Voicelessness and Emotional Survival Message Board
Voicelessness and Emotional Survival => Voicelessness and Emotional Survival Message Board => Topic started by: Twoapenny on December 25, 2016, 12:07:00 PM
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Wowzers. I am finding it harder and harder to even pretend that I can tolerate this time of year. I am very grateful for the life we have and I'm very aware that there are millions of people who live hard, unjust, unfair lives and suffer greatly. But I still feel that this entire festival is forced upon me, no matter how much I try and resist and avoid it.
My son had a big seizure this morning. This isn't unusual for him but the fact that it's happened on Christmas Day seemed to make it worse, for some reason. He's perked up now, I'm completely worn out. It hasn't even been a normal day, it's been a worse than normal day. I can't wait for it to be over.
On a less grumpy note, I did want to say thank you, not only to Dr G for the board and the quiet, subtle way that it is run, but also to everyone who posts on here. I can't put into words how much it helps me to know I have this safe, non-judgemental, easy space in which to spill things that I don't (and probably never would) tell anyone else. Reading other people's stories helps me as well, sometimes because it stirs something in me and makes me realise something about myself, or inspires me to do something, and sometimes because it just makes me realise that I'm not alone with this.
Anyway, I hope everyone has enjoyed/ignored/tolerated the day in whichever way they needed to. Thank you all for being there and your support all year round.
Love Tup xx
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I can't put into words how much it helps me to know I have this safe, non-judgemental, easy space in which to spill things that I don't (and probably never would) tell anyone else.
Exactly! Wow, just looking at my profile and I've been here since 2004. Every year, I've come here on Christmas Day. This place, and the support from everyone here, has saved me in ways I can never express in words.
Yes, for children of Ns, this is hell day. The day we hate more than any other, stress about for weeks, even months, in advance. No matter what, the day always brings some form of pain. First it was torment from my NM, then, after she died, from Co-Father. This year he apparently gave up on his stalking as I didn't receive as much as a card, and even that left me feeling uneasy. I should be relieved, but now sit here wondering why it stopped. Am I not worthy of stalking anymore? How crazy to even think that?
Like you, I have nothing but gratitude for the existence of this board. Many thanks to Dr. G for creating what has become our safe place.
Tup, I'm so sorry to hear about your son's seizure, but so happy to hear that he's feeling happy and well now. I wish you were too. For what it's worth, I'm here, and I'm thinking of you. Like you, I'm just tolerating the day, but it's only one day. We'll get through it together.
Love,
Kathy
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Wowzers. I am finding it harder and harder to even pretend that I can tolerate this time of year. I am very grateful for the life we have and I'm very aware that there are millions of people who live hard, unjust, unfair lives and suffer greatly. But I still feel that this entire festival is forced upon me, no matter how much I try and resist and avoid it.
My son had a big seizure this morning. This isn't unusual for him but the fact that it's happened on Christmas Day seemed to make it worse, for some reason. He's perked up now, I'm completely worn out. It hasn't even been a normal day, it's been a worse than normal day. I can't wait for it to be over.
On a less grumpy note, I did want to say thank you, not only to Dr G for the board and the quiet, subtle way that it is run, but also to everyone who posts on here. I can't put into words how much it helps me to know I have this safe, non-judgemental, easy space in which to spill things that I don't (and probably never would) tell anyone else. Reading other people's stories helps me as well, sometimes because it stirs something in me and makes me realise something about myself, or inspires me to do something, and sometimes because it just makes me realise that I'm not alone with this.
Anyway, I hope everyone has enjoyed/ignored/tolerated the day in whichever way they needed to. Thank you all for being there and your support all year round.
Love Tup xx
Wow!!!
That is rough!!! I hope your son feels a lot better soon!
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Well, I'd say you rocked your "Christmas Surprise", Tupps. And it sounds like you've kept your balance through it too.
Twoapenny = 1; Christmas angst = 0.
Now, get yourself a cuppa something soothing and refreshing, put your feet up, and just breathe in the reality that you got through another one and might even be getting the hang of this - even if it your way of doing so, IS non-conformist.
(pssst - us non-conformists are the INTERESTING people.)
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Well ho ho HELL, Tupp.
I'm really sorry about your boy's seizure.
I can't imagine the toll it takes on you both.
It must be exhausting to witness and deal with safely,
and must be exhausting for him to have his body
challenged in that way so frequently. Even the
muscles, much less his weary brain.
That you have the mental wherewithal to even type
a post is the Christmas miracle. You really are something.
I hope NYear's brings a happier mood and calmer time.
Kathy, I can relate to the loneliness, and the hard insight
that there are so often more than one N in our lives.
What a sinking feeling when that sinks in.
I do hope you can strengthen yourself and find some
solution that will allow you to take joy in your own being again.
The security of a cage is still a cage, and it's a hard formula
to work through until the way is clear.
