Purple♡Hearts 4 Butterflies


This is to be a SAFE Place to Blog, Get Information, Read Stories & Articles, Listen to touching Music Videos, Pray and Share our Inner Discoveries; How we are Renewing our Lives Through God's GRACE AND HEALING Power!


One Day at a Time....One Moment at a Time....
Through Sharing, Praying....and God Perfect Timing....





Tuesday, December 28, 2010

A Dad for Christmas - A Lifetime Movie

A Dad for Christmas [Aka Me and Luke]

Lifetime Movies 1:29:09

Starring:

Christopher Turner and Louise Fletcher. Matt goes to see his newborn son in the hospital only to discover that his girlfriend has already made arrangements for an adoption. With no means to stop it, he takes his son to his grandmother's house

 

Home by Christmas, a Lifetime Movie (Enjoy the movie- it's very empowering for us women you have to start over)

 

 

1:29:06

Starring Linda Hamilton. Dedicated homemaker Julia Bedford's world is rocked by a divorce that leaves her next to nothing. When she hits rock bottom, she decides to begin her comeback and ultimately discovers what is really valuable in life.

 

Monday, December 27, 2010

Don’t Stop Talking about Mental Illness



Don’t Stop Talking about Mental Disorders

December 21st, 2010 /
 http://www.healthyplace.com/blogs/dissociativeliving/2010/12/dont-stop-talking-about-mental-illness/
Near the bottom of the HealthyPlace homepage there’s an audio widget, bordered in 
orange with the header Share Your Mental Health Experience. 
If you have a spare three minutes, please play the clip titled “I Hear A Voice in My Head
” and listen to one woman poignantly illustrate why I write about 
Dissociative Identity Disorder. This woman, like so many others, is struggling in 
isolation with something she doesn’t understand. 
“People act like it’s nothing,” she says. No matter the condition, there will always be 
people who act like it’s nothing. Talking about mental illness, 
publicly and honestly, is the only way I know to ease that kind of invalidation.

Just Talking about Mental Illness Invites Negation

At first I was astonished that smart, educated people would rather believe I’m 
maliciously manipulative than consider that 
Dissociative Identity Disorder is a legitimate psychiatric condition. ‘What is the 
deal with DID?’ I wondered. ‘Why are so many people
 determined to chalk my experiences up to anything but this diagnosis?’ 
Eventually I realized that the pervasive unwillingness to 
acknowledge mental illness isn’t exclusive to DID. I’d wager that anyone 
talking about mental illness has met with people who act like it’s nothing...... 


Because so many psychiatric disorders are extreme manifestations of 
what everyone experiences from time to time, 
it’s easy to see why some people believe mental illness is an inclination 
towards the dramatic or simply a total lack of personal responsibility
Fortunately, converting the non-believers has never been my goal.
When I tell the truth, it is not for the sake of convincing those who do not know it,
 but for the sake of defending those that do. 
- William Blake

Talking about Mental Illness for the Sake of the Mentally ill

I’ve long since realized that debating these attitudes is an exercise in 
futility and an utter waste of my time. Arguing the validity of 
Dissociative Identity Disorder won’t help that woman who hears the 
voice in her head. But what if she searched the web and found 
a blog post from someone else who hears voices and knows how 
distressing that can be? What if she came across just one person 
who didn’t act like what she’s living with is nothing? Instead of invalidated 
and dismissed, she might feel understood and taken seriously. 
That won’t solve her problems, sure. But she might feel less alone with them.


Don’t Stop Talking about Mental Illness
Whether you have Dissociative Identity Disorder or some other mental illness, 
there are people who will "act like it’s nothing", that you are "using it as an excuse to not work, 
or get help, or sympathy". 
That matters little to me than the encouragement
support, and validation so many offer just by sharing their stories. To those people 
I say thank you, and please don’t stop talking about mental illness.

