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March 25, 2015 at 1:52 pm #74414MargitParticipant
Thanks for starting this thread, Marshmallow!
This hits home right now because I’m having a pretty rough day. A few hours ago, I was on the verge of a breakdown. Lots of old personal stuff suddenly came up and I was shocked by how firmly my mind kept saying “There’s something wrong with you. You don’t deserve any joy/love/whatever.” In minutes, it was like years of self compassion work was out the door. Luckily, I had some strategies to work through it.
#1 – I know what works for me. At first, I wasn’t hearing any of it today, but I knew it had worked in the past so I kept at it. Find what works for you, take note, use it and don’t give up. Sometimes it takes a while to break through the funk. Keep going.
#2 – I write out my negative feelings as they come. No analyzing, no judgement. I just get them out. It’s vile, hateful stuff, but it’s on paper, not bouncing around in my mind. I feel better because I’m facing the hate, not hiding from it. I rarely re-read it, I just get it out. Sometimes I analyze it, but the most important think for me is to just GET. IT. OUT.
#3 – I practice a Breathing & Awareness meditation. Sometimes, I’m too upset to feel anything other than hate toward myself. Those lovely Self-Compassion, Loving-Kindness meditations do not stick in those times. Instead, I need work to remind myself that “I exist.” I try to experience a neutral breath and neutral physical feelings (sitting on a floor, clothes on my body). I keep meditating until I’m calm enough to hear my heart again. After I’ve calmed down, I can start to explore the reasons for my distress.
#4 – I also check in with my body. Am I hungry? Tired? Cold? Seriously – those things can really affect your mood. Take care of your body so it stops messing with your mind.
#5 – I come here, actually. I find so much strength in knowing that I’m not alone when I have a difficult time experiencing the human condition. Just knowing that all of you beautiful, perfect, worthy-of-love people also experience pain makes me feel less helpless. It sucks, but it happens to all of us because we’re humans who live with humans. Your situations are different and your strategies to deal are different, but what matters is that you keep trying to experience life. It reminds me that although I can sometimes be a victim of circumstance, victim of a damaged childhood, victim of an unbalanced mind, victim of whatever…I am still a living thing who can also experience life. It helps me to lose the title “victim” and just accept that I’m human and this is how we are.
When I “come to” after getting caught up in negative thoughts and realize I can still go on, the feeling usually isn’t profound. It’s more like “Oh. Yeah. That’s right. Breathe in, breathe out. Neutral.” Maybe I haven’t fixed things forever, but I’m living here right now, and sometimes that’s enough.
Can’t wait to hear from more people!
October 22, 2014 at 2:54 pm #66659MargitParticipantNot sure if this will help you, but I definitely relate to your story and want to share mine and give some advice.
My quick story: I was incredibly depressed at 24. Nothing was right â job, friends, family, future â nothing. I read a bzillion self help books about motivation and achievement and when I couldnât make any of it work I felt worse as a result. At my job, we had to write self-reviews and I poured all of my pain into criticizing myself for being so terrible at my easy entry level position. My [perfect] boss, 35, saw right through it. She took me out for coffee and told me plainly âI would not repeat my early 20s for anything.â
Having someone who seemed to have it all together acknowledge that YES, this period in your life sucks, made me feel less alone. I wasnât the only one going through it. You are not the only one going through it. For lack of a better word, your suffering is ânormal.â Youâre not alone in this.
Sometimes life simply blows and nothing is right. Youâre in the middle of a hard time. Itâs hard to start your adult life. Youâre suffering but it doesnât mean youâre bad or weak or cowardly. There isnât anything wrong with you. Youâre experiencing a difficult period in your life. Life is raining on you and youâre wet. It happens. Is it uncomfortable? Yes. But youâre not wet because thereâs something wrong with you â youâre wet because itâs raining.
Also, you feel like your life is at a standstill, but life is always moving even when it feels like it isnât. Time happens. Change happens. Right now youâre in a slow period. Keep striving to get somewhere, but donât beat yourself up for not being there yet. Acknowledging where you are â in a hard place â doesnât mean youâve given up. Youâre allowed to take a deep breath and live in between those crushing job rejections. It can take a while to get the right job and figure out what you want to do, but something will eventually happen. You wonât be here forever. Life is always moving.
Iâm rambling now, but hereâs whatâs helped me:
- Know that youâre not alone. Youâre not the only one going through this.
- Know your life is moving even if you feel stuck. Life moves without you having to do anything, so when you canât do something (like when a job rejection is out of your control), sit back for a few minutes and allow yourself to be swept along.
- Suffering happens. Allow yourself to feel the pain and know it isnât you, itâs life. Donât tell yourself it doesnât hurt when it really does. Lean into it and acknowledge the suffering.
- Donât overthink your suffering. You could blame yourself for not bringing an umbrella when it rains, but how useful is that? You didnât know it would rain and even if you did, it finds a way of blowing sideways and drenching you anyway. Donât blame yourself. Stop thinking about the umbrella. It wonât do anything except stress you out.
- Love yourself. When lost in overthinking, talk to yourself with the love and compassion youâd give a scared kid. Youâd never tell a child half the crap you tell yourself now. Tara Brachâs book âRadical Acceptanceâ has a lot to say about this and was my gateway into appreciating myself.
- Curb overthinking by learning to meditate. Itâs amazing. Youâll learn so much about yourself and life by taking a break from your thoughts once and a while.
In case youâre curious, Iâm 30 Iâve achieved a lot and am more put together than I was at 24, but itâs still not perfect. I still suffer, and still feel so alone sometimes..but that happens and it sucks but thatâs life. But I find that whenever I can stop beating myself up and just live, I can do more with my life because Iâm less stuck in a muddy psychic funk. The difference is night and day. Maybe that would work for you too? It takes work and time but itâs worth it. Check out âRadical Acceptanceâ and similar books/articles, try meditation (Insight Timer App is an easy way to start), maybe see a therapist if you can (I did and it was the best gift I ever gave myself) and keep seeking out connections with outer people. Itâll be OK.
Take care and message me if you want!
- This reply was modified 9 years, 10 months ago by Joshua Denney.
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