It happens?
Monkeytraps is one of my favourite mental health professional blogs. It’s about control, relationships, and monkeys… well less about monkeys, and more about control. Steve Hauptman (the author) writes some really interesting posts; so when I saw the latest one titled Just the world, I was curious as to what it was about. This was my sister’s birthday after all, the perfect day to be challenged slightly… However, there was no way I could have anticipated what actually happened…
Steve wrote about how each of us form this concept of what is a “just world”… one where good things happen to good people, and bad things happen to bad people. I admit, that I fall into this thinking, regarding myself and my past… I was abused because I was bad, evil, asked for it, provocative, a slut, a whore… the list goes on. I don’t judge others in this way; but for myself, I lay it on thick!
After describing this “just world” scenario, Steve gave the punch line… we buy into this concept of a “just world” because it gives the illusion of control. Talk about a kick in the gut…
All of my life I have strived to be perfect. I got as many A’s as I could, while panicking over every B and C; I played sport above my age grade; I was silent; I didn’t cry; I did everything within my power to be perfect… Because if they saw how perfect I really was, they would stop… They would leave me alone.
But I knew that they saw the evil in me. They saw how dirty and disgusting I was; so my focus of control changed. I no longer wanted them to stop, as I was beyond redemption. Instead, my only purpose, was to stop others from being hurt. As I grew up, I thought I had succeeded with this aim… I wasn’t aware of any whispers about other girls being taken to “those” places. My sister seemed troubled, but “fine”.
It wasn’t until I finally admitted to my mother what had happened about five years ago, that she said “was one of the boys J. Doe? Because I was talking to his mother the other week, and she was telling me about the historical sexual abuse charges he is facing”. At that point, my idea of a “just world” collapsed. I had failed. I hadn’t been enough for them to not hurt others; and I hadn’t spoken up so that others would have been spared. My illusion of control crumbled…
I was unable to see beyond this being my fault… my control… my fault…
I still can’t. I can’t accept, as Steve suggests, that there is no “just world”; but instead, the world is a place where justice is possible, and that shit happens. It can happen to good people, or bad. It doesn’t matter. It doesn’t discriminate, it just happens.
But if that’s true; then maybe one day, a long, long time ago, I was maybe a good person? Maybe?
But bad things happen to bad people, so maybe I was bad all along. I came into this world screaming, and didn’t stop for six months. I was difficult and evil, even then.
Please let me have saved at least one person. Please. Please don’t let what they did to me, be for nothing. There had to be some purpose beyond their needs and wants? There does, doesn’t there? There must. That is why it’s easier for me to believe it was my fault, my evil, my badness attracting the inevitable karma of equal badness to balance out the universe.
Funny thing is… we used to say “shit happens” all the time growing up… “Shit happens, and then you get over it”.
As a note: I never think anyone else deserves bad things to happen to them. Please know that. I always turn it in on myself, but never hold that thinking for others. I’m always devastated to know of any pain to any other living thing.
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Now playing: The Verve Pipe – The Freshman
via FoxyTunes
Falling
When I returned from Wellington, I thought I was making my way out of the abyss. Things seemed more settled, and my thinking clearer.
I was wrong.
During the past week I have reconnected with dysfunctional people from my past; and set-up emotional scenarios which mirror different aspects of my past.
I’m a train wreck.
I’m trying to live in the present, and failing. The past has begun haunting me with a vengeance.
I would tell you how my week has been; but I don’t know, it’s a blank. I see from my tweets that there was a problem over the weekend with a neighbour… my hair has been cut… I see from emails that I was concerned about friends… I had Christmas cards to put in the post today, so things were getting done… I was appearing normal. But, I don’t remember it. There’s jumbled glimpses of other things… putting on trackies when I was getting cold talking to a friend on the phone Friday night… It’s Monday, right? That means I need to get the rubbish ready to put out tomorrow… Panic in the mall on Saturday… I hate Allison… Take the team at work to afternoon tea on Thursday, but tell them they can go downtown for an hour if they want – one small way I can make up for them not getting a bonus… I don’t trust anyone… Why is our work Christmas function in a sports bar?