Warning Signs and Impact of Domestic Violence - HealthyPlace

Warning Signs and Impact of Domestic Violence


How do you know if you're being abused? Definition and warning signs of domestic violence plus mental health effects of domestic violence.

What Is Domestic Violence?

Domestic violence is control by one partner over another in a dating, marital or live-in relationship. The means of control include physical, sexual, emotional and economic abuse, threats and isolation.
Survivors face many obstacles in trying to end the abuse in their lives although most are able to…psychological and economic entrapment, physical isolation and lack of social support, religious and cultural values, fear of social judgment, threats and intimidation over custody or separation, immigration status or disabilities and lack of viable alternatives. Increased public, legal and healthcare awareness and improved community resources enable survivors to rebuild their lives.

Who Is Affected by Domestic Violence?

Domestic violence occurs in every culture, country and age group. It affects people from all socioeconomic, educational and religious backgrounds and takes place in same sex as well as heterosexual relationships. Women with fewer resources or greater perceived vulnerability—girls and those experiencing physical orpsychiatric disabilities or living below the poverty line—are at even greater risk for domestic violence and lifetime abuse. Children are also affected by domestic violence, even if they do not witness it directly.

How Do You Know if You Are Being Abused?
Abusers use many ways to isolate, intimidate and control their partners. It starts insidiously and may be difficult to recognize. Early on, your partner may seem attentive, generous and protective in ways that later turn out to be frightening and controlling. Initially the abuse is isolated incidents for which your partner expresses remorse and promises never to do again or rationalizes as being due to stress or caused by something you did or didn’t do.
EARLY WARNING SIGNS OF ABUSE:
  • Quick whirlwind romance
  • Wanting to be with you all the time; tracking what you’re doing and who you’re with
  • Jealousy at any perceived attention to or from others
  • Attempts to isolate you in the guise of loving behavior (You don’t need to work or go to school; we only need each other, criticizing friends/family for not caring about you)
  • Hypersensitivity to perceived slights
  • Quick to blame others for the abuse
  • Pressures you into doing things you aren’t comfortable with (If you really love me, you’ll do this for me)
QUESTIONS TO ASK YOURSELF:
  • Are you ever afraid of your partner?
  • Has your partner ever actually hurt or threatened to hurt you physically or someone you care about?
  • Does your partner ever force you to engage in sexual activities that make you uncomfortable?
  • Do you constantly worry about your partner's moods and change your behavior to deal with them?
  • Does your partner try to control where you go, what you do and who you see?
  • Does your partner constantly accuse you of having affairs?
  • Have you stopped seeing family or friends to avoid your partner's jealousy or anger?
  • Does your partner control your finances?
  • Does he/she threaten to kill him/herself if you leave?
  • Does your partner claim his/her temper is out of control due to alcohol, drugs or because he/she had an abusive childhood?
If you answer yes to some or all of these questions, you could be suffering abuse. Remember you are not to blame and you need not face domestic violence alone.

How Common Is Domestic Violence?

According to a National Violence Against Women Survey, 22 percent of women are physically assaulted by a partner or date during their lifetime and nearly 5.3 million partner victimizations occur each year among U.S. women ages 18 and older, resulting in two million injuries and 1,300 deaths.
  • Nearly 25 percent of women have been raped and/or physically assaulted by an intimate partner during their lives.
  • 15.4 percent of gay men, 11.4 percent of lesbians and 7.7 percent of heterosexual men, are assaulted by a date or intimate partner during their lives.
  • More than 1 million women and 371,000 men are stalked by partners each year.

    What Are the Mental Health Effects of Domestic Violence?

    MENTAL HEALTH EFFECT
    Domestic violence can lead to other common emotional traumas such as depression, anxiety, panic attacks, substance abuse and posttraumatic stress disorder. Abuse can trigger suicide attempts, psychotic episodes, homelessness and slow recovery from mental illness. Children exposed to domestic violence are at risk for developmental problems, psychiatric disorders, school difficulties, aggressive behavior, and low self-esteem. These factors can make it difficult for survivors to mobilize resources. Nonetheless, many domestic violence survivors do not need mental health treatment and many symptoms resolve once they and their children are safe and have support. For others, treatment is in their plan for safety and recovery.

