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Getting Back Your Spark When Every Day Feels Hard

“When you reach the end of your rope, tie a knot in it and hang on.” ~Thomas Jefferson

Did you ever wake up one morning and not know who you were anymore?

Waking up for the past four years of my life, I felt like I was in the movie Groundhog Day. The same things happened every day, and I felt the same horrible feelings all the time. Anxiety, depression, and hopelessness ran my life.

I had it all figured out at some point. I was furthering my career and moving toward my dream of becoming a psychologist. I had great co-workers, tons of friends, and a supportive family.

There was this continuous, sun-shiny, flowing feeling of “everything works out for the best.” Any struggles I went through would make me stronger, a better psychologist and friend. A better person. And so, I enjoyed the ups and downs of life with no regrets and little struggle.

It seems that I woke up one day and everything was gone.

I had lost my job, which paid for my education. All my friends had drug abuse issues, and I removed myself from their lives or vice versa. My puppy, best friend since age five, died four days before my birthday. I was plagued with pain from Lyme disease and an undiagnosed tick-borne illness. I felt like every piece of my life was falling apart.

My dreams were not coming true anymore. I still have no idea how I slid down this far without knowing it.

The best parts of my life had left me, and it seems like it all hit me at once. There were no more happy, “let it go, it’ll all turn out for the best” thoughts. It was all darkness. I had lost myself and my joy for life.

The worst part was that I knew I could get back to that place if I tried. But I didn’t know how. I longed for that spark, that fulfillment with my life, for years. I just couldn’t put my finger on what I was missing. I hadn’t even realized that it was gone until it seemed light years away.

I realize now that there were quite a few things I could actively do every day to pull myself out of this dark place. If you’re going through a rough time, these may help you as well.

1. Acknowledge and appreciate everything that happens, even the seemingly bad.

During my “golden age,” I had acknowledged everything that worked out well for me. I recognized the random strokes of luck that life handed me and appreciated them, and it seemed like more of these things happened as a result.

When I lost my way, I was so focused on the negative, overwhelming feelings that I thought good things just didn’t happen for me anymore. I had to learn that the only difference between a good thing and a bad thing is how you look at it.

I could sit and think about how much I disliked my boyfriend’s mother all day. From the first thought in the morning, all the way until bedtime I could obsess over how horribly she treated me. Why couldn’t she just accept me as I am? I love her son more than anything, after all!

After struggling with this for close to a year, I finally realized why she had grown to be such a focal point in my life. She was here to teach me compassion. True, loving compassion for someone you thought you couldn’t stand, until you open your eyes and think what it may be like to be them.

It is a good thing that she is in my life, and though she often presents challenges to me, that’s not necessarily a bad thing. She helped me to see that people are not black and white, good or bad.

Nothing is inherently bad; it just is. As your mind processes information, it applies your filters, your beliefs, and your preconceptions to the information. This is the reason we are angered, or feel sad, or disappointed. It’s not actually the thing she said, or what he did that angered you; it’s all what you think about it.

2. Challenge limiting, irrational thoughts.

When things go haywire, we tend to cling to our irrational thoughts like a life preserver, when what we really need to hold onto is our inner calm.

I really believed that I could just think my way out of the hopelessness-box I had placed myself in. I obsessed and ran and re-ran the same thoughts all day, trying to make sense or pull what I wanted out of every conversation.

My mind was a mess of tangled thoughts that I used to keep me in a bad place. Nothing was ever good enough; nothing was ever good at all. And there seemed nothing I could do about it but obsess even more.

I would obsess that my boyfriend and I weren’t getting along. Did he still love me? Why wasn’t that spark there anymore? He was cheating on me, he had to be. Why couldn’t things be the way they used to be? Why had he said that thing this morning, the one that made me feel so unloved?

I realized that all these thoughts did was give me something external to obsess over, to keep me from thinking about the real problem.

The real reason why I was uncomfortable and stuck in this thought loop was because of my own insecurities. I did not feel like I was good enough for him, hence my sneaking suspicion he would cheat on me. Focusing on what he may do kept me from addressing my own issues.

