Author Topic: Embracing Fear - freedom comes in odd forms  (Read 2058 times)

sKePTiKal

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Embracing Fear - freedom comes in odd forms
« on: May 22, 2009, 02:58:53 PM »
I think FDR had it wrong: There is a REAL reason for fear; a real purpose. And I've discovered that I disregarded it - denied it - and put myself in even more peril. All because Twiggy trusted adults to know the right thing to do, instead of listening to - paying attention to - what her fear was trying to tell her. One didn't "break the rules" - EVER - for ANY REASON.

GS: here is the story of my road trip. I got in the car Saturday morning. I drove west for 6 or 7 hours, through my old "stomping grounds". I didn't think or ponder anything. I didn't even sing along with the radio/CD very much... I just drove. When I got "home" I enjoyed the horses, the buggies, the late afternoon light. Then: I drove past my old house to check on the old Oak tree that I felt was like one of Tolkein's Ents - it looked out for me and comforted me.

The Oak tree was gone. Completely. Not even a stump. The old trailer that I detested was still there. The old house that was such a comfort to Twiggy... but not a trace of the tree. I sat there in amazement trying to understand this. The tree has always been there - I moved away in 1980 - and the tree has always been there. Not a few branches gone - the whole tree gone. And then I remembered: there was a bad storm the night my H.S. president died. His ex-wife is my best friend and still lives near that town - and her house caught fire that night and we talked shortly after. I'd looked at pictures on the local newspaper website in hopes that I'd see a picture of the tree still there.

Then I drove downtown and completely lived the old Pretenders song: I went back to Ohio and my city was gone. As gone as the Oak tree. Only two businesses left that were there when I left town - and I bought dinner at one and a paper at another - then went back to my hotel.

The next day, I got up early to mist and the promise of warmer temps... and drove another 6-7 hours. I was too early to check into my hotel so I called my brother to talk over some business matters for our meeting on Monday and he suggested I drive to his place, instead of going directly to the hotel. We met with the person we were negotiating a new contract for, that evening and I drove on to my hotel.

Monday we had the meeting and I found myself having to define a boundary - which I did with minimal hestitation. After the meeting, I had lunch with my brother and let him twist my arm into going with him to my Dad's house, which is now empty of all furnishings except those my brother has decided to keep. I knew he needed to process his emotions more - but damn, I had no clue how many emotions and how deeply and how far back they were attached. He is in great pain right now. And completely overwhelmed by the facts of what he has inherited. He simply can't process any of the business information, because of the personal emotions.

Then I got in my car and drove another 6-7 hours to my best friend's house, in my home town. I've been there many times - but I got lost and had to call her twice, because I was disoriented about where I was. She had tried to call me - but I sent her the wrong cell phone number in email. It was OK; it was funny. Then we had the best pizza in the world and I bought some to bring home to my hubby. We got in the hot tub until I was almost asleep - even though the night time temp was 34 degrees - and the next day I drove 6-7 hours to get back home.

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All this time on the road, I wasn't thinking or pondering a THING. I was simply paying attention to driving. Watching my speed, looking for cops, trying to stay on time without a ticket between stops, and stopping to pee along the way. (Diuretics, ya know?) Light another cigarette, drink some water or coffee or lemonade... stop, get gas, pee...

It's a long way from the east coast to the eastern side of Lake Michigan.

And while I was driving, I became aware of this FEAR that came out of nowhere so many times... it had no real point to it, either. It was just a "What IF"...

What if - I missed an exit?
What if - I forgot where I was - thought I was somewhere else - and made a wrong turn?
What if - I got lost?
What if - I completely dissociated and drove into oncoming traffic?

In other words: what if I did something completely STUPID and killed my self?

And over the course of a 1000 miles or so, I realized that the WHAT IFs were related to whether I was paying attention to myself or not. I.E., - was I paying attention to the FEAR?

This kind of fear is necessary for survival. This kind of paying attention, too. It was fear telling me I had a need that needed to be addressed - that I was letting myself slide into "white line fever" (a form of hypnosis), that I was afraid of forgetting where I was and being embarassed by not remembering and looking like a complete dimwit - that I was afraid I wouldn't do what I needed to do to get to my next destination.

This kind of fear is COMPLETELY different than what I've known of anxiety. It's the kind of fear I experienced when Twiggy received the phone call from the rapist. And the kind of fear I experienced, when I realized I hadn't been paying attention and he was within 50 ft. of me. The same kind of fear I felt, when he pulled a gun. (Edit in: this will make a lot more sense, if I explain that if I'd listened to my fear - instead of adults who were WRONG - with all their rules - I would've fled and not been there when the rapist showed up. But no - I was always told my fear was my imagination running away with me... sigh.)

Then, as Twiggy - and now 40 years later - I realize there is another kind of fear. One that bound me to other people's expectations of me; one that insisted that I follow the "rules" - or ELSE. A fear that insisted I "not be" my SELF - because it was "against the rules" my mother insisted on. To the point - well, you know - I became someone else to survive. Because who I was, in reality, was NOT OK... according to Mother. I was afraid of the "OR ELSE".

Well, duh! I did get lost - twice. And no one made fun of me. I did space out on the road - and got off the road at the next possible point, and stretched, breathed in fresh air and talked to human beings. I listened to, respected, and TRUSTED my fear. On instinct. Without consciousness of doing it. I just DID it.

I got home Tuesday evening. Today, I just processed that experience and finally understand that there are different kinds of fear and not ALL of them are bad. In fact: learning to listen to - and act on - my primal fear makes me whole in some undefinable, mysterious way. That kind of fear, I NEED to pay attention to. The other kind - PPPSHHH! who cares? It's just "programming". It really isn't important at all.