    What You Can Do if You Are Being Abused

    While you cannot stop your partner’s abuse—only he or she can do that—you can find help and support for yourself.
    • Talk with someone you trust: a friend or relative, a neighbor, coworker or religious or spiritual advisor. Tell your physician, nurse, psychiatrist or therapist about the abuse.
    • Call the National Domestic Violence Hotline [1-800-799-SAFE (7233)], your state domestic violence coalition, and/or a local domestic violence agency.
    • Call the police if you are in danger.
    • Remember, you know your situation better than anyone else. Don’t let someone talk you into doing something that isn’t right for you.

    • For more information, please contact:
      American Psychiatric Association (APA) 
      1000 Wilson Blvd., Suite 1825 
      Arlington, VA 22209 
      703-907-7300 
      www.HealthyMinds.org
      National Domestic Violence 
      Hotline: 800-799-SAFE (7233) 
      or 800-787-3224 (TTY) 
      www.ndvh.org
      National Coalition Against Domestic Violence 
      303-839-1852 
      www.ncadv.org
      National Network to End Domestic Violence 
      202-543-5566 
      www.nnedv.org
      The Family Violence Prevention Fund 
      415-252-8900 
      www.endabuse.org
      National Resource Center on Domestic Violence 
      800-537-2238 
      www.nrcdv.org
      The Battered Women’s Justice Project 
      800-903-0111 
      http://www.bwjp.org/
      The Domestic Violence and Mental Health Policy Initiative 
      312-726-7020 
      www.dvmhpi.org
      Rape Abuse and Incest National Network (RAINN) 
      800-656-HOPE 
      www.rainn.org


Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) Overview

Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) Overview

Thorough overview of Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Description of PTSD- PTSD symptoms and causes, treatment for PTSD.

What is Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

It's been called shell shock, battle fatigue, accident neurosis and post rape syndrome. It has often been misunderstood or misdiagnosed, even though the disorder has very specific symptoms that form a definite psychological syndrome.

The disorder is post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and it affects hundreds of thousands of people who have been exposed to violent events such as rape, domestic violence, child abuse, war, accidents, natural disasters and political torture. Psychiatrists estimate that up to one to three percent of the population have clinically diagnosable PTSD. Still more show some symptoms of the disorder. While it was once thought to be a disorder of war veterans who had been involved in heavy combat, researchers now know that PTSD can result from many types of trauma, particularly those that include a threat to life. It afflicts both females and males.

In some cases the symptoms of PTSD disappear with time, while in others they persist for many years. PTSD often occurs with other psychiatric illnesses, such as depression.

Not all people who experience trauma require treatment; some recover with the help of family, friends, a pastor or rabbi. But many do need professional help to successfully recover from the psychological damage that can result from experiencing, witnessing or participating in an overwhelmingly traumatic event.

Although the understanding of post-traumatic stress disorder is based primarily on studies of trauma in adults, PTSD also occurs in children as well. It is known that traumatic occurrences--sexual or physical abuse,loss of parents, the disaster of war--often have a profound impact on the lives of children. In addition to PTSD symptoms, children may develop learning disabilities and problems with attention and memory. They may become anxious or clinging, and may also abuse themselves or others.

PTSD Symptoms

The symptoms of PTSD may initially seem to be part of a normal response to an overwhelming experience. Only if those symptoms persist beyond three months do we speak of them being part of a disorder. Sometimes the disorder surfaces months or even years later. Psychiatrists categorize PTSD's symptoms in three categories: intrusive symptoms, avoidant symptoms, and symptoms of hyperarousal.

Intrusive Symptoms

Often people suffering from PTSD have an episode where the traumatic event "intrudes" into their current life. This can happen in sudden, vivid memories that are accompanied by painful emotions. Sometimes the trauma is "re-experienced." This is called a flashback_a recollection that is so strong that the individual thinks he or she is actually experiencing the trauma again or seeing it unfold before his or her eyes. In traumatized children, this reliving of the trauma often occurs in the form of repetitive play.

