Author Topic: Continued healing  (Read 23858 times)

Gaining Strength

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Continued healing
« on: February 25, 2016, 02:01:14 PM »
I'm sneaking back to this place of comfort because I need a refuge as I continue on my journey of seeking and healing. 

In some ways I'm in the same place but in others I am moving forward.  I still struggle but I continue to understand more and more about my disorder and how I got here.  This month has been one of those slips into depression.  Not unusual but always I welcomed.  But with it comes always welcomed insights.

It is my birthday today and for the past 6 months I have been planning about my life going forward, what I want to accomplish with the last third of my life.  Honestly I am very excited about it and have been able to be more focused than at other periods.  I am able to let so many things go which is such a relief. Today I am now the age my husband was when he died.  This has been especially significant to me as I am ever vigilant about my young son's life and how little family or support system he has. In truth, it frightens me and that fear, of course, triggers all that is related to fear and hopelessness in the past.

I still have such a huge struggle with being able to function fully on a daily basis and this is directly related to my brain function and the profound sensitivity that can at times be debilitating.  So worked into my goals is the significant one of maintaining my mental health.  Ironically, some of the steps that help are the most difficult to execute when I am struggling so in part I am waiting for the wave of debility to wane and it will and when it does I will renew my efforts to exercise regularly.  That will surely help regulate those surges of anxiety that at times keep me paralyzed still.

Finally the cold is soon abated.  The spring birds are here but the cold still cuts like a knife. 

Moving forward, I have turned again to Jon Kabat-Zinn's meditations.  They have such a calming effect and I believe, over time, a healing power as well.  I love concentrating on evoking and feeling the emersion of love.  Bit by bit. I can extend that experience.  Oddly, the first bit of that feeling actually sends a shock of fear that gives way to acute anxiety.  All of it hardening back to past experiences where hope led to exclusion and rejection and the paralyzingly sense of humiliation.  It is a powerful cycle. It is a reflection of normalcy for me.  And in that moment of mindful experience of that cycle - hope - remembrance - fear - paralysis - I see past and present and delve in to refocus, re experience a moment of sitting emerged in the sense of love.  Believing that that experience, that healing will grow and extend the more I practice, the only surprise is how difficult it still is to jump back into the meditation.  But I will.  There is nothing to lose and everything to gain.

sKePTiKal

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Re: Continued healing
« Reply #1 on: February 26, 2016, 07:36:14 AM »
Hi there. I've been keeping up with your progress on FB and it seems to me you're doing really well.

Big hugs and a Huzzah!! happy dance for you.

(PR)
Success is never final, failure is never fatal.

Gaining Strength

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Re: Continued healing
« Reply #2 on: February 29, 2016, 10:35:55 AM »
Hi there. I've been keeping up with your progress on FB and it seems to me you're doing really well.

Big hugs and a Huzzah!! happy dance for you.

(PR)

Thanks Skeptikal.  It's nice to be able to pop in and be remembered.
« Last Edit: February 29, 2016, 10:37:36 AM by Gaining Strength »

Gaining Strength

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Re: Continued healing
« Reply #3 on: February 29, 2016, 10:49:36 AM »
I started listening to Jon Kabat-Zinn's Mindfulness meditations on YouTube about 18 months ago.  His voice is so soothing.  Just this month, when depression pulled me down deep again, I went to his Heartscape meditation  which  is the right one at the right time.  I am more and more drawn to it the more I use t.

My fears Bourne out of rejection and her concomitant wounds find reprieve in the  place of  love, health and well being that Zinn  guides through the meditation.  I can tap hope and belief when I am in the midst.  In time that experience will be accessible for longer periods and in the midst of fear and darkness.  It will take root  and replace that long lived canker. How can I not practice? How can I not be willing to cast aside doubt.

It fits with the linguistic list of things that I have been drawn to across the years, like a culmination go a long journey, bringing me to a new place where a different story begins.  This healing has been slow and painful.  I am hoping to come across a way to put my experiences to good use beyond my own.

Twoapenny

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Re: Continued healing
« Reply #4 on: February 29, 2016, 01:45:00 PM »
Happy Birthday for the other day, GS :)  Those meditations sound lovely.  I'm glad you're hanging on in there and making progress.  I do find the winter quite difficult to get through each year.  It's feeling more like spring now; the mornings and evenings are lighter, the birds start singing much earlier and crocuses and daffodils are starting to flower, it makes a really big different, I find :) x

Gaining Strength

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Re: Continued healing
« Reply #5 on: March 01, 2016, 10:53:23 AM »
Twoapenny, the emerges of spring is life renewing isn't it.  I am counting the short days until extended light in evening.