Me, I had a sorrowful Xmas morning, new par for the course
over the last few years. Even though I had somewhere to go
later in the day, it still hit. Hard not to think about my gone girl.
I wound up listening to some African American Christmas songs
I hadn't heard before...and it hit me how sorrowful the tone of
many were. I could hear in both the singing and the verses how
much pain and courage there was in singing about peace, hope
and good will...even while wishing it could be that way year round.
When a soulful black singer sings with sadness about Christmas,
you know the contrast of the temporary kindness is cutting close.
Two songs that addressed it literally were a song about a jailed man
yearning for his family whom he could not see because he is a
prisoner (and how much he mourns his past violence). Another
started with the upbeat sound of cheesy secular Christmas songs,
but the refrain was: Santa, go straight to the ghetto...don't leave
anything for me. That really went to my heart.
Under the jollity, pain was audible. It's a whole canon.
I had a very nice time at my friend's family's dinner...and got to
hold and savor the new baby in the family. A little girl whose Mom
is my friend's daughter, and whose Dad is Iranian. Little Ayla is 2 mo., gorgeous
and that comfy-sturdy-wobbly little body was a joy to hold. I asked
them "how much will you charge me to babysit for you?" They laughed
and are going to take me up on it sometime.
Now I'm going across the street to my Jewish neighbors'--they just
got back from a trip from Barcelona to Barbardos. She is a lovely
warm person who heads up the local faith-coalition social justice
organization, which has been accomplishing very good things here.
I'm taking homemade gingersnaps, which I baked at noon. I was
surprised how good they were--the folks at dinner really liked them.
Good to check in here. Happy Solstice, everyone.
love,
Hops
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I'm so sorry to hear your Christmas was so difficult TwoAPenny. I truly hope the New Year will bring better times. The holiday can be so difficult---especially for Narcissistic families. The holidays are a reminder of everything that is missing and that we'll never have. It's a reminder of the "haves" and "have nots". Frankly, I think surviving it is an accomplishment in and of itself!
This year was a sobering holiday for me. After expending all of the effort in my family for the holiday, I realized that I truly have no family. I was once again forced to witness my brother expend all of his effort and emotion for his "adopted family"---his wife's family----and express not one iota of sentiment for his own biological family. I realized that will never change. He has lived a truly charmed life, never having to struggle for anything----perfect wife, perfect child, good career that was literally handed to him by others...No challenges of any consequence. He has adopted more of my N mom's traits----the need to completely control and dictate behavior, a lack of empathy and compassion, and a sense of superiority. I look at him now and see that the brother I knew and grew up with is gone, never to return.
I spent Christmas morning at the cemetery visiting and honoring my Dad who always had such a true heart and, like me, loved Christmas. He as grateful and appreciative for all the effort I made. While there, I witnessed a scene that was truly heartbreaking. A little girl had apparently recently passed. Her family, including a person I surmised was the young father, arrived at the grave site and prayed around the grave in a circle, The young dad was dressed as Santa and placed a wrapped doll carriage with some small toys on the grave. A small wreath with a motion-censored ornament that played a Christmas song hung over the grave. Just like that popular image, "Santa" kneeled down at the grave and prayed and then drew a small heart in the snow before the family departed. That scene put a lot of things in perspective. While I, along with other visitors that day, were mourning our losses, it couldn't be compared with the loss of this family on Christmas Day.
Acceptance is very hard. It is especially difficult at Christmas when we are inundated in society with images of happy families and messages of what is truly important at the holiday---spending time with family and loved ones. I believe that to be true which makes it all the more heartbreaking when you know you have no family or loved ones who care. But I also know, although society never wants to remind us of this, that there are many, many, many people out there who are alone or lonely with no family or families who are estranged and have betrayed or hurt us. The bottom line is that life is not fair. Those of us on this board probably fit into that group of people who, through no fault of our own, have no family to count on, to sit around the Christmas tree with and have authentic, loving experiences.
Instead, what we must do is forge on, to find our way to acceptance and to do our best to contribute to this life in some way.
Like many have expressed here, I truly am grateful for all of you, for the kindness and support you have shown me over the years. It has made the world of difference and helped me feel I'm not so alone.
Thank you Dr. G for providing this forum and doing so with so much compassion, empathy and understanding.
May we all find a moment or two of joy this season and may we experience a New Year that is filled with peace, acceptance and understanding.
Bright Blessings. Sunblue.
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Well, I spent the traditional holiday totally alone - by choice. I still had a Christmas tree; a fresh arrangement on the table. I had a bunch of exotic treats that I always liked, oil cured olives and cheeses, for instance. There's still some peppermint bark I bought at Thanksgiving.
For me, it hurts more to be in that mix of cheery people than to be alone. And I really was hoping to talk to Michael... and let him know it's time I move on. And that requires quiet. And there isn't the regular pulling at heart strings so much now or the longing to have just 5 minutes back. I've made decisions for me and completely removed a lot of reminders that kept me in that "groove" and it's all good. It is OK that I'm doing this alone.
