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allzil

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  • in reply to: I need to start living, but I don't know what I want #53430
    allzil
    Participant

    Gosh Alex, we’re in the same boat, only I’m in Vancouver and the place I ‘escaped’ off to was Colombia… I have had a really hard time readjusting back to life in my PARENTS’ house, with my SISTER who I do *not* get along with. And a community that has disappeared, which was something I was very engaged with in years past. Feel very alone in this city now… and a barrage of male “friends” that have finally all chaotically left my life. I was teaching English, rock climbing, making music too….down there. Went twice, two years in a row – as return tickets were the same price as one-way. I went down originally because my parents decided we would go traveling there for a month, and I just stayed, and man, at the beginning…the first couple of months I was just high on the energy of living there. Being alone. Being independent. Living in a dangerous city and making it work really well. Making friends… But I didn’t pursue the English gig nearly as much as I should have. I didn’t make enough money, out of laziness and pot smoking and pleasure seeking. I didn’t practice and record nearly as much as I should have, basically for the same reasons, plus a bit of fear of success/failure………. I could really ramble on a lot longer, but…I’ll just synthesize to a key point. Do everything 100%. If I had regrets – which I don’t, as I’ve somehow managed to delete that emotion from my possible range… – it would be to have not done everything half-ass. I also have very high expectations for myself and with this habit I am basically letting myself down all.the.time…. We are better people when we commit and follow through, but not just to see, with one foot in the water…no, really just do it. What is there to fear, really, after all? Following this advice is difficult as f(#* but so much worth your while to try try try..

    Very late quick post. More to come? x

    in reply to: Who are you? #51492
    allzil
    Participant

    Hi everybody,

    Thanks for the thread start! Will contribute….

    1. Describe myself in 3 sentences.
    I am a sensitive and emotional person. I love other languages and living in other cultural settings. As I find myself straddling the mid-20s, I hope that the struggles I’ve had (mainly produced by my own mind..) have not been in vain, and that I will emerge on the ‘other side’, knowing better who I am.

    2. How did I first learn about Tiny Buddha?
    A dear colleague/superior/friend. I confided in her about …well, everything, after she showed that she seemed to understand. And she sent me here!

    3. What makes me laugh?
    Self-deprecating with a good friend who knows me really well. When my dog tries to climb on top of me and be as heavy as possible…he’s a fat golden retriever. 😀

    4. Where would I take a tourist in my hometown and vicinity?
    The park by my house – it’s old growth, it’s on the Pacific, it smells like earth, it’s right next door to have lunch and tea! And Cypress Bowl lookout, to see the city, the sunset..

    5. What do I like to learn about?
    Right right now I am learning to make kombucha. Also, about nutrition and what vitamins do what for your body… I’ve been reading a good deal about maintaining positive outlook, mindfulness and living in a tech age rampant with low attention span and – ironically – disconnectedness. I’m reading a book called the Happiness Hypothesis, which basically surmises all the most popular and widely agreed upon concepts – East/West, ancient/contemporary – that guide are knowledge of self, how we interact with others. It’s a nice little survey book that can open channels to many new reads, if you are looking to expand your library….

    Cheers-
    LR

    in reply to: Entwined in music #51166
    allzil
    Participant

    I listen to Maggot Brain – Funkadelic, when I’m feeling pensive. I listen to Massive Attack and disco when I’m dealing with heavy emotions and want to calm down/distract myself. I listen to opera – Pavaroti, especially, but anything will do – to truly, truly relax and free my mind from thoughts. I like a lot of classical, but it can vary HUGELY with regard to the ‘vibe’. Opera rarely does not have a sweet essence about it – voices dripping with sweetness… I listen to John Digweed, Deep Dish, Richie Hawtin – to dance, to let go and feel my pulse. And I sing And So It Goes – Billy Joel, frequently, when pensive and driving in my car that has no functioning radio..

    There’s so much out there…. x

    in reply to: Toxic Negativity Ruining the Life I Desire to Have. #51161
    allzil
    Participant

    Hi Adrian,

    I empathize with much of your description. Though I may not tap into exactly what you need, I’m going to go ahead and offer up my personal solutions to dealing with somewhat constant emotional distress.

