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The PTS Cup Summary

The reason is actually rather easy, and better to show than commonly describe more readily those with PTSD have a tendency to get mad quicker, and faster than others at small PTSD stressors represented stupid things.

I want to clarify this, and you'll better comprehend the difference to those with PTSD, and those without.

Whether you realise it or not, everybody has this thing called "good stress" in their life, which consists of such things as getting out of bed, day to day jobs, going to work, cooking dinner, etc etc. No problems with that one.

The clear, when something goes wrong, or is actually PTSD cup hindering you, is normally classified as "bad stress", which consists such things as paying invoices, cash, relationships, getting fired from your own job, etc etc etc. Poor anxiety is got by everybody at some stage in their day; it just is dependent upon the sum, along with the person themself.

As you can observe, an individual that is normal is represented by Cup 2, and with both bad and good stress. They still have plenty of room inside their cup without overflowing (bursting, fury, wrath, etc etc). Before being pushed on the edge, a normal man has the ability to take a lot of pressure within their everyday life.

The issue with that is that we have the same amount of good and bad pressure as everyone else, though we also have this enormous ball of PTSD which features more and our traumas.

As you can see from this cup, with great pressure and PTSD, you actually don't have much room for anything else. You are able to see by the "bad stress" representation near the top of the cup, it's very modest when compared with Cup 2 - thus that is why something so small and insignificant can make someone with PTSD fly off the handle so promptly (fury). A little "bad stress" for a person with PTSD, plus they overflow rather rapidly compared to anyone else.
 
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