Challenging sometimes! I have a whole new set of systems to learn in the house. Things to fix to my satisfaction. New noises and wondering if it's better beams flex in the wind, rather than stoutly resist it like a rock... and I've been able to make my living space the way I want it -- without someone else's input or opinions. Maybe that's a tad selfish - but I've not been able to do that before and I wanted that opportunity. And I'm just to tired to carry on over the holiday, too. It's been an exhausting year. So the quiet and total freedom to do as I like is healing.
I'll see the girls on Epiphany; H's birthday and the 12th day of Christmas.
Maybe I'm becoming a Druid; but I'm really "over" all the shoulda, woulda, couldas about this holiday and frankly my dears - I just don't have a damn left to give about it.
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Sunblue,
I'm sorry it was sobering and sad.
I re-read back on your Holiday Wars thread and it hit me that it was October that you began detailing the (understandable) resentment over your brother, and how it's carried right on for you for over two months now.
It sounds miserable for you.
Do you have any sense for the New Year, of how you might try to un-enmesh from your unhappy family and look to build new relationships outside it?
I would feel so sad a year from now, if you remain stuck in that particular dead-end sadness. You deserve better, you've really figured out it's never going to happen from Nmom and GCbrother, they're never going to provide the warmth and loyalty and fairness and connection and affirmation and affection that would nourish you. You've tried everything and really are trying to get water from stones.
So what do you want the rest of your life to be about? It can't be this. Too many women spend decades of their lives trying to please, cajole, encourage loving behavior from people who just don't have it to give. (Speaking from experience, here, not from judgement.)
I'd love to see you take seriously the reality that you can free yourself from this emotional cycle. In time, with the right support, and especially with the right attitude of loving and valuing yourself whether your family does or not--I know you could.
Loving and valuing yourself as you are, for who you are--independently. You deserve this and only you can give it to you. You'd need to make your family less important to your happiness, and claim your happiness on your own.
Next holiday? I envision Sunblue celebrating simply and peacefully with a few new gentle friends. I had one lovely holiday evening with about 8. Happened to be all women, all at peace with making temporary family for each other. And it was a very happy time.
With hopes for you,
Hops
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Hello Hops:
Happy Holidays. As always, you are so kind to respond to my post. I do feel guilty for posting---complaining really about my same negative family dynamic. It's a rant really and I don't generally like to be that person. You are right, of course. My family will never change. The reality that I will never have a family or have the feelings I have for them returned back to me will not change. I can't change my brother or Nmother. I can't make my mother care about me. I can't change the fact that somehow my brother got everything I didn't. It is time to finally accept that no matter how much I may want it or need it, no matter how hard I work at it, I will not get it in this lifetime. This holiday that reality was really thrown in my face.
While it is not ideal I will necessarily have to be the one who looks after my mother. Right or wrong, my siblings have no conscience or empathy and do not hesitate to turn their back on her. I wasn't built like that. I have strong empathy and a conscience. I know that will not mean she will ever change her non-feelings for me. But it is my responsibility. However, I can attempt to distance myself emotionally---both from her and my brother and his family. So, in 2017, I will attempt to do that.
I am glad you had some friends you could spend the holiday with. I hope they were able to bring you some moments of joy and cheer. I don't know what 2017 will hold. I do know that I will no longer have the hope I had this year for the family others have. My brother ruined that for me this year. His disrespect, selfishness and controlling behavior showed me there can never be any going back. I looked at him and could not see any remnant of the brother I grew up with. That brother is gone for good, never to return. I lost my Dad, I lost my brother and never had a mother or sister due to their narcissism. Perhaps the loss of my brother was the final loss to process. This year I spent Thanksgiving alone and while it wasn't happy, it was peaceful. I think I will repeat that next year and maybe plan some kind of short trip during the Christmas holiday.
I did some charity work this holiday which I think is always a good thing as it reminds you that others are enduring far worse circumstances. It puts life in perspective. My loss is nothing compared to the loss of the young family I wrote about who grieved their small daughter at the cemetery.
So enough with my griping, complaining and venting. I know others here and elsewhere are going through far worse. The New Year is also a time to be grateful for your blessings and I am for mine. Thank you for being one of those blessings Hops and for taking the time to respond to my post.
I hope you can ring in the New Year with friends or friends who have become family. Wishing you only wonderful adventures in 2017 as well as peace, health and happiness.
Thanks Hops!
Sunblue
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Sunblue, I have ranted AND ranted (and ranted) here on the very same redundant topics for over 10 years! Nmother, Nboss, NsocioSomethingbrother, and more recently...estranged daughter (whom I can't bear to "diagnose.")