At times, the re-experiencing occurs in nightmares. In young children, distressing dreams of the traumatic event may evolve into generalized nightmares of monsters, of rescuing others or of threats to self or others.

At times, the re-experience comes as a sudden, painful onslaught of emotions that seem to have no cause. These emotions are often of grief that brings tears, fear or anger. Individuals say these emotional experiences occur repeatedly, much like memories or dreams about the traumatic event.

Symptoms of Avoidance

Another set of symptoms involves what is called avoidance phenomena. This affects the person's relationships with others, because he or she often avoids close emotional ties with family, colleagues and friends. The person feels numb, has diminished emotions and can complete only routine, mechanical activities. When the symptoms of "re-experiencing" occur, people seem to spend their energies on suppressing the flood of emotions. Often, they are incapable of mustering the necessary energy to respond appropriately to their environment: people who suffer post-traumatic stress disorder frequently say they can't feel emotions, especially toward those to whom they are closest. As the avoidance continues, the person seems to be bored, cold or preoccupied. Family members often feel rebuffed by the person because he or she lacks affection and acts mechanically.

Emotional numbness and diminished interest in significant activities may be difficult concepts to explain to a therapist. This is especially true for children. For this reason, the reports of family members, friends, parents,teachers and other observers are particularly important.

The person with PTSD also avoids situations that are reminders of the traumatic event because the symptoms may worsen when a situation or activity occurs that reminds them of the original trauma. For example, aperson who survived a prisoner-of-war camp might overreact to seeing people wearing uniforms. Over time, people can become so fearful of particular situations that their daily lives are ruled by their attempts to avoid them.

Others--many war veterans, for example--avoid accepting responsibility for others because they think they failed in ensuring the safety of people who did not survive the trauma. Some people also feel guilty because they survived a disaster while others--particularly friends or family--did not. In combat veterans or with survivors of civilian disasters, this guilt may be worse if they witnessed or participated in behavior that was necessary to survival but unacceptable to society. Such guilt can deepen depression as the person begins to look on him or herself as unworthy, a failure, a person who violated his or her pre-disaster values. Children suffering from PTSD may show a marked change in orientation toward the future. A child may, for example, not expect to marry or have a career. Or he or she may exhibit "omen formation," the belief in an ability to predict future untoward events.

PTSD sufferers' inability to work out grief and anger over injury or loss during the traumatic event mean the trauma will continue to control their behavior without their being aware of it. Depression is a common product of this inability to resolve painful feelings.

Symptoms of Hyperarousal

PTSD can cause those who suffer with it to act as if they are threatened by the trauma that caused their illness. People with PTSD may become irritable. They may have trouble concentrating or remembering current information, and may develop insomnia. Because of their chronic hyperarousal, many people with PTSD have poor work records, trouble with their bosses and poor relationships with their family and friends.

The persistence of a biological alarm reaction is expressed in exaggerated startle reactions. War veterans may revert to their war behavior, diving for cover when they hear a car backfire or a string of firecrackers exploding.At times, those with PTSD suffer panic attacks, whose symptoms include extreme fear resembling that which they felt during the trauma. They may feel sweaty, have trouble breathing and may notice their heart rate increasing. They may feel dizzy or nauseated. Many traumatized children and adults may have physical symptoms, such as stomachaches and headaches, in addition to symptoms of increased arousal.

Other Associated Features

Many people with PTSD also develop depression and may at times abuse alcohol or other drugs as a "self-medication" to blunt their emotions and forget the trauma. A person with PTSD may also show poor control over his or her impulses, and may be at risk for suicide.