Just a mess of thought fragments being tossed around my head.
I was scrolling through my YouTube playlists, and came across this piece which calmed me briefly…
If I’m falling, I wonder where I’ll land?
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Now playing: Arvo Part – Spiegel Im Spiegel
via FoxyTunes
Being
Everything we see, or experience leaves an impression on our being… is it positive or negative, and does it balance out over time?
As I’ve descended into the depths of suicidal ideation and intent over the last few months; these sorts of questions, have played on my mind. I questioned why I was here, what my purpose was, and how far I had fallen short of meeting any expectations – my own, and my perception of what others expected of me. I could say that I was caught in the thinking, but I wasn’t… I was still working, existing, and being “normal”. However, everything was very superficial, and in the moment. I had no concept of anything long-term, and all I felt was the confusing extremes of nothingness, or utter chaos.
Earlier this week, I had to go to Wellington for a conference. Not only was the conference in the city where my father lives, but it was going to force me to interact with a group of strangers for long periods of time without any downtime. This was the proverbial straw that broke the camels back; all of the emotions that I’d been bottling up from the different stressors over the last few months, came bubbling to the surface. In my rather typical fashion, I didn’t tell anyone what the problem was; instead, I descending into mute chaos, unable to even pin-point what was going on. All I knew, was that I had to go to Wellington, and that going to Wellington was going to be the place where I tried to destroy myself – either physically, or psychologically. There was so much rage at the thought of being in Wellington, that I was barely able to function.
Most people would have tried to avoid going to the conference. Most people would have tried to communicate with their therapist about what was causing the chaos, especially after asking for an emergency session because things were out of control. Not I. Nope. I sat there, almost mute. Allison tried to encourage me to talk. I shut down further. She tried different techniques to try to encourage me to open up, and I dismissed them. All I could do was scream internally, and not say a word until the very end of the session, when I mentioned that I wouldn’t be seeing her at the usual time because I was going to be in Wellington at a conference. A nice parting cry for help… too little, too late.
I went into the weekend, planning my own demise. It was going to be spectacular!
Possibly the only reason why those plans weren’t carried through, was that a friend I hadn’t talked to in a while contacted me. Thankfully, they know me well enough to understand my warped codes… my signals of distress… the warning signs that I was planning something very bad. They pushed through their own problems, and forced me to confront my own. They tried to be a voice of reason, when I wasn’t prepared to hear anyone, or anything. They listened to my rants about no one understanding… countering my rant with simple questions regarding how I was communicating. They know me all too well… I can walk out of a conversation sure that I had said A, B, and C; only to realise that I might have said A, B, and C… but it was buried amongst the rest of the alphabet in such a way that there is no way that anyone would be able to understand what I was really trying to say.
As part of this interaction, I wrote one of the most honest emails I’d written in a long time. I laid out how out of control things were, what had caused the chaos, and the reasons why I had been slowly withdrawing from everything for months. I tried to show how much I was failing at everything, and that I could see no reason to keep on going. I thought I laid it all out very nicely… my friends counter point was that I wasn’t a quitter, so why was I quitting now. It seemed a pretty weak argument. It didn’t change my plans for self-destruction. I flew to Wellington with everything set.
What I hadn’t counted on, was the quiet determination of my friend. There were texts to see how I was. Often arriving at a point when I was about to jump off the metaphorical cliff. Those seemingly simple acts kept that part of my brain that seems determined to heal, somewhere nearby.
I honestly don’t know how I made it through the conference. There were triggers everywhere… crowds, noise, alcohol, hotels… and one of the worst… a former team leader. A woman who seems to know exactly how to push my buttons in a way that will tear me apart without thought. This time around was no different. My colleagues and I met her outside our hotel, as she was waiting for someone to come and pick her up. She greeted us with a smile, and then said that she had recognised me because of the tattoo on my right shoulder-blade. As this tattoo is quite low, I said that I was surprised that she could see it… she said she could just see the top of it, and then grabbed my jacket and blouse, pulling them down to expose my back, and show everyone what she had seen. This invasion of my personal space was too much. I immediately dissociated, and lost the rest of the night… in one move, she had shown that my personal space was meaningless, and could be invaded at any moment without consent.
