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Fallen Apart

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Viewing 15 posts - 61 through 75 (of 76 total)
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  • #94698
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Amy:

    I like it that you are asking this particular question, not that I have the answer, but I like it that you are asking this question at this point. And of course, I would love to explore possibilities with you on how to achieve this.

    I think that thinking about him has become a habit. The thinking about him in the physical reality of your brain means there are well worn neurological pathways that have his name on them. There are connections between nerve cells in your brain, well established, strengthened through practice, so you are inclined to think about him simply because you have been thinking about him for so long.

    So, like any habit, this destructive to you habit needs to be broken. It is not going to be easy because habits are hard to break and this is a mental habit.

    I have ideas but first, do you agree this is a mental habit, something that you do automatically at this point, inclined to do anytime whether you want to or not, often not? And if so, do you have ideas about how to break this mental habit?

    anita

    #94750
    Amy
    Participant

    Definitely habit.
    It’s the first thing I think of when waking up, and the last thing I think of before going to sleep. If it’s not him directly, it’s the situation. I’m constantly going through my mind: “how can I make this better? What can I do? Who can I speak to? What will happen if I do xyz? Why am I so sick? What do I have to do to fix this? Will it ever stop? What if, what if, what if?!” Everything I do in life is some sort of attempt to claw my way out of the situation. Then, of course there’s the things I am required to do for court and my physical health, which takes up a lot of my mental energy. Lawyers, mediation, collecting evidence, counselling for my child, counselling for myself, doctors appointments, specialist appointments, tests… The list goes on and on!

    Some of the professionals I have spoken to have likened it to PTSD. I’m missing out on so much in life because of the anxiety. It makes me depressed and even more anxious, which makes me feel sicker… It’s a perpetual cycle that I need to break, but I don’t know how.

    #94805
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Amy:

    “A perpetual cycle that (you) need to break…” Reminds me of your one year of drinking, that was a perpetual cycle that you repeated every day for a year, from your share… how did you break that cycle? Might be answers there that may apply here.

    Addiction to alcohol, drugs, gambling etc… are all perpetual cycles that people are stuck in, feeling powerless over those behaviors, feeling the behaviors were stronger. And it doesn’t matter how destructive those behaviors…

    And so is this cognitive addiction, or obsession with him and the situation. Maybe comparable to an addiction to food because unlike drugs, one has to eat. So unlike other obsessions, yours is about something you have to live with, so it is comparable to food addiction in my mind.

    I know, I know that it is possible for you to break this cycle, it is just not easy. First I … appreciate how powerful this cycle or obsession/ addiction (what do you prefer to call it? I will refer to it by the word you choose!)- sort of know thy enemy, appreciate the power you are dealing with, knowing this is NOT an easy endeavor.

    What do you think so far? If you agree, it will take time and we can go on and on figuring it out, trying this or that until we hit something that works. i am willing to go with this however long it takes!

    anita

    #94845
    Amy
    Participant

    Thank you

    I think I’ll stick to the word “habit”. It has less of a negative connotation to it. Unlike the other additions you spoke about, which you need to actively and consciously seek and engage in a behaviour/substance (eg seeking out and consuming excessive amounts of food, drugs, alcohol, gambling, etc) what I’m dealing with is also subconscious. You can lock me in an empty room and I will not have access to these things, but will always have access to my thoughts.

    That said, being locked away in an empty room for a period of time sounds pretty awesome right now.

    #94858
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Amy:

    Good point. i see the difference between your mental habit (and I will call it “habit”) and addictions. In the first you think, think, think and in the others you engage in behaviors to attain the substance and abuse it. The second category of behaviors involve the thinking and the doing. Your mental habit is a lot of thinking and paralysis results, lots of energy expenditure for nothing, hence the chronic fatigue.

    Wait… but the thinking about him, that habit, has a purpose: a part of you believes if you only think about it long enough and hard enough, you will come to a solution, only you haven’t come to a solution… but you keep thinking there is one. There is a purpose, however misguided, to all that thinking.

    I am getting this image that… you took part of what is real outside of you, took it into your brain for the endless ongoing loop of analysis to the point where you lost touch with what is really… real outside of you.

    For example, you took inside you the idea that this man is a very powerful entity in your life while in reality he is a middle aged, long damaged by alcohol abuse, man who is getting weaker and weaker by the day.

    And you took into your head the idea that your child needs a mother and a father and that he… has to have a father while in reality, he doesn’t need that man as father and he needs his mother free of this habit that keeps her unavailable enough.

    What do you think at this point…?

    anita

    #94863
    Amy
    Participant

    You make valid points.