Treatment for PTSD

Psychiatrists and other mental health professionals today have effective psychological and pharmacological treatments available for PTSD. These treatments can restore a sense of control and diminish the power of past events over current experience. The sooner people are treated, the more likely they are to recover from a traumatizing experience. Appropriate therapy can help with other chronic trauma-related disorders, too.

Psychiatrists help people with PTSD by helping them to accept that the trauma happened to them, without being overwhelmed by memories of the trauma and without arranging their lives to avoid being reminded of it.

It is important to re-establish a sense of safety and control in the PTSD sufferer's life. This helps him or her to feel strong and secure enough to confront the reality of what has happened. In people who have been badlytraumatized, the support and safety provided by loved ones is critical. Friends and family should resist the urge to tell the traumatized person to "snap out of it," instead allowing time and space for intense grief and mourning. Being able to talk about what happened and getting help with feelings of guilt, self-blame, and rage about the trauma usually is very effective in helping people put the event behind them. Psychiatrists know that loved ones can make a significant difference in the long-term outcome of the traumatized person by being active participants in creating a treatment plan--helping him or her to communicate and anticipating what he or she needs to restore a sense of equilibrium to his or her life. If treatment is to be effective it is important, too, that the traumatized person feel that he or she is a part of this planning process.

Sleeplessness and other symptoms of hyperarousal may interfere with recovery and increase preoccupation with the traumatizing experience. Psychiatrists have several medications--including benzodiazepines and the new class of serotonin re-uptake blockers--that can help people to sleep and to cope with their hyperarousal symptoms. These medications, as part of an integrated treatment plan, can help the traumatized person to avoid the development of long-term psychological problems.

In people whose trauma occurred years or even decades before, the professionals who treat them must pay close attention to the behaviors--often deeply entrenched--which the PTSD sufferer has evolved to cope with his or her symptoms. Many people whose trauma happened long ago have suffered in silence with PTSD's symptoms without ever having been able to talk about the trauma or their nightmares, hyperarousal, numbing, or irritability. During treatment, being able to talk about what has happened and making the connection between past trauma and current symptoms provides people with the increased sense of control they need to manage their current lives and have meaningful relationships.

Relationships are often a trouble spot for people with PTSD. They often resolve conflicts by withdrawing emotionally or even by becoming physically violent. Therapy can help PTSD sufferers to identify and avoid unhealthy relationships. This is vital to the healing process; only after the feeling of stability and safety is established can the process of uncovering the roots of the trauma begin.

To make progress in easing flashbacks and other painful thoughts and feelings, most PTSD sufferers need to confront what has happened to them, and by repeating this confrontation, learn to accept the trauma as part of their past. Psychiatrists and other therapists use several techniques to help with this process.

One important form of therapy for those who struggle with post-traumatic stress disorder is cognitive/behavior therapy. This is a form of treatment that focuses on correcting the PTSD sufferer's painful and intrusive patterns of behavior and thought by teaching him or her relaxation techniques, and examining (and challenging) his or her mental processes. A therapist using behavior therapy to treat a person with PTSD might, for example, help a patient who is provoked into panic attacks by loud street noises by setting a schedule that gradually exposes the patient to such noises in a controlled setting until he or she becomes "desensitized" and thus is no longer so prone to terror. Using other such techniques, patient and therapist explore the patient's environment to determine what might aggravate the PTSD symptoms and work to reduce sensitivity or to learn new coping skills.

Psychiatrists and other mental health professionals also treat cases of PTSD by using psychodynamic psychotherapy. Post-traumatic stress disorder results, in part, from the difference between the individual's personal values or view of the world and the reality that he or she witnessed or lived during the traumatic event. Psychodynamic psychotherapy, then, focuses on helping the individual examine personal values and how behavior and experience during the traumatic event violated them. The goal is resolution of the conscious and unconscious conflicts that were thus created. In addition, the individual works to build self-esteem and self-control, develops a good and reasonable sense of personal accountability and renews a sense of integrity and personal pride.