It takes as long as it takes to love oneself and find strength and purpose from within. I hope you'll post MORE, not less, about your stuck places. I understand it completely and don't think anyone else's timetable is relevant. I just truly meant that I'd love to see you free from that cycle (I was stuck in so many ways for an incredibly long time, and still am in others).
Bear in mind that half my "advicey" or "preachy" posts are aimed squarely at myself. I tend to give out lectures I need to hear. (Lucky everybody! Har.)
I like your resolve and hope it helps you move forward. I know what it's like to feel as though you're wearing cement shoes. And I admire your conscience being your guide about elder care, too. You are right that you won't be rewarded emotionally for it from those you'd love to have appreciate you...but there is reward in living according to your own values.
That's what I ultimately decided...my care of my mother did give me closure and peace and a very clean conscience (I hate the way elders are generally treated in this culture). It's not always the kids' fault--our society isn't structured around the needs of the vulnerable (very young/very old) so a huge burden can fall on the next generation down.
Despite all that closure and peace, though, I can also see my choice to put her first for so long as --also--a very significant mistake in judgement. Hindsight's 20-20. The fact of it is, I believe my care extended her life considerably (she lived to 98) and unless I am capable of major will and commitment to myself...shortened mine. It was just way, way out of balance. Partly because of her demanding self-absorption, and partly because I didn't have the core strength I needed NOT to serve her in the manner to which she had become accustomed. Only near the end did I begin to recognize how I'd lost goals, drive, hopes and purpose for my own being, my own fulfillment.
It's a tough call.
Rant away, it's good for you! And good for your listeners, too.
Hugs,
Hops
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I can't put into words how much it helps me to know I have this safe, non-judgemental, easy space in which to spill things that I don't (and probably never would) tell anyone else.
Exactly! Wow, just looking at my profile and I've been here since 2004. Every year, I've come here on Christmas Day. This place, and the support from everyone here, has saved me in ways I can never express in words.
Yes, for children of Ns, this is hell day. The day we hate more than any other, stress about for weeks, even months, in advance. No matter what, the day always brings some form of pain. First it was torment from my NM, then, after she died, from Co-Father. This year he apparently gave up on his stalking as I didn't receive as much as a card, and even that left me feeling uneasy. I should be relieved, but now sit here wondering why it stopped. Am I not worthy of stalking anymore? How crazy to even think that?
Like you, I have nothing but gratitude for the existence of this board. Many thanks to Dr. G for creating what has become our safe place.
Tup, I'm so sorry to hear about your son's seizure, but so happy to hear that he's feeling happy and well now. I wish you were too. For what it's worth, I'm here, and I'm thinking of you. Like you, I'm just tolerating the day, but it's only one day. We'll get through it together.
Love,
Kathy
Hi Kathy,
Sorry for the delayed reply, my head has been a bit all over the place the last few days and I couldn't seem to settle to do anything. I do know what you mean about wondering why you're not being stalked any more! It's funny how things become normal and you're so used to them happening that you constantly wait for the next incident. When it doesn't come it's almost as unnerving as when it does! In my case I know my mum has switched her venom to my younger sister. Tough for her but easier for me, and will only cease if my sis cuts our mum out the same way that I did. She's not ready to do that yet. It is an awful thing to say/think but my mum is getting on in years and I think her passing will be the only release for all of us, really. It's terribly sad and I do wish she could have seen that she at least played some part in it all, even if she couldn't see she's created most of the problems! But she can't and that is that.
I think what I find difficult about the holiday is that it just goes on for so long in the UK (and I guess in the States as well?). You have Thanksgiving just a few weeks before as well, don't you? From mid November onward it's all anyone can talk about here. All the shops are packed, it's difficult to park anywhere, I struggle with the excess as I stop and chat with some bloke who's sleeping rough in freezing temperatures and has all his wordly goods in a carrier bag whilst people walk past loaded down with shopping and don't even look at him. I find that hard. And then the holiday period itself is always difficult for my son and this seizure he had was very scary so we've hardly been out since as he's been too tired (and so have I, to be honest!). So it always turns into a sort of house arrest situation where we just stay at home and, try as I might, I do find it difficult to be upbeat and cheerful, even though I know I am luckier than so many others. And yes, at the back of all that, the entire family are all enjoying themselves and having a wonderful time with their own respective families now and myself and my boy just sit there like the ones that no-one wanted, lol, it's not the nicest of times!
I would volunteer to help with the community lunch or something but because my son's health is so unpredictable we sometimes have to cancel at short notice and you can't do that on a day as important as Christmas. Perhaps next year we can help clear up and then at least if we can't get there it means everyone got their lunch anyway. Silly time of year. So difficult for so many and yet so impossible to avoid!
Anyway I hope you got through it okay and are settling down a bit again now.
Love Tup x
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As far as giving out advice, that we ourselves need to hear... I think you & I are two peas in a pod, Hops. LOL. I do a lot of editing, still.