    First of all, I think it’s important to develop steps to deal with your intense flare-up emotions with your close ones *when you are calm and collected*, as once you are in the swings, it is definitely too late for clear thinking. For example, to explain to “Joe” that when you feel a certain boiling happening in your blood, that the conversation should probably stop right there and then, and that you’ll deal with that by, maybe, simply walking away. You might not be able to say anything – perhaps you could have a ‘safe’ word, like ‘gone’ or ‘break’, that signals your departure from the situation. In that moment when you’ve evacuated yourself from the stressful situation, you can use deep breathing, repetition of calming mantras and imaginative imagery to reach a calmer plain, from which position you will likely be able to make more rational choices with regard to what you say about yourself, your man, and the relationship. I have learned these techniques from yoga, intros by friends (and internet) to meditation, and sleep counseling as a kid – – the man got me to curl up in his office cushioned chair, and close my eyes.

    The first image: imagine a whiteboard, covered in black marker scrawl. Just covered, a total mess, no sense of it at all – a reflection of your mind, your emotions, the busyness of your day, just a bloody mess. Really envision that messy whiteboard. Then imagine that you take a large whiteboard eraser, and you start at the left side and smooth it all away, leaving the board clean as clouds. If it’s a particularly hard day, and I am particularly anxious, it could take me many times to get to a clean whiteboard. But I always get there. After this, I use a second image to fall asleep… Imagine a vista, a place, that brings you total calm, peace and relaxation. Better yet, if it’s a place you’ve been to or have seen explicitly – an image you already have in your memory. Mine is the coast of Ireland, where the land is plateau until it hits the rough coast. The land is quite green, and far below. Imagine a little magic flying carpet, it’s floating there and you hop on – you’re in the sky and you go gliding in and out of the clouds, which feel clear and cold but comforting in the light wind. I look down and see my coast below. I can’t really recall one time that I haven’t woken up in the AM after having fallen right asleep after this process. It really works wonders for me – to focus and calm my mind. It’s not easy always, you have to be TOUGH on yourself, to not let your mind go wandering to other ideas that want to insert themselves. Don’t let them..

    I have practiced yoga since I was 18 or so. I am currently 25, and only in the last 2 years or so have I started to really take yoga home with me. It was always class-only, hot yoga-only. But after a few years (and I’m sure the adjustment is different for everybody), I now do yoga movements on my own time, alone: on a mat or not, in my living room, or in the forest after/before a run, at waking to open my spine (it can get SO stiff), in the afternoon to get some knots out of my back. at night to relax my mind before bed. If you get into yoga, go to classes to get into the flow and learn the basics with good technique so you don’t overdo it. When I go to yoga classes, I focus on my process – I make sure I am fully engaged the entirety of the class, and if I need to cry, I let that happen. It’s not about anybody else. No one else matters in that room, but at the same time, you are breathing with everyone together and that can feel really empowering.

    It’s important to discipline your mind – to decide when you will think about something and when not. Yoga teaches you the discipline that you will use for so many other things in your life. Obviously, other sports can do this too. I started rock climbing two years ago – and apart from my body type, I don’t think many people would have predicted that I was going to get into this – but I f&#*ing LOVE it. The best thing about going to the gym when I’m having a hard time – and this is especially true if you have a climbing partner or you know folks at the gym – is that once you’re in there and on a climb (bouldering, if you’re scared of heights), that is all that exists. Your mind slows, your focus switches immediately – the physical realm of the gym is the reality you are faced with and I’ve got to face it, right there and then, no excuses. I’ve talked with other climbers about this, and *so* many people are on the same page with me. Hours later, I leave the gym and realize with an incredibly satisfied sigh that I hadn’t thought about any of the bullshit for that entire time. So so so rewarding… Also, rock climbing along with yoga share that importance of breath. I can’t stress enough how important it is. I know it sounds so new age guru etc. etc. but if you can control your breath, you can control your mind.

    Anxiety attacks for me – breath is one of the first things to go, to the point that I’ll be hyperventilating. If you can just try, just just just enough, just take that little itty bitty step to get some cooling imagery in your head, and to inhale 6 counts, hold for a millisecond, exhale 6 counts, hold out for a millisecond, and continue. You’ll find that your quickened pulse will drop, your face will feel less flush, the pressure and tightness in your neck and back will loosen. You are manipulating your body into a calm state with this breath technique – as generally we only breathe this deeply when we are very, very relaxed, like during sleep. To share an anecdote: I have difficulty having blood taken – it’s a panicky situation for me, a physiological reaction that I cannot rationalize my way out of… So I go in to the clinic and as soon as she is calling me in, I can feel my pulse quicken, my whole body start to sweat, my breath quicken… I start yapping to the nurse about being kind to me, trying to make sure she doesn’t give me a painful needle… It’s not really helping me calm down, it’s nervous talking – a symptom of my physiological state. And all of a sudden, right as she’s pumping my vein for the needle, I decide to go into deep breathing – the 6 in, 6 out. I pluuuuunge into it, and I use that breathing during the whole process, and man! Did it ever work! I was flabbergasted at its efficacy, as I’d never used it in that scenario before.