Whether PTSD sufferers are treated by therapists who use cognitive/behavioral treatment or psychodynamic treatment, traumatized people need to identify the triggers for their memories of trauma, as well as identifying those situations in their lives in which they feel out of control and the conditions that need to exist for them to feel safe. Therapists can help people with PTSD to construct ways of coping with the hyperarousal and painful flashbacks that come over them when they are around reminders of the trauma. The trusting relationship between patient and therapist is crucial in establishing this necessary feeling of safety. Medications can help in this process also.

Group therapy can be an important part of treatment for PTSD. Trauma often affects people's ability to form relationships--especially such traumas as rape or domestic violence. It can profoundly affect their basic assumption that the world is a safe and predictable place, leaving them feeling alienated and distrustful, or else anxiously clinging to those closest to them. Group therapy helps people with PTSD to regain trust and a sense of community, andto regain their ability to relate in healthy ways to other people in a controlled setting.

Most PTSD treatment is done on an outpatient basis. However, for people whose symptoms are making it impossible to function or for people who have developed additional symptoms as a result of their PTSD, inpatient treatment is sometimes necessary to create the vital atmosphere of safety in which they can examine their flashbacks, re-enactments of the trauma, and self-destructive behavior. Inpatient treatment is also important for PTSD sufferers who have developed alcohol or other drug problems as a result oftheir attempts to "self medicate." Occasionally too, inpatient treatment can be very useful in helping a PTSD patient to get past a particularly painful period of their therapy.

The recognition of PTSD as a major health problem in this country is quite recent. Over the past 15 years, research has produced a major explosion of knowledge about the ways people deal with trauma--what places them at risk for development of long-term problems, and what helps them to cope. Psychiatrists and other mental health professionals are working hard to disseminate this understanding, and an increasing number of mental healthprofessionals are receiving specialized training to help them reach out to people with Post-traumatic Stress Disorder in their communities.

For comprehensive information on post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other anxiety disorders, visit the HealthyPlace.com Anxiety-Panic Community.


Additional Resources

Burgess, Ann Wolbert. Rape: Victims of Crisis. Bowie, Maryland: Robert J. Brady, Co., 1984.

Cole, PM, Putnam, FW. ";Effect of Incest on Self and Social Functioning: A Developmental Psychopathology Perspective." Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 60:174-184, 1992.

Eitinger, Leo, Krell, R, Rieck, M. The Psychological and Medical Effects of Concentration Camps and Related Persecutions on Survivors of the Holocaust. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 1985.

Eth, S. and R.S. Pynoos. Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder in Children. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Press, Inc., 1985.

Herman, Judith L. Trauma and Recovery. New York: Basic Books, 1992.

Janoff, Bulman R. Shattered Assumptions. New York: Free Press, 1992.

Lindy, Jacob D. Vietnam: A Casebook. New York: Brunner/Mazel, 1987.

Kulka, RA, Schlenger, WE, Fairbank J, et al. Trauma and the Vietnam War Generation. New York: Brunner/Mazel, 1990.

Ochberg F., Ed. Post-traumatic Therapies. New York: Brunner/Mazel, 1989.

Raphael, B. When Disaster Strikes: How Individuals and Communities Cope with Catastrophe. New York: Basic Books, 1986.

Ursano, RJ, McCaughey, B, Fullerton, CS. Individual and Community Responses to Trauma and Disaster: the Structure of Human Chaos. Cambridge, England: The Cambridge University Press, 1993.

Other Resources

Anxiety Disorders Association of America, Inc.
(301) 831-8350

International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies
(708) 480-9080

National Center for Child Abuse and Neglect
(205) 534-6868

National Center for Post-traumatic Stress Disorder
(802) 296-5132

National Institute of Mental Health
(301) 443-2403

National Organization for Victim Assistance
(202) 232-6682

U.S. Veterans Administration-Readjustment Counseling Service
(202) 233-3317

http://www.healthyplace.com/other-info/psychiatric-disorder-definitions/post-traumatic-stress-disorder-ptsd-overview/menu-id-71/page-4/