It's sitting on my head right now; like some big fat stinky fluffy turkey - to say that just there isn't any one right/wrong way of dealing with our FOO as we still struggle to grow into ourselves, have our own lives - yet stay connected to the FOO in a way that doesn't continue the dysfunction, and still be free to be who we are. They are who they are and who am I to expect or insist that they change?
And even when they do make some progress - my brother seems to have made some - they still come back and exhibit some of the same old patterns, over & over & over again. I probably do too - it's necessary to have some way to cope with that, you know?
Humans are just amazingly complex creatures and relationships between them are never, ever "perfect" - not even the best, most functional of them. That said, we each of us have to find ways to meet our real, deep needs to take care of ourselves -- sometimes outside of the normal places. And life's too short to try to make something, into something it's NOT.
So says the big stinky turkey on my head.
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we each of us have to find ways to meet our real, deep needs to take care of ourselves -- sometimes outside of the normal places. And life's too short to try to make something, into something it's NOT. (http://we each of us have to find ways to meet our real, deep needs to take care of ourselves -- sometimes outside of the normal places. And life's too short to try to make something, into something it's NOT.)
Wow.
I entirely fail to understand why this turkey is stinky.
I find it magnificently wise.
Or I even suspect you have confused it for an owl.
SO wise, Amber. Thank you.
(Thanks Tupp for tolerating the hijacks!)
Hugs,
Hops
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Hey, Tupp.
Can you ask your boy's doctors about this, if it's available in the U.K.?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/a-powerful-new-form-of-medical-marijuana-without-the-high/2016/12/29/81bbf7c0-b5b2-11e6-b8df-600bd9d38a02_story.html?tid=pm_pop&utm_term=.eaa596d75ac8 (https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/a-powerful-new-form-of-medical-marijuana-without-the-high/2016/12/29/81bbf7c0-b5b2-11e6-b8df-600bd9d38a02_story.html?tid=pm_pop&utm_term=.eaa596d75ac8)
You never know but it's an encouraging story.
Hugs
Hops
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Hey, Tupp.
Can you ask your boy's doctors about this, if it's available in the U.K.?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/a-powerful-new-form-of-medical-marijuana-without-the-high/2016/12/29/81bbf7c0-b5b2-11e6-b8df-600bd9d38a02_story.html?tid=pm_pop&utm_term=.eaa596d75ac8 (https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/a-powerful-new-form-of-medical-marijuana-without-the-high/2016/12/29/81bbf7c0-b5b2-11e6-b8df-600bd9d38a02_story.html?tid=pm_pop&utm_term=.eaa596d75ac8)
You never know but it's an encouraging story.
Hugs
Hops
Thanks Hops, have read up on a bit this morning, all cannabis related products are illegal in the UK apart from one approved drug for MS which is derived from cannabis apparently (and that's not available on the NHS so average cost is about £500 a month). Maxiumum sentence for possession is 5 years in prison, possession with intent to supply is 14 years. They seem fairly against it at the mo, lol, however, there is a good website that I will continue having a read through as it seems there is growing evidence that this can help with all sorts of things, it's just taking a long time to get the medical profession behind it :)
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Medical marijuana can be good for certain things, but I think it's been a bit overrated, at least to my experience. I think it needs to be made available in alternate forms, like pills and oils.
Medical cannabis is legal here in California, and I actually have my card (and the pot to go with it). Thing is, while most people in the country would be envious, I'm less than thrilled about it. My current doctor actually recommended it for my chronic neck pain and headaches because there are few physicians willing to prescribe pain medications anymore. With all the celebrity deaths, and hype about the opiate "epidemic," getting as few as five percocet or vicodin is simply impossible. It's much easier for a doctor to dismiss you by suggesting you go get some marijuana.
The way it works here, is you go to a licensed doctor and get your card, which is ridiculously easy. Then you go to the dispensary. I will say that the guys who work at the dispensaries are incredibly knowledgeable and helpful. They have 30 or more different strains, and will help you select the best one for your symptoms. Actually using it is where it gets tricky. For a newbie, there is quite a learning curve. Too little, and nothing happens. Too much, and you can have a severe panic attack (not good for someone with an anxiety disorder). For people who don't want to smoke it, they do make edibles, but those can be scary. It takes the body an hour or more to metabolize it, and when it hits, it can be rough. I tried it once, and after an hour of it not working, ate a little more. Then, boom, thought I was going to die. It was scary.
Smoking it makes me feel like a druggie. I take it outside, but the smell gets in your hair. Even if you use a vaporizer, you still get that distinctive pot smell. I live in Hollywood, and everyone is using it, but it still feels weird to me to be smoking pot.
As for results, it varies. Sometimes it works wonders and kills my pain without making me feel stoned. Other times, nothing. I hate that it's becoming the only option for chronic pain, but the good news is that it's quite inexpensive, and at lest offers hope for those who can't get a prescription for actual pain meds. That one is going to become increasingly difficult, so legal cannabis may become a more widespread option as a result.