So now I sit, having made it through the conference in one piece, despite my best efforts. I’m left wondering where to next. I sent the email to my friend, to Allison as well. On Thursday we had a very difficult session. She admitted that she didn’t understand my code. I told her I was difficult, and that every other therapist I’ve seen has said the same thing. She read things in the email that she had no idea about. All I could do was mention how difficult I am to work with. I hide. I avoid. I cloak unbearable pain in pretty words and say them as if they were nothing. When she doesn’t understand, I take that to mean that the unbearable pain is indeed nothing. So, I withdraw even further.
Yes, I am difficult. I would hate to be the therapist that tries to help me heal. Part of me thinks that this is Allison’s way of easing me out the door. Another part of me thinks that the fear of that, is a good distraction from having to deal with the pain of what happened in Wellington, and what led up to it.
Time will tell. Time will tell if it really is worth the pain of being.
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Now playing: Counting Crows – Round Here
via FoxyTunes
Asking for help
I’m told that asking for help is one of the strongest things that a person can do. There is a strength in the vulnerability that comes from admitting that you can’t do something by yourself. It’s an indication that you’re not perfect… not the self-sufficient island of invincibility that you’d like to think you are.
It stinks.
It hurts.
It feels impossible.
Over the last few months, I’ve had the urge to cut off my hands during therapy. I know that this is about wanting to reach out for help, and not being able to do so. It’s about punishing those parts of myself who want to reach out. It’s about not allowing weakness.
I learned early on in life that weakness was not acceptable, and made life difficult. Any sign of weakness could be used against me. If I was scared of something, then I could be taunted with it. If something hurt, then it could be prodded. I was confused by being hurt by people that, five minutes earlier, had been laughing and teasing me. All of this meant that I saw my only option as being to draw inward, and showing no outward sign of vulnerability. I was often called stuck-up while I was growing up, mainly because I did everything possible to keep myself separate from those around me. I didn’t think that I was better than anyone else, I just didn’t trust anyone (including myself); so my only protection was to withdraw and project a veneer of invincibility.
That veneer of invincibility is now being threatened. There’s a needy part of me wanting to reach out to others for help. But that is being resisted. I’m showing more signs of dysfunctional coping. I’ve withdrawn any meaningful communication with everyone. I’m having to take medication every morning, just to face the prospect of work. I’ve withdrawn as much contact with people as is possible. All I’m doing, is trying to fly under the radar.
This is the contradiction that I’m living with – needing to fly under the radar, which by definition, means being self-sufficient and invisible; and parts of me needing help.
One is seen by society as being strong; the other weak.
One has kept me alive for the last 30 odd years; the other is what led to so much pain in the past, that I don’t know if I can go there again.
Even if I wanted to ask for help, I don’t think that I know how to do so. The stumbling efforts that I’ve made towards asking for help, have been a disaster. I’ve sent emails which have been misread and caused more pain. I’ve called crisis lines, and not been able to communicate how badly I’m coping, or ended up in the Police holding cells. I’ve gone online to talk to friends, but ended up being unsafe instead. So I obviously don’t know how to ask for, or accept, help. I don’t know what positive help looks like, and I’ve lost all sense of safety.
But, I’m still turning up to work everyday. I’m still playing the game.
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Now playing: Adele – Rolling In The Deep
via FoxyTunes
Expressive Arts Carnival: Hopes and dreams
The theme for this months Expressive Arts Carnival is:
Through drawing, painting, or any other visual means, create an image that incorporates your personal hopes and dreams.
I’m not sure why, but I found this activity really easy to do. This, of course, makes me incredibly suspicious… did I not think it through properly… did I focus too much on the happy, cheery aspect of it all… did I do the exercise when so dissociated, that it will make no sense in an hour/day/week… That sort of self-doubt is the kind of thing that I hope to one day not live with so strongly.