IF YOU ARE IN CRISIS



IF YOU ARE IN CRISIS AND NEED IMMEDIATE HELP



PLEASE CALL ANY OF THESE NUMBERS:







  • 1-800-273-8255 (1-800-273-TALK)





  • 1-800-784-2433 (1-800-SUICIDE)





IF YOU ARE IN CRISIS

IF YOU ARE IN CRISIS AND NEED IMMEDIATE HELP

PLEASE CALL ANY OF THESE NUMBERS:

  • 1-800-273-8255 (1-800-273-TALK)

  • 1-800-784-2433 (1-800-SUICIDE)

Time Zones differences for the blog talk radio show

TIME ZONES MAP

 Posted by Dreamcatchers Talk Radio on September 23, 2010 at 2:03 PM

TIME ZONES M

TIME ZONES MAP

 Posted by Dreamcatchers Talk Radio on September 23, 2010 at 2:03 PM

TIME ZONES MAP 

AP

Hawaii-Aleutian Standard Time (HST) Thu 08:06 AM

Alaskan Standard Time (AKST) Thu 10:06 AM

Pacific Standard Time (PST) Thu 11:06 AM

Mountain Standard Time (MST) Thu 12:06 PM

Central Standard Time (CST) Thu 01:06 PM

Eastern Standard Time (EST) Thu 02:06 PM

Atlantic Standard Time (AST) Thu 03:06 PM

Samoa standard time (SST) Thu 07:06 AM

Chamorro standard time (ChST) Fri 04:06 AM

 

US time zones differences:

PST to MST: Time difference between PST and MST is 1 hr

MST is 1 hr ahead of PST - when it is 1 pm in PST, it is 2 pm in MST

PST to CST: Time difference between PST and CST is 2 hrs

CST is 2 hrs ahead of PST - when it is 1 pm in PST, it is 3 pm in CST

PST to EST: Time difference between PST and EST is 3 hrs

EST is 3 hrs ahead of PST - when it is 1 pm in PST, it is 4 pm in EST

PST to HST: Time difference between PST and HST is 3 hrs

PST is 3 hrs ahead of HST - when it is 1 pm in HST, it is 4 pm in PST

PST to AKST: Time difference between PST and AKST is 1 hr

PST is 1 hr ahead of AKST - when it is 1 pm in AKST, it is 2 pm in PST

MST to CST: Time difference between MST and CST is 1 hr

CST is 1 hr ahead of MST - when it is 1 pm in MST, it is 2 pm in CST

MST to EST: Time difference between MST and EST is 2 hrs

EST is 2 hrs ahead of MST - when it is 1 pm in MST, it is 3 pm in EST

MST to HST: Time difference between MST and HST is 4 hrs

MST is 4 hrs ahead of HST - when it is 1 pm in HST, it is 5 pm in MST

MST to AKST: Time difference between MST and AKST is 2 hrs

MST is 2 hrs ahead of AKST - when it is 1 pm in AKST, it is 3 pm in MST

CST to EST: Time difference between CST and EST is 1 hr

EST is 1 hr ahead of CST - when it is 1 pm in CST, it is 2 pm in EST

CST to HST: Time difference between CST and HST is 5 hrs

CST is 5 hrs ahead of HST - when it is 1 pm in HST, it is 6 pm in CST

CST to AKST: Time difference between CST and AKST is 3 hrs

CST is 3 hrs ahead of AKST - when it is 1 pm in AKST, it is 4 pm in CST

EST to HST: Time difference between EST and HST is 6 hrs

EST is 6 hrs ahead of HST - when it is 1 pm in HST, it is 7 pm in EST

EST to AKST: Time difference between EST and AKST is 4 hrs

EST is 4 hrs ahead of AKST - when it is 1 pm in AKST, it is 5 pm in EST

HST to AKST: Time difference between HST and AKST is 2 hrs

AKST is 2 hrs ahead of HST - when it is 1 pm in HST, it is 3 pm in AKST