Trusting my fear to tell me what I need to pay attention to, is something that I'm just now learning. And it's very, very important.
A LOT more important that worrying about how I look, act & appear to other people. Really: who cares?

Either they like me as I am - or they don't. The world won't come to an end, if they don't.
And I found out that it's also possible to do this with my Mom, as well. She barely noticed.

How about that?
« Last Edit: May 22, 2009, 03:09:23 PM by PhoenixRising »
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lighter

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Re: Embracing Fear - freedom comes in odd forms
« Reply #1 on: May 22, 2009, 04:05:25 PM »
Thanks for sharing your trip, Amber.

I would suggest reading THE GIFT OF FEAR to help figure out how our instincts protect us.




sKePTiKal

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Re: Embracing Fear - freedom comes in odd forms
« Reply #2 on: May 24, 2009, 08:18:01 AM »
Well, I think what's so significant for me, was being able to actually tell the difference - finally - between helpful, instinctual fear that keeps us alive, out of danger...

and the ultimately limiting kinds of fear - anxiety, worry, self-consciousness (what will "they" think??) - that at some point became a refuge from what I perceived to be hurtful or worse.

It's kind of a victory over the old "who do you think you are??" question, for me.
Success is never final, failure is never fatal.

lighter

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Re: Embracing Fear - freedom comes in odd forms
« Reply #3 on: May 24, 2009, 09:34:44 AM »
Amber..... you've figured out so many difficult puzzles in your life. 

Truly amazing.

THE POWER OF FEAR is a good read, with examples of how people react under stress and who survives.

I'd suggest it to anyone: )

Mo2




Hopalong

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Re: Embracing Fear - freedom comes in odd forms
« Reply #4 on: May 24, 2009, 02:10:19 PM »
Amber: OUTSTANDING, as ever!
Quote
there are different kinds of fear and not ALL of them are bad. In fact: learning to listen to - and act on - my primal fear makes me whole in some undefinable, mysterious way. That kind of fear, I NEED to pay attention to. The other kind - PPPSHHH! who cares? It's just "programming". It really isn't important at all.

Trusting my fear to tell me what I need to pay attention to, is something that I'm just now learning. And it's very, very important.
A LOT more important that worrying about how I look, act & appear to other people.

M02, me too, re. The Power of Fear--such an empowering book. I wish it were assigned to all girls.

Hops
"That'll do, pig, that'll do."

Gaining Strength

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Re: Embracing Fear - freedom comes in odd forms
« Reply #5 on: May 26, 2009, 12:03:55 AM »
I may have read your post as early as Friday but I found it too significant to process fully.  Even now I haven't processed it fully.  I feel as though what little response I give it inadequate.  For some reason I felt the need to offer this apology before I offered a comment.

Quote
Then, as Twiggy - and now 40 years later - I realize there is another kind of fear. One that bound me to other people's expectations of me; one that insisted that I follow the "rules" - or ELSE. A fear that insisted I "not be" my SELF - because it was "against the rules" my mother insisted on. To the point - well, you know - I became someone else to survive. Because who I was, in reality, was NOT OK... according to Mother. I was afraid of the "OR ELSE".

I know that fear.  I know that "or ELSE" and I know becoming someone else.

I understand wha you are saying.  There no longer is an "or ELSE".  I can actually return to that person w/o that particular type of fear.

debkor

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Re: Embracing Fear - freedom comes in odd forms
« Reply #6 on: May 26, 2009, 02:15:15 AM »
Hi PR

Well I like you as you are!!!  Just do!!


Love
Deb

sKePTiKal

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Re: Embracing Fear - freedom comes in odd forms
« Reply #7 on: May 26, 2009, 11:17:45 AM »
 :lol:

Thanks, all. Thinking about how I've let those "or else..." type of fears dictate my life - my experience of life... is proving fruitful. It sorta comes down to "the rules". There were the spoken rules and the unspoken ones...

but both kinds derive from an abuser's need to be in charge of reality. To make life what THEY think it's supposed to be. Those poor people don't realize that this need of theirs: to make someone as miserable as they are, derives from a fear of simply being; of simply being a human being - warts & all, as I like to say.

GS - yep; you got it. There isn't any "or else" anymore. Or, as my tai chi teacher likes to say: nothing bad will happen - if you decide to "break" those old rules. It'll still be scary; you may have to take these one at a time and very consciously... but eventually those old "rules" fade away like the real bad experience that they once were - and have no more power to make you miserable - NOW.

My absolute biggest fear is what kept coming up on the road trip: what if what I am apprehending as reality - isn't REAL. What if I'm not able to see, hear, think or feel... what is really real? And take appropriate action? That level of self-doubt is responsible for all kinds of maladapted, neurotic habits I've lived with all my life since then. I truly don't think my mother was aware that this was happening in me, as a result of her denying me the truth about what happened to me. All she knew, is that she could use this type of doubt to control me. And so she did.

Ironically - I intuitively realized after a while, that it was she that was delusional and not me. But once the fear was planted - once that hook was set in my feelings about myself - I didn't know how to get myself free of it. Instead, I learned a whole bunch of OTHER things which could be considered "proof" that my mom was completely, totally, without any doubt - wrong about me and who I was and what I was capable of being/doing. And even that wasn't enough to un-do the power of that fear. What it took to un-do that was attempting the things I was told I'd inevitably screw up - and yes, even fail at them - enough times to see that:

hey - I'm only human. I can make mistakes and the "or else" doesn't happen. People don't treat me like a lunatic or an imbecile, in fact, they laugh WITH me (a huge clue about people - abusers can't laugh at themselves) about my mistakes. And I think I've finally realized that as big and insurmountable as my old fears were - they're insignificant to the level of fear that causes someone else to be consistently abusive. They're so afraid of being humans.
Success is never final, failure is never fatal.