Home→Forums→Share Your Truth→I never knew change could be this hard. My brain is one tough cookie.
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Anonymous.
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May 12, 2018 at 4:52 am #206983
Anonymous
GuestDear Ryan:
I can relate. Our brain is made of hundreds of thousands (or more, I don’t have the number) neuropathways. This very sentence I just typed is made possible by multiple such pathways. During our childhood most of the pathways that exist for the rest of our lives are formed.
Many of those formed pathways carry our core beliefs, combinations of thoughts and strong emotion. Those core beliefs get activated all day long.
Healing requires changing core beliefs that are not true to reality, false core beliefs, that is. Physically, this means re-wiring our brain by inserting new neuropathways into the existing map of our brain.
When you learn a new dry fact, for example, a name of a plant you didn’t know before, that is a very small neuropathway. But to believe something new about yourself and life, that requires a whole lot more than a short pathway. It requires many new pathways that slowly grow into different areas of the brain.
And while this re-wiring is done, a physically slow process, extremely slow, the old pathways keep getting triggered.
Healing is so slow and difficult, I am surprised it is possible at all. I am engaged in it and it is indeed very, very slow. It requires so much dedication and persistence.
anita
May 13, 2018 at 1:13 pm #207115Airene
ParticipantHello Ryan,
I’m glad you posted. By posting, you have already set yourself on a different path. Even though you are struggling, you are still on a better path than you were yesterday. And the day before. Rebuilding your inner structure, as you say, takes a tremendous amount of effort and dedication. Good for you for making the effort.
You ask if anyone can relate and/or offer advice for you to ponder. My methods for facing problems/struggles…one is to “act as if.” I act as if I will succeed in what I am setting out to do. I act positive even if I am feeling anything but. Another method I employ is taking one step at a time. I learned about this when I went to Al-Anon meetings many, many years ago. It really does work. When I had 4 kids at home, and two had – and still have – very complex needs, some days felt pretty bleak and dark. I acted as if it would be okay. I took things one day at a time, and some days, I took one hour at a time.
Oh, a third thing. I try very hard to recognize what I have control over. I can’t control how other people react, how they feel, what they do or don’t do, but I can control how I react, and I can control whether I act on my feelings or not. But, if someone gets mad at me, or I upset them, I do want to know why, and if I am in any way responsible for something that caused that, I will try my best to make it right, depending on the person and the circumstances.
I hope this helps, and please post any time.
Airene
May 13, 2018 at 7:19 pm #207147Ryan
ParticipantThank you both for your insight and commitment to share what you have learned throughout your journeys. I am very thankful to have found this community of great people from all around the world all walks of life and yet we all come here to not be judged by our past, to feel a connection with like minded individuals, acceptance, and an outlet that seems to be the most valuable tool for me. I don’t live near any of my immediate family or have many friends that I can talk to and deflate when I’m feeling that just a little compassion and affirmation that im doing the best I can and everything will be ok. So I really cherish the opportunity to reach out and even if no one responds I will not be offended, I’d still be thankful for being able to vent or even help someone else along.
May 14, 2018 at 3:23 am #207175Anonymous
GuestDear Ryan:
You are welcome. What a well written post, skilled writing. I hope you post again anytime you would like.
anita
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