Now, in the case of Tup's son, it would have to be available in pill form. Medical grade marijuana is not legal in children under the age of 18 (at least not here). We do have a way to go on this front.
Sorry to change the subject of the thread, but thought you might be interested in knowing what it's like. Interesting to hear that it's still so highly illegal in Great Britain. Hopefully that will change so you can at least give it a try. It's certainly not as dangerous as other treatments, so it would be nice to give it a go and see if it helps.
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That was fascinating and informative, Kathy. Thank you! I'm glad it helps you and wish this country wasn't so silly. And that we put money into medical research rather than military overkill.
What I understood from the article is that the new strain spray/droplets (British company, which is ironic given what Tupp said) offers the pain or seizure or insomnia relief without the high. That was the exciting part to me, as it sounds as though it will soon be possible to have the only-medical benefits without the mental downsides.
I enjoyed pot a lot in college and less frequently in my 20s. Eventually though, some bizarre mental side effects kicked in. I once was at an intersection I'd known for 20 years and was completely lost. I didn't know where I was (though I realized I SHOULD know) and that was terrifying. A couple of times it triggered panic attacks (being stoned didn't mix well with my anxiety) and that was that. Panic attacks were the worst thing I ever experienced so I knew pot was no longer my friend.
I do miss how pleasant and stimulating it was for a time. My imagination liked it a lot.
Hugs
Hops
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Yes, I wish they'd do more in the area of drops and other methods of delivery. I have one friend with RA, and she was reading about cannabis oil that would work as a topical, but it's not available here. I think there's far too much money to be made with so-called designer drugs, that the pharmaceutical companies just aren't interested in something that they can't trademark and make huge profits from.
Marijuana does trigger anxiety attacks pretty badly. A lot of people claim that it's good for anxiety, but it seems to go both ways. When I went to get my medical card, the paperwork I filled out did state that it was not to be used for anxiety or depression, so apparently panic attacks are quite common. I'm VERY careful with the amounts I use because I just don't want to go through that again. The anxiety was far worse for me when I ingested it, so I wonder about other types of delivery, like pills, drops, oil, etc. I think there's a great deal of research that still needs to be done.
Kathy
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Wowzers. I am finding it harder and harder to even pretend that I can tolerate this time of year. I am very grateful for the life we have and I'm very aware that there are millions of people who live hard, unjust, unfair lives and suffer greatly. But I still feel that this entire festival is forced upon me, no matter how much I try and resist and avoid it.
My son had a big seizure this morning. This isn't unusual for him but the fact that it's happened on Christmas Day seemed to make it worse, for some reason. He's perked up now, I'm completely worn out. It hasn't even been a normal day, it's been a worse than normal day. I can't wait for it to be over.
On a less grumpy note, I did want to say thank you, not only to Dr G for the board and the quiet, subtle way that it is run, but also to everyone who posts on here. I can't put into words how much it helps me to know I have this safe, non-judgemental, easy space in which to spill things that I don't (and probably never would) tell anyone else. Reading other people's stories helps me as well, sometimes because it stirs something in me and makes me realise something about myself, or inspires me to do something, and sometimes because it just makes me realise that I'm not alone with this.
Anyway, I hope everyone has enjoyed/ignored/tolerated the day in whichever way they needed to. Thank you all for being there and your support all year round.
Love Tup xx
Wow!!!
That is rough!!! I hope your son feels a lot better soon!
Thank you, Bonesie, sorry for the late reply, I do not seem to have been able to get my brain into gear at all the last few weeks! I could do with a spare one for emergencies :) Hope all is well with you xx
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Well, I spent the traditional holiday totally alone - by choice. I still had a Christmas tree; a fresh arrangement on the table. I had a bunch of exotic treats that I always liked, oil cured olives and cheeses, for instance. There's still some peppermint bark I bought at Thanksgiving.
For me, it hurts more to be in that mix of cheery people than to be alone. And I really was hoping to talk to Michael... and let him know it's time I move on. And that requires quiet. And there isn't the regular pulling at heart strings so much now or the longing to have just 5 minutes back. I've made decisions for me and completely removed a lot of reminders that kept me in that "groove" and it's all good. It is OK that I'm doing this alone.
Challenging sometimes! I have a whole new set of systems to learn in the house. Things to fix to my satisfaction. New noises and wondering if it's better beams flex in the wind, rather than stoutly resist it like a rock... and I've been able to make my living space the way I want it -- without someone else's input or opinions. Maybe that's a tad selfish - but I've not been able to do that before and I wanted that opportunity. And I'm just to tired to carry on over the holiday, too. It's been an exhausting year. So the quiet and total freedom to do as I like is healing.
I'll see the girls on Epiphany; H's birthday and the 12th day of Christmas.