Gaining Strength

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Re: Continued healing
« Reply #6 on: March 01, 2016, 10:54:42 AM »
Tear tracks  - you are so kind and welcoming and wonderfully unforgettable as well.

Gaining Strength

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Re: Continued healing
« Reply #7 on: March 01, 2016, 11:14:43 AM »
Lifelong, I've been gripped by a dread.  One step out increases the grip. Retreat doesn't relieve it but lessens the intensity.  Though in retreat more inaction piles up the failings which has its own set of tortuous grip. Across the years I have found techniques that chipped away at this predicament.

I have come to understand a significant portion of the psychology of how I got trapped in the first place and of course having narcissistic parents is an enormous portion of that.  Understanding their role opened the door but once the door opened there was a mountain to  climb and that climb has had pitfalls which exposed dangers and demands that caused indescribable pain.

As I enter a kind of final stretch, the downhill, I am finding that  the dread has  been softened, made permeable, seems contained rather than infinite.  And now I am able to penetrate it, to see something on the other side.  It takes pointed  concentration and the experience is fleeting but the difference now is that for the first time I know the other side can exist for me.

 While I see  how my own reactions have alienated me, stimulated rejection, how my own fear of rejection played a role in generating more and more of it for the first time I am seeing how I can exist without that or outside that reactive volatility.  I have been longing for this experience my entire life.  Of course I am thankful to be on this precipice but I cannot move forward with out experiencing the enormous grief of the decades of pain, loss, rejection, isolation that have been my life and through no fault of his own, my child's as well.

I cannot help but feel that inordinate grief and yet there is not gift in staying in it, no benefit.  I must move forward, committed to intentionally being aware of, present to the loving kindness existant in the world and available to us all. With intention, I can expand the feeling of the heart, grow it.  In the midst of that intention I experience peace and in time that sense of peace with shift something internal within me, within my soul, within my mind, within my brain and slowly it will become my norm.

Believing it will be, rather than taking shelter from the dread of failure and rejection  gives me just slightly more wiggle room than has been my norm and that is something too.

Day by day this grows as I feed it with intention, protected from inner and outer harm, experiencing ease of well being.

Gaining Strength

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Re: Continued healing
« Reply #8 on: March 04, 2016, 11:24:01 AM »
The political situation today, along with my child's struggles with his  executive function issues is depressing to me. Along with my  life long norm of depression and anxiety, it can take a toll on me, not to mention the dull, cold, rainy weather. But I am finding that the Heartscape  meditation helps me lift above it, even for brief moments. 

It takes specific mindful recollection for now but in time, I expect to have as my norm, a place above dark, shamed paralysis where the norm is hope, and motivation and a spence of well being.

Gaining Strength

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Re: Continued healing
« Reply #9 on: March 04, 2016, 12:14:53 PM »
The omnipresent sense of dread comes with a hyper vigilance in perpetual anticipation of attack and/or rejection. As as the saying goes, to a hammer, everything is a nail, so too goes the anticipation of rejection and/or attack.

Gaining Strength

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Re: Continued healing
« Reply #10 on: March 04, 2016, 12:28:54 PM »
To move out of this place of dread is to move into a totally unfamiliar realm. For decades, I have longer for healing which I saw completely in terms of functioning - the elusive being of functioning. Moving out of dread includes bit is not limited to functioning. Being in loving kindness means I will not even dread the thought, experience of images, places, situations that trigger depression.

The very hope of lifting out of dread is a profound relief.

sKePTiKal

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Re: Continued healing
« Reply #11 on: March 05, 2016, 07:53:00 AM »
Maybe emotions have their polar opposite - their "flip side" or "B side" like we used to say with 45 speed records. The feeling feels the same, but we associate a different WORD with it, to explain it.

So that dread's flip could be excitement or anticipation; eagerness.

Maybe rejection's flip is just a simple recognition of you as person... as in, "I see you" (watch the movie Avatar, for an interesting use of that phrase; talk about balm for the soul of a child of an N). You are real, you matter, you have value - just in being.

..............
Somewhere around the time I was 16 or 17, I had to write a research paper for school. I think it was civics class. I wrote about Pavlov. I was already reading a lot of the 70s psych stuff anyway by then, but Pavlov's Law is much like Newton and gravity. At the time, it didn't connect for me... that even our feelings could be "conditioned" and "trained" in such a way to be completely upside down and inside out from "normal".