    Yes, I am in this perpetual cycle of trying to come up with ways to fix the situation (quickly!), as well as trying to preempt his next move so that I can be prepared for whatever he throws my way next. Have you ever heard that expression “the best defence is a good offence”? I’m always trying to stay one step ahead of him, and at the same time considering my actions and how they would look to a judge (ie “will this help or hurt?”). It’s all very strategic to me. It can’t be just a case of “wait and see what happens, and just roll with the punches”. The thought of being unprepared makes me feel physically ill. I can’t be caught off guard. Not only this, but I take it to the extreme. As an example, I have to think of and write down responses to every thing I think *might* come out of his mouth, or the judges mouth, or the lawyers mouth. I’ve never been able to just think on my toes.

    I am fully aware of how weak and pathetic this man is. The only power he has over me is in the legal sense, and unfortunately, that is all that matters.

    Yes, I do firmly believe that a child needs the support and love of two parents, and just as importantly, I, as a single mother, need the support. It’s damn hard raising a child alone, and that is part of the reason why I have sooooo much anger and frustration in me, and not nearly enough forgiveness.

    #94874
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Amy:

    I wish there was a way for you to have no contact with him but you are saying this is not possible, at least not at this point as you wait the results of the latest legal maneuvering. You are not going to stop thinking if you believe it is necessary. Maybe in the future, the legal activity will stop, there will be a break and no need to think about the next legal happening. For now, why don’t you… assign 10 minutes of thinking about the case every two hours, like clock work, or some such arrangement. It is necessary, you say, to think, so think… in moderation. You can even start with thinking about him and the case for 20 minutes straight every single hour and take a break 40 minutes every hour.

    I understand your anger and frustration. Here comes my suggestion to Emotionally Accept him, you, the situation. Stop resisting what is reality, stop banging your head against the wall, figuratively, and crying out again and again: “This is not my life! This is not my life!” You end up with a bruised, bleeding head, a terrible headache and … it is still your life!

    anita

    #95264
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Amy:

    How are you??

    anita

    #97032
    Amy
    Participant

    Hi Anita

    Not sure what to tell you. It’s been a couple of weeks since we last communicated, and nothing has changed… Not that I expected it to.

    #97040
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Amy:

    It’s been 21 days since your last post and I was wondering about you and hoping you’ll be back here. Nothing has changed and you didn’t expect it to change, you wrote. Does this mean you are more accepting of your life circumstances, more at ease with them (however unpalatable!)? Or are you still waking up in the mornings with: “This CAN’T be MY life!”?

    anita

    #97054
    Amy
    Participant

    Until the drama is over, I will be in constant “fix it mode”. That part I can accept. Unfortunately my childs father is being increadibly difficult (as expected). He keeps dragging me back to mediation to try and convince me to change my mind, but I’m in too deep now. I reported him to CPS, and they said that if I were to hand my child back to him now, and something were to happen, I would be just as responsible as him for negligence, and failure to protect.

    #97065
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Amy:

    Fix it mode and Acceptance mode are not mutually exclusive. Both, I think both is a good idea. You are going strong, Amy, going all the way to CPS- good job! I mean, you are a fighter, going all the way! Yes, it is war and you are in war to protect your child. This is your reality. Relax into it, is my suggestion. You will be a more effective fighter if you relax into the war. While you are in the bunkers, in between the shootings, relax. That is what an effective soldier would do, gather its strength, relax before the next battle.

    anita

    #97376
    Amy
    Participant

    I don’t think I know how to relax. My mind is constantly going a bazillion MPH. It never shuts off, and don’t think it will until this war is over and a considerable amount of time has passed and I have been able to move on with my life. I just want this hell to end.

    #97401
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Amy:

    Well then, what you are proving to yourself is that you are surviving hell very well, a long time of hell. I just hope your child is okay, that your child is not suffering considerably from this hell you are in. I am very concerned. I know how vulnerable children are, how much a child needs to know his/ her mother is okay, calm, reliable to be a calming presence. That is what makes a place the Home that a child needs so desperately!

    anita

    #97419
    Amy
    Participant

    Ok, well you can sit there being concerned for the welfare of my child while I’m doing the best I can to protect them. I try as hard as I can to give my child what they need (including a safe and responsible and loving father), but it always blows up in my face. I just can’t give what I don’t have. My child is on a waiting list for trauma counseling, I take them to church despite my own personal reluctance, I am in counselling myself. I have lawyers, CPS and family services all helping out, not to mention my childs school teachers and the schools child welfare officer and chaplain at my disposal. What more can I do?!

    I never asked for this! I came here for help with forgiveness and getting myself right. I am burnt out trying to do the best thing for my child. He is my #1 priority.

    Thank you for your time, but this is not helping anymore.

Viewing 15 posts - 61 through 75 (of 76 total)

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