Maybe I'm becoming a Druid; but I'm really "over" all the shoulda, woulda, couldas about this holiday and frankly my dears - I just don't have a damn left to give about it.
Yep I think that attitude is a good (and healthy one) to have, Skep. I think what I find hard about these days is that it's just everywhere for at least two months in the UK - I don't know if it's similar in the States? It's all anyone talks about, everywhere's decorated, all the shops play Christmas music (the girl in the supermarket made me laugh, she was wearing ear plugs because the Christmas CD in the shop was driving her mad :) ). People ask what we're doing for Christmas and if/when I say we'll be staying in alone there is pity/surpise/shock from most people. And I find that hard to cope with; you can't explain to people that your family are certifiable and you've done everything you can to keep away from them, lol. There's too much history and too much of a story there to drop into a casual conversation.
I understand completely what you say about doing up your space the way you like it and I don't think there's anything at all selfish about that. I am really enjoying planning and working on our new flat. A little bit at a time, but I know what you mean about not having to worry about what someone else wants. It's nice to put your furniture where it suits you (I am about to rearrange the sitting room for the fourth time, lol) and to pick out the things you like without having to be mindful of someone else's taste. I hope you got your quiet time with Mike. I think the people that love us want us to move forward and live as fully as we can after they have gone x
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Well ho ho HELL, Tupp.
I'm really sorry about your boy's seizure.
I can't imagine the toll it takes on you both.
It must be exhausting to witness and deal with safely,
and must be exhausting for him to have his body
challenged in that way so frequently. Even the
muscles, much less his weary brain.
That you have the mental wherewithal to even type
a post is the Christmas miracle. You really are something.
I hope NYear's brings a happier mood and calmer time.
Kathy, I can relate to the loneliness, and the hard insight
that there are so often more than one N in our lives.
What a sinking feeling when that sinks in.
I do hope you can strengthen yourself and find some
solution that will allow you to take joy in your own being again.
The security of a cage is still a cage, and it's a hard formula
to work through until the way is clear.
Me, I had a sorrowful Xmas morning, new par for the course
over the last few years. Even though I had somewhere to go
later in the day, it still hit. Hard not to think about my gone girl.
I wound up listening to some African American Christmas songs
I hadn't heard before...and it hit me how sorrowful the tone of
many were. I could hear in both the singing and the verses how
much pain and courage there was in singing about peace, hope
and good will...even while wishing it could be that way year round.
When a soulful black singer sings with sadness about Christmas,
you know the contrast of the temporary kindness is cutting close.
Two songs that addressed it literally were a song about a jailed man
yearning for his family whom he could not see because he is a
prisoner (and how much he mourns his past violence). Another
started with the upbeat sound of cheesy secular Christmas songs,
but the refrain was: Santa, go straight to the ghetto...don't leave
anything for me. That really went to my heart.
Under the jollity, pain was audible. It's a whole canon.
I had a very nice time at my friend's family's dinner...and got to
hold and savor the new baby in the family. A little girl whose Mom
is my friend's daughter, and whose Dad is Iranian. Little Ayla is 2 mo., gorgeous
and that comfy-sturdy-wobbly little body was a joy to hold. I asked
them "how much will you charge me to babysit for you?" They laughed
and are going to take me up on it sometime.
Now I'm going across the street to my Jewish neighbors'--they just
got back from a trip from Barcelona to Barbardos. She is a lovely
warm person who heads up the local faith-coalition social justice
organization, which has been accomplishing very good things here.
I'm taking homemade gingersnaps, which I baked at noon. I was
surprised how good they were--the folks at dinner really liked them.
Good to check in here. Happy Solstice, everyone.
love,
Hops
I'm glad you had some nice places to go, Hops, and that your gingersnaps turned out well :) Babies and toddlers are such a tonic, aren't they, those chubby little limbs and they're just so happy in their own skin at that age. I have a terrible urge to swoop up babies when I see them out in shops and cuddle them. Obviously I don't as I'd be arrested, lol, but there's something about them that just makes you want to hold them close.
I'm sorry about the space left by your girl. I know the pain is there every day but those sorts of things are always much harder on special days, sometimes just because it's a 'rest' day, I think, and you're just not so busy. That's when I find my mind wanders. I find I think about my dad more and more these days. We miss the people we love. We've got through another end of year. I think we're all warriors xx
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Hey, Tupp.
Can you ask your boy's doctors about this, if it's available in the U.K.?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/a-powerful-new-form-of-medical-marijuana-without-the-high/2016/12/29/81bbf7c0-b5b2-11e6-b8df-600bd9d38a02_story.html?tid=pm_pop&utm_term=.eaa596d75ac8 (https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/a-powerful-new-form-of-medical-marijuana-without-the-high/2016/12/29/81bbf7c0-b5b2-11e6-b8df-600bd9d38a02_story.html?tid=pm_pop&utm_term=.eaa596d75ac8)
You never know but it's an encouraging story.