When I was thinking of how to sum up my hopes and dreams visually, my immediate thought was to have an image of a woman confidently smiling into the camera. This is my ultimate hope… to be able to look people in the eye, with a smile on my face, and without the need to dissociate in order to accomplish it. Because, if I can do that, then I will have confidence and a sense of self-worth; and I won’t be living under the cloud of shame that envelopes me and directs so many of my actions.
The problem with this, was that it was based on having a photo that could represent that feeling/image. I can’t put an image of myself on this blog, and I felt uncomfortable finding a representative image. I’m not quite sure why there was resistance to doing so, but I think it was because it would be having someone else’s face represent my hope for the future. As a result, I purposefully moved away from images, and instead created the following Wordle…

These are my long term hopes… so closer to the 10 year, rather than 5 year time-frame. Some are about where I want to be physically (healthy and by the ocean), but a majority are about my mental health.
In many ways, my hopes and dreams are about possibilities… just daring to have hopes and dreams is about the possibility for a future. Then, to have that future possibly be better than what I currently experience, is another possibility. It is possible, because anything is possible. Add to that my determination to have a life worth living, and I definitely think it’s possible.
When safety contracts fail
I’ve talked briefly about Allison’s encouragement of a formal safety contract (see Becoming unstuck); well, something happened about a month ago which forced the issue, and a safety contract was written. It has been covering one week at a time and listing the two actions which are considered to be the most dangerous, the reward for keeping the contract, and the consequences of breaking the contract. It is kept simple, and driven by me as a way to try and maximise the chances of success. This week, there was huge resistance to making the contract for an entire week for several reasons… but mainly because there is a big rugby game being played here tomorrow. My reservations weren’t about wanting to break the contract and self-injure; but instead, there was a fear that I would break it, and in so doing, break a promise. The idea of potentially breaking a promise created huge amounts of tension… like lies, broken promises is not allowed.
Allison listened to my fears about shortening the contract, but said that part of the reason to have the contract, is to see what happens when it is broken. That sounded reasonable, so with little thought, and despite the warnings, the contract for the week was sent through to Allison.
The backlash was severe, and immediate. I had again ignored the warning signs, and instead of listening, I rode roughshod over the concerns.
I’ve done this before, and it’s never pretty. In my head, I counter all the concerns with very adult logic… “It will be alright, there’s only three days difference. What’s the big deal?” Implied within that line of thinking is the thought… “Just get over it”. It’s a sign of my intolerance, as well as my inability to accept what is happening in the present, and what happened in the past. It’s telling different ones that their opinion doesn’t matter, and that their feelings are meaningless. It’s another way in which I try to express my need for control…
Whenever I’ve tried to impose any form of unilateral control in the past, there has been an outright rebellion. The control tends to be harsh, and the responding consequences are just as harsh. This time was no exception. I have no one else to blame, but myself. I should have listened. I should have paid attention.
The problem is now that the contract has been broken, there is a reaction to breaking a promise to Allison. Ones within the system don’t want to see her again, for fear of what she will do and say. Others see the breaking of the contract as an invitation to push the self harm to new levels – the contract is already been broken after all, so may as well make the most of it, right? I know that the feelings driving this line of thought are the worthlessness and shame arising from the self harm, but it’s still confusing.
My head is a mess. I’m struggling to stay present.
As I write this, I hear the background chatter… the taunts, the derisive comments, the hatred, the self-hatred, but most of all… fear.
The rugby game hasn’t even started. The tourists haven’t arrived. That will happen tonight and tomorrow… how ironic that the big game should happen on a Friday night, which has always been one of my most difficult nights to get through.
Did I mention that my head is a mess?
Solitude within the storm
Some days, you just want the world to slow down… preferably stop. It feels like you’re being swept along on a tidal wave of noise, anxiety and demands from others… but all you want to do is stand still and ask it to stop. The thing is, it will never stop… our only hope is to change the way we deal with those feelings.
