturbing, then I close the drawer, to be reviewed at a later time when I can control it. The contents of these drawers never go away. They are simply properly stored and secured. Each drawer is labeled so there's no surprise. That's a key element. No surprise. My desk has many drawers. They contribute to who I am rather than take away from that person.
No therapy will remove memories. No therapy will make them tolerable. These solutions are inside the person. This is how we got the term PTSD. It defines those that cannot control the irreversible memories. I use the "roll top desk" method. My life is stored in a roll top desk. I can open the desk and select whichever small drawer that I want. My hard times are stored in those drawers. I can open the drawer and review the contents until it becomes disturbing, then I close the drawer, to be reviewed at a later time when I can control it. The contents of these drawers never go away. They are simply properly stored and secured. Each drawer is labeled so there's no surprise. That's a key element. No surprise. My desk has many drawers. They contribute to who I am rather than take away from that person.
I do a little pro bono work with Vietnam Vets with PTSD and some of the hard cases can be a bit hostile and yell at me asking how I think I would know what it was like.
I pull my jacket back and show my ribbon bar on my shirt and yell back at them 'because I was there too', generally gets me on a good footing with them when they realise I do know what they are going through and we can get to work.
Sounds rough but it works as they hate text book experts, generally quite a friendly session after that.
I use the roll top desk with some but doesn't work for everyone, tell some to buy a dog but make sure it is a rotweiler and when you feel angry you can kick it but be aware that it will bite back and you will be worse off, gives them something to think about and approach the problem rationally when you imagine a leg full of teeth.
No two are the same of course.
Good story. I plan ahead and try to avoid being trapped by traffic. In your situation you sometimes find yourself in the middle of it before any prevention action can be taken.
I'm sure you've noticed this also, but, notice how cars tend to run in packs??? Something about human nature triggers that I guess......
I'm 3 miles East of the Eagleville exit.
Definitely human nature to do things like that. I've noticed in my 30+ years of driving (with tons of metro freeways and lots of long distance interstates) that same phenomenon. Many times I've followed someone who is cruising along in the left lane and doing like 5 over the posted when nobody is around them. But they come to another car or truck in the right lane and they end up slowed down and speed matching for quite a while. If/when they get past they rocket back up to the original speed until they get to another car. I don't understand the reason but it happens.
The left lane nazis (or speed-matchers as I call them) that drive alongside another vehicle for miles while traffic stacks up are indeed some of the worst people on earth. Regardless of whether their reasoning is selfish, pseudo-policing, or just ignorance, I wish them all a fiery and horrible demise. My philosophy for driving has always been to be courteous to others and not impede them, regardless of whether they are driving faster or slower than me. I'll stay out of their way if they stay out of mine. But my courteous nature ends when they demonstrate they aren't worthy of it.
Rob
If you ride with them an oft heard comment is "I'm doing the speed limit, they don't need to pass"... completely disregarding another law which states "Keep right except to pass." One law we have here which would be hard to enforce, but good to be on the books; Except when passing on the right is permitted, the operator of passed vehicle: B. May not increase speed until completely overtaken by the passing vehicle"Well stated. I totally agree.
I would add, if those people don't know they are doing that then they should not be driving!!!!