I was insecure. I had deep rooted self-worth issues, and I kept looking past the fact that all this started and ended with me. It was my insecurities making me think this way. It was my thoughts that would one day enable these things to happen—if I wanted to keep believing that I wasn’t good enough.

Often, when you think defeating and self-limiting thoughts all day, you start to believe they are true.

If you start from a place of love and acceptance for yourself, it greatly affects the way you think about important things in your life. My panicked mind just took the root cause and expanded upon it, made it grow, made it bigger and meaner until I couldn’t overlook the real problem staring me in the face anymore.

When you accept and love yourself as you are, and when you feel the inner peacefulness and calm inside yourself, you are able to see straight through your own tricks.

3. Do something just for you. Every day.

I am a responsible person and I always did everything I was supposed to do. I was a good girl. I went to work. I did my job. I did the dishes and laundry and was exhausted by the end of every day. But I couldn’t sleep through the night.

I felt like nothing was ever truly done. There was always more to do. I remember looking at a dirty bottle once and breaking down crying. Being everything for everyone doesn’t mean anything if you can’t enjoy a few moments with yourself. No one can appreciate you the way you can.

I slowly started substituting tasks with things I wanted to do. Instead of coming home and picking up the living room, I would come home and exercise. I felt better, relaxed, and energized when I was done, and the picking up got done quickly and without the bitterness accompanied by never having any time to do anything for me.

Its funny—all these people are relying on you, but all these people really need is you. Not the things you do. They love and appreciate you for you, not for the clean house. I had built up this idea that being a mother and responsible adult meant that I couldn’t have fun anymore. That I couldn’t do things I enjoy.

Make time to do something you love, and to just be you. Make you your number one priority today. Everything else will fall into place

4. Let the fun in.

Dance to your favorite song in the car, go dig your hands in the dirt in the garden, tickle your husband, make a mess; however you like to have fun, do it!

It seems like as we grow into adults, we are expected to act like grown-ups and slowly filter out all the fun in our lives. Piece by piece you realize everything that you used to enjoy, you no longer do!

Reclaim your life.

You need to take whatever time you have and use it to the fullest. It’s okay to go a little crazy. Get a little dirty doing something you enjoy. Remember what it was like to be a kid and totally immerse yourself in something, just because you loved to do it.

Forget your to-do list and do you instead. Love completely, open your heart, act like a kid, and who knows; you may just feel like one again.

About Sarah Hohl

Sarah Hohl is a mother, devoted meditation junkie, aspiring author, and artist on a nutrition and trauma-informed journey to self-fulfillment. Visit her and her ramblings at https://srhhohl.wixsite.com/lokeecalm

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Jeramy Hobbs

this is a really great article. Its funny how you may already know something, having heard it a thousand times, but thousand and one gets you in the right spot, thanks… btw my wife randomly tickles me all the time. i love it.

Becks

Absolutely brilliant!! The part about your relationship is sooooooo familiar to me! I thought the same things…. Does he still love me? Where’s the spark gone?! Is he straying?! It has nothing to do with him. He loves me. I know that, everyday. But through my own thoughts and insecurities I was pushing him away!!! Nearly loosing him was a big enough wake up call for me!!! I am still working on myself. Time for fun! Too much seriousness!!

Dr. Huntington James Jr.

Great essay. Thank you!

Ross

Brilliantly written article to I can relate massively to. The over-thinking, the inward blame are reactions to my own insecurities about life and love. Thank you.

Talya Price

Thank you for this.

el

Wow. Solid advice in there. Thank you.

nikole

Awesome. Described me perfectly!!

Chani

Sounds familiar. Lyme disease – letting go of the constant to dos, constant negativity and insecurity. Might be something in that.

Adam Myers

Thank you for these words. Don’t know we’re to start really with my life as it’s well..

All I can say is it is somtines hard to look at the positives and so things like this help..

Thank you for caring and trying to help people it helps.

Angie G

Great article! I’m still in the process of learning to really accept (and not just intellectually understand) this wisdom…

“Nothing is inherently bad; it just is. As your mind processes information, it applies your filters, your beliefs, and your preconceptions to the information. This is the reason we are angered, or feel sad, or disappointed. It’s not actually the thing she said, or what he did that angered you; it’s all what you think about it.”