Hugs
Hops
Hops, a funny coincidence - literally within a couple of days of you posting this someone posted on another forum that I use that the powers that be are considering using this for medical purposes in the way described in the article. I've no idea how long these sorts of things take to sort out but apparently they've done a lot of tests because they were concerned about the numbers of people using it illegally (and they were worried about safety) and the tests have been very positive. So they're doing more research and it may at some point be available! Was just so funny that it came up somewhere else after you posted it on here. Anyway I am keeping my eyes on it and will let you know it there are any developments :)
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I'm so sorry to hear your Christmas was so difficult TwoAPenny. I truly hope the New Year will bring better times. The holiday can be so difficult---especially for Narcissistic families. The holidays are a reminder of everything that is missing and that we'll never have. It's a reminder of the "haves" and "have nots". Frankly, I think surviving it is an accomplishment in and of itself!
This year was a sobering holiday for me. After expending all of the effort in my family for the holiday, I realized that I truly have no family. I was once again forced to witness my brother expend all of his effort and emotion for his "adopted family"---his wife's family----and express not one iota of sentiment for his own biological family. I realized that will never change. He has lived a truly charmed life, never having to struggle for anything----perfect wife, perfect child, good career that was literally handed to him by others...No challenges of any consequence. He has adopted more of my N mom's traits----the need to completely control and dictate behavior, a lack of empathy and compassion, and a sense of superiority. I look at him now and see that the brother I knew and grew up with is gone, never to return.
I spent Christmas morning at the cemetery visiting and honoring my Dad who always had such a true heart and, like me, loved Christmas. He as grateful and appreciative for all the effort I made. While there, I witnessed a scene that was truly heartbreaking. A little girl had apparently recently passed. Her family, including a person I surmised was the young father, arrived at the grave site and prayed around the grave in a circle, The young dad was dressed as Santa and placed a wrapped doll carriage with some small toys on the grave. A small wreath with a motion-censored ornament that played a Christmas song hung over the grave. Just like that popular image, "Santa" kneeled down at the grave and prayed and then drew a small heart in the snow before the family departed. That scene put a lot of things in perspective. While I, along with other visitors that day, were mourning our losses, it couldn't be compared with the loss of this family on Christmas Day.
Acceptance is very hard. It is especially difficult at Christmas when we are inundated in society with images of happy families and messages of what is truly important at the holiday---spending time with family and loved ones. I believe that to be true which makes it all the more heartbreaking when you know you have no family or loved ones who care. But I also know, although society never wants to remind us of this, that there are many, many, many people out there who are alone or lonely with no family or families who are estranged and have betrayed or hurt us. The bottom line is that life is not fair. Those of us on this board probably fit into that group of people who, through no fault of our own, have no family to count on, to sit around the Christmas tree with and have authentic, loving experiences.
Instead, what we must do is forge on, to find our way to acceptance and to do our best to contribute to this life in some way.
Like many have expressed here, I truly am grateful for all of you, for the kindness and support you have shown me over the years. It has made the world of difference and helped me feel I'm not so alone.
Thank you Dr. G for providing this forum and doing so with so much compassion, empathy and understanding.
May we all find a moment or two of joy this season and may we experience a New Year that is filled with peace, acceptance and understanding.
Bright Blessings. Sunblue.
Hey Sunblue,
I remember that moment of realising that I didn't have any family to speak of and it's a terribly hard and shocking thing to experience, I think. I think in some ways it's tougher to have family that could love you but don't than it is to physically not have any family? I don't know, maybe they're both just as hard. I remember one year after I 'came out' about my step-dad abusing me that my mum invited the whole family to a big lunch for Easter, didn't invite me and made sure I knew about it. It was my punishment for spilling the family secrets. I have adjusted as time goes by, I think. It helps, in some ways, that Christmas has been turned into a big commercial enterprise. That helps me to put it in perspective (I see it as an advertising ploy, basically. I don't mean that in a rude way to people who celebrate for religious reasons but I feel it's been hijacked by businesses and as I'm not religious I feel less of a need to get involved). I'm glad you have the good memories from your dad, though. I have good memories from my dad and I do feel it helped me to just have that normal, loving presence in my life, even though it wasn't for very long.
The description of the family at the grave is heartbreaking. As you say, there are so many experiencing pain, heartbreak and loneliness, not to mention the homeless, those who are ill, living in loveless relationships and so on. So much joy on one hand and so much pain on the other, it's hard. We took some flowers up to my friend's daughter's grave on Christmas Eve and what I thought was lovely was that the graves were awash with colour. So many people had taken flowers up for their loved ones. It makes you realise how loved people are.
Anyway I hope you got through it okay. I have found Christmases have become less painful as time's gone by but it's a hard one to get through. Lots of love xx