Now, of course I know that this nugget of truth is just the beginning of understanding that emotional space.
Success is never final, failure is never fatal.

Gaining Strength

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Re: Continued healing
« Reply #12 on: March 05, 2016, 10:58:26 AM »
Brilliant, (as always) Skeptikal.  Truly conditioned.  Exposing to light. Restores to pre"conditioned" self.

Gaining Strength

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Re: Continued healing
« Reply #13 on: March 05, 2016, 12:18:48 PM »
Quote
But the real issue is that trauma changes people. They feel different and experience certain sensations differently.

“ . . . the main focus of therapy needs to be helping people shift their internal experience.”
That’s why the main focus of therapy needs to be helping people shift their internal experience or, in other words, how the trauma is lodged inside them.

How Talking Can Distract a Client from Feeling

Now, in helping people learn to stay with their sensations, we need to resist the temptation to ask them to talk about their experience and what they’re aware of.

This is because talking can convey a defense against feeling.

Through the use of brain imagery, we’ve learned that when people are feeling something very deeply, one particular area of the brain lights up.

And we’ve seen other images taken when people are beginning to talk about their trauma and, when they do, another part of the brain lights up.

So talking can be a distraction from helping patients notice what is going on within themselves.

“ . . . some of the best therapy is largely non-verbal.”
And that’s why some of the best therapy is very largely non-verbal, where the main task of the therapist is to help people to feel what they feel - to notice what they notice, to see how things flow within themselves, and to reestablish their sense of time inside.


This is an except from a FB article that I had to go through hoops to read.  I post it b/c it points to an understanding that helps me understand where I am.  24 hours aday my antennae are alert.  Ready. On guard.  My secondary position is retreating, fearing every demand for even basic functioning.  All of it harkens back to childhood, to minor fears and traumas that added up, the incessant drip of water wearing away the stone.

Over the years I have employed countless methods to  help, to heal, to relieve.  Many did help - a little, for a while.  But perhaps the total trauma was too great? Or the effect of the trauma caused actions and inactions which further traumatized.  Maybe all of it.

But still I persist.  All my knowledge, understanding, experience coming into play.  Hope never ends.  Small shifts bring relief.  Faith endures.

Yesterday, for some reason remembrances of my attempts at EFT kept bombarding me.  It, EFT, seemed to hold promise and even bits of relief.  But even years ago, I saw that the traumas were too many and many unknown, not remembered, unconscious.  I tried the "bundling" technique - to no effect.  Why did this memory come up so powerfully yesterday?  I have no idea.

But as I move forward yet again, find light rays of peace and hope yet ever strangled by that constant presence of dread, I wonder.  Then I remember how my entire adult life has been a combination of retreat and conscious and unconscious attempts to find relief.  Coffee, sweets, good foods, bingeing carbohydrates. Exercise, sloth. Reading. Television. Flurry of activity - organizations, membership, enterprises, projects.  Nothing. None of it brought relief and much of it brought on more and more  pain, more failure, more disappointment, no relief, more loss.  It all seems so clear today.  The rat race, the fleeing on the hamster wheel.  Run faster, faster, faster and I'm no further away.

I'm still in the midst of indescribable pain.  My parents are dead and I still hurt.  But I have not given up.  And more miraculous - I still have hope and believe there is a way out of the constant state of dread and the physical pain that accompanies it.  And most important of all - I believe that the paralysis that has plagued me for decades is bit by bit breaking up and dissolving - like the ice on the frozen pond in spring.  Time will tell.  It either will or it won't.  And with the constant state of dread, the self-hatred and self-condemnation that I was trained, encouraged, demanded to develope so many years ago by my father and silently promoted by my mother.  

I have no hatred for either.  When I think if my father I see him through a child's eye and find myself cowering and hyper vigilant for refuge.  Hmmmmm.  When I think of my mother I fall into a longing, a pleading to be seen, to be heard, to be recognized.  It us not hatred but hurt.  Healing will bring relief from that ancient disease.  I am on that road, almost there.  Resentment and bitterness broke, sorrow remains but freedom will come when the dread and hypervigilance for retreat recede as well.
« Last Edit: March 05, 2016, 12:24:58 PM by Gaining Strength »

Gaining Strength

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Re: Continued healing
« Reply #14 on: March 05, 2016, 12:47:36 PM »
The longing for my mother is my longing for connection.  It is an unrelenting need or longing that I can't  quench.