    These are some of the principal ways I deal with my stress/anxiety/life boredom/depression/hopelessness. Sometimes I don’t have the energy to even get out of bed, but those days don’t usually last too long, and if you find yourself with an opportune moment to take a small step, make it. Hell, make that opportune moment happen yourself! If you hear about a gym/center/park, or that someone is going that you know, don’t think about it, don’t consider the whys and the hows. Just take a very small step: try it. No judgment, no one else cares, because they’ve got their own shit they’re dealing with. It’s all you – and there’s no reason to hesitate, at all. No risk, at all. JUST the risk and sometimes strange fear to get better, be better – as it flips everything upside down, but for the better….

    Obviously I am not completely healed, but I honestly can say that it has changed my life and outlook. These activities are coping mechanisms – for immediate relief – but are also preventative, as long as you keep up with them. The hardest step is that first little one, because it means you’re making moves and you care about getting better. Once you get the ball rolling, it’s easier to keep just touching the ball a little each day to make sure it doesn’t lag. I have thought long and hard about why I am the way I am, why I react the way I do – I’m sure you have, too. Sometimes there are huge circumstantial factors that are really hard to avoid that contribute directly to the emotional toil. Try to be aware of them but not obsessing or emotionally engaging with them. I live with my sister (at home with my parents) right now, as we’re both jobless and in transition, and I gotta say, it’s a daily grind dealing with that. After years of smoking cigarettes and cannabis, and now two years of having identified how they are negatively affecting my life, they are getting cut down and out. I used to use both to help deal with anxiety, when in actuality, one+ cigarettes gives me chest pain that leads to increased anxiety, and pot contributes to a lifelong state of apathy, undermining my own desire to achieve goals and be a smart, articulate person. Identifying these triggers disguised as coping mechanisms and stressors takes some of the stigma out of being so afflicted by our emotions – you realize that it makes sense, it’s not coming out of nowhere, there is a pattern. And patterns can be worked with.

    I may have gone on a bit about my own process, but it’s in the hope to illustrate how useful these strategies can be for dealing with real problems. Exercise is how we use our body to restore equilibrium. The body supports the mind – let it serve you.

    I hope this was helpful. Christ, I could go on and on. Good luck, take care of yourself. 🙂

    in reply to: 2013 thanks for ummm…nothing #51158
    allzil
    Participant

    If the bad continues, try to stay positive – it can induce more positive things and people coming into your life. Staying positive is just KINDA hard, but my key way to do this is to NOT disconnect from society – it makes your warped/negative perception of your own life become all the more real to you. And get an activity that makes you feel strong, healthy and focused – I indoor rock climb, and it has saved me from a night of crying endlessly, various times.

    Good luck in 2014! A banner year, I tell you… 😉

    in reply to: Reeling after a life change. Help! #51157
    allzil
    Participant

    Periods of adjustment, at least for me and I’m sure for many, are always hard. I am currently back in my hometown, which I left to live in South America for almost two years. I have no career, my degree does not insert me into a job, I miss my ex-boyfriend (ugh..) and I have almost no community of friends here anymore – something that I used to rely on *immensely*. I am living at home and my costs are few, and the last month has been one of utter hopelessness, anxiety and depression. It was hard, but for my mental health and to give me options to do *something* of use, in the future, I got some work. They are measly hours and there a bunch of reasons why I could just devalue the positions, but I remind myself that I’m working towards the future – this is not my career, and I am NOT stuck in this for the rest of my life. Man, patience is a virtue: that’s the truth.

    For some, daily routines and something to expect each day with certainty makes you grounded, makes you sane. Looks like that’s what you had at the F/T past job. You made some choices to make changes, and they required that you make a sacrifice – taking a P/T job that isn’t necessarily the best situation. Know that you are working towards a goal, and just like the previous poster said, the change phase you are in now is *temporary*. Sometimes it can be hard to cope, but as long as you and your child are healthy and safe, you can get through this to the other side. Slug it out. If you made the choice to get the higher education when you were feeling good and proactive about your career and future, then just hold on to that mentality; remember that you thought things through, and stick to your guns. If you’re doubting yourself, a career counselor, the therapist, or someone in a similar circumstance that has already gone through this process could help immensely. But the gut sometimes can be relied upon too.

    Hang in there, we all get through the things we go through to get to higher ground, eventually..

Viewing 6 posts - 1 through 6 (of 6 total)