The past few months have been a fairly constant series of tidal waves, dragging me under and tossing me about. This has come to some sort of head this week… my mother is visiting for her 70th birthday; the Rugby World Cup starts tonight (the hoopla associated with such an event has been intense); Winnie’s health is failing; and I was offered the position of team leader. Being offered the job seems to have been the last straw. As soon as the offer was made, an internal cacophony erupted… “Yes” … “No” … “$%^# NO” … “What?” … “YES” … “I’m scared“…
Possibly because there was so much confusion, I didn’t do an immediate people pleasing response of “Yes”. They gave me the weekend to think it over, but it feels like I’m running on a mouse wheel, going nowhere. I already struggle to cope with work, so why would I want to increase that stress? My manager and current team leader say that I am ready for the move… but, am I? Is someone who needs fairly major doses of sedatives before they can teach, really be able to lead a team? I’m already showing physical signs of the stress, so would this push me over the edge?
It feels like I’m being pulled in all directions. It feels like the only way out is through the old coping mechanisms. To say “Yes” and take the punishment. Be a good girl, and play the game.
You always have to play the game, no matter what.
I just want to be alone… alone and clean. I feel so dirty and disgusting.
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Now playing: Christina Aguilera – Beautiful
via FoxyTunes
My relationship with food
Of all the relationships in my life, my one with food is probably one of the most dysfunctional. It started from when I was a baby, when I was defined as a “fussy eater”. This warped over time into odd eating behaviours… when my mother used to get us ready for school, I remember we would have breakfast and a prepared lunch; but that only happened for the first couple of years of my schooling, and I was soon going to school without breakfast or lunch. I don’t remember ever feeling hungry during these times, but I do remember the embarrassment when it was raining and we had to eat our lunch in the classroom… I always pretended that I’d forgotten my lunch. It wasn’t that we were poor, and couldn’t afford food; I just didn’t know how to make lunch, and I wasn’t really interested. The couple of times that I did make my lunch, I recall looking at it as an oddity, and as if it was some sort of foreign thing that had arrived out of the blue. I never felt jealous of my friends who had lunches, only boredom as I waited for them to finish eating.
During my childhood, there were a couple of significant events involving food and my weight that strongly effected me:
- My father commented that “at least she’s not fat like her mother and sister”.
- My mother would compare myself and her friends daughters regarding our weight. One time she pushed in my loose t-shirt, to show that I didn’t have a “fat stomach”.
These events dehumanised me, and made me think that if I was overweight, then no one would want to touch me. That weight would act like a protective barrier against the world. This thinking became strong during my teens, and I gained weight… I no longer wanted people to touch me. But what I didn’t expect, was the teasing and self-hatred that my weight caused. This is what started the roller-coaster that my weight became – I would lose weight, and feel vulnerable to abuse; so gain weight, and feel disgusting and gross.
When I attended university, my weight issues came to a head. I couldn’t afford food, and there were stressors which meant that some of my other self-injurious behaviours became out of control. My weight dropped drastically. It was the first time that the doctors started weighing me as a way of monitoring what was going on. As I’d never owned any scales, this was the first time I’d been weighed since I was in school. I remember being horrified at my weight… it was much too high. I’ve never had an ideal weight in my mind, but what was being shown on the scale was way above what I thought it should be. I remember the doctor talking about nutrition, and how I was showing signs of deficiencies. I remember him talking about having to monitor my weight unless I got it back up to a healthy level. All I wanted, was to run and hide.
When I finished university, by weight went back to the roller-coaster, mainly dipping when I was going out with someone. In many ways, I considered eating to be an inconvenience. People seemed obsessed with it, and I couldn’t understand the obsession. At other times, I would be eating, and part way through a mouthful of food, become so disgusted with what was in my mouth that I didn’t know what to do with it. Sometimes I would have to go and get rid of it, sometimes I was frozen in disgust.