Sarah

Thank you Angie.
I still struggle with this as well. I think the most helpful thing I did was to listen to what I was thinking about a situation, but not believe that my thoughts are necessarily true or right.

Sarah

Thank you Adam 🙂
It means a lot to actually think that I can help!

Sarah

Thank you 🙂 It took a lot of inward reflection to get to that understanding. Best wishes to you!

Sarah

We sound very similar Becks. I almost lost him many a times from my own issues. It’s so much easier to look at an external factor for our unhappiness than within ourselves 🙂 Life is a game, so we might as well play it!

Sarah

Glad to hear it Jeramy 🙂

Peter Ewin Hall

Sarah, Thanks foir your story. Sometimes we place a lot our happiness on external things like careers which can at best be unrelaible. One thought I had today was that we’ve got to work on the good things – the fun moments – create more of them and make the gaps between them smaller.

Luvina

Sorry, I’ve got a question for this theory that I really struggle with: Let’s say it’s not what he did, it’s how I see what he did… so sexual abuse is not inherently bad I suppose? Come on. There has to be another “healthy” way of seeing how anger affects us.

Vee Somphon

Thank you for writing so openly about your recent struggles and the lessons that will help others transform their pain. Elizabeth Gilbert called these difficult times the Dark Night of the Soul. During such times, it is so important to rebelliously search out any tiny moment of joy and beauty that will illuminate and cast out the dark. It will be that one reason to get out of bed.

I can’t agree with you more about challenging our own thoughts. Science now has revealed that doubting your doubt is healthy. Any voice that does not come from love is not our true and best self, so we must question it.

Noam Lightstone

It seems that as we grow up, we stop realizing that we’re still kids inside… If you make a kid do homework (read for an adult: chores and work) all the time, do you think they’ll be happy?

Heck no! They want to go run and play outside!

Sometimes we just feel like life is scary and full of misery yet when we look at it from different angles (as you suggest), we usually see that we’ve been given so much! And, that we were put here to explore and ENJOY.

I’m behind on a lot of stuff but instead of staying in “trying to catch up”, I’m going to a place to jump between wall to wall trampolines. Thanks for the well put article, Sarah :).

Charlie

I’ve never commented here before, but…you could have written this just for me. It’s everything I need to hear right now, will try to put this into practice. Thank you.

Sarah

That is a beautiful way to put it Vee (Any voice that does not come from love…) and I completely agree.

Sarah

I agree Luvina, not all experiences fall very easily into this category. I was referencing thought patterns and how we interpret others comments and thoughts that pertain to us. I think this type of thing falls into a little different category. The way I tend to think about those type of issues, where it is very hard to see any good at all from, is to think, what did I learn and how did I grow as a person from this “bad” thing. Some things are just bad, and painful, but thats does not mean that we cannot use them to grow.

Sarah

Exactly! I think that is one of the secrets of life and true happiness. FUN!

Sarah

Thats awesome Noam. We are here to enjoy life and grow as people. Thats a great idea 🙂 and it sounds like so much fun!

Sarah

I’m so happy you could relate so closely to my struggles and what I learned. It means so much to me. Best of luck!

Jennifer Bialk Scott

Sarah, I can’t believe I stumbled across this. You are literally me with a different name! I live art and writing. Lost all my “friends” when I got sober. And lost the career, finances, self-worth, athletic abilities, joy, happiness, motivation, drive….
Basically my life was stolen by late stage chronic lyme, babedia, Bartonella, erlichiois, RMSF, anaplasmosis….and all the viruses that became activated.
I’ve been sick firc13 years and while I can physically function again ai am still lot me. I feel I am merely existing and I am STUCK!
Seeing you get past that amazes me. I wish you could be my life coach.
Feel free to email me at jennycody1@aol.com.

Kukka

good point!

Sarah

Hi Jennifer,
Sorry it took me so long to see this! Its been about 3 years since I wrote this and I think I may need to make a follow up article, it definitely hasn’t been easy but the last year has definitely been full of growth for me. I hope your doing well! I’ll be happy to shoot you an email!