During my marriage, food was a control issue… everything else in my life was so out of control, that I had to have some control somewhere. The ex-husband was a big man, and a big eater. He liked to think that he was a chef, but in reality, he was a glorified kitchen hand. He preferred fatty, unhealthy foods. That, in combination with the memories surrounding the times when my father was a butcher, were the final straw for my brain, and I could no long touch uncooked food. It became difficult to touch any food, but uncooked meat, was especially difficult. The feel of it on my skin was stomach churning. This, combined with feeling that I didn’t deserve good nutrition, again led to more signs of malnutrition… oddly enough I was overweight at this time, but not eating food that had any nutritional value.
During the process of my divorce, the food issues ramped up again. I soon couldn’t eat at all. I was surviving on nutritional drinks, and trying to show a smiling face to the world.
Other forms of self-injury have co-existed with my food issues, and often if one of the other forms increases, then the food issues ease off. It’s seemed like some sort of warped trade-off. But now, it’s revolving solely around food.
Over the last few months, I’ve lost a fairly significant amount of weight. But oddly enough, even though I weigh myself every day, with the hope of losing weight, a part of me doesn’t connect the dots between losing weight, and losing dress sizes. So when I had to go and buy new clothing, there was a panic about going down in size… fears of the abuse starting again resurfaced, and ironically, drove a need for more food control.
I’ve never been diagnosed as having an eating disorder, so I feel a bit of a fake talking about this… but as someone recently told me, you don’t have to be diagnosed with something, in order to have a problem with it. I have a problem, I’m just not sure how bad it is.
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Now playing: Fauré: Cantique De Jean Racine, Op. 11
via FoxyTunes
Perceptions
I’m often curious how others perceive me. At work this past week, I’ve been used as a manager, mediator, problem-solver and substitute therapist… yet every night as I left work, I had to fight the vivid thoughts of suicide. Am I really that good at hiding my internal chaos, that people don’t see the stress that I am under; or do they not care?
The nature of my dissociation, means that I can compartmentalise and hide the chaos. Just like everyone else, I have a “work face” that I present to those around me. But even with each “face” we present to the world, things show through. Over the last three months, my eating has become more of a problem… to the point that my jeans are now, literally, falling off me. Isn’t that a visual clue of the chaos that is going on behind the scenes? Yet, no one mentions it… making it like a dirty secret that exists in plain sight.
I became curious about this, after reading We must see past what it seems… a post about Melody’s struggles after her husband suffered a brain injury, and they were forced to sell many of their possessions. When they put their farm equipment up for sale on their property, a neighbour complained about the eyesore it created… Melody’s husband response -
“Sir,” he said, “There was a time in this country, in this community…when if you drove past your neighbor’s house and saw every single thing they own was for sale in front of their house…and that their lawn had not been mowed for weeks….that you would stop and say….WHAT IS GOING ON, SOMETHING MUST BE TERRIBLY WRONG, WHAT CAN I DO TO HELP YOU?”
When did society, as a generalisation, stop caring about the people around them? I know the research behind the disintegration of the community, and the individualisation of the population… I get that… but it also makes me sad, and more than just a bit frustrated.
In her blog post, Melody asks what would happen if we each wore a sign which told of the struggles and fears we are facing. Would seeing such a sign change the way in which we act towards each other? I’d like to think it would, but would it? For a start, would the signs we wore be honest? Part of the reason why we have a “work face”… “party face”… “school face”… etc, is so that we can protect ourselves a little from the harshness of the world, and to fit into the group that we find ourselves in. So would you want to wear a sign saying “I’m going through a painful divorce” (one of the signs on Melody’s blog post), in all of those situations? I doubt that many of the signs we would wear would be G rated, or appropriate in all situations.
So what is the alternative? One of the big things for me, is something as simple, and complex, as respect. If we respect each other, then we don’t need to wear any signs, because we’ll be treating each other as individuals with unique needs, wants and problems. We’ll be seeing each other… really seeing each other. Seeing past the protective sarcasm, to the hurt underneath.
Of course, if we did this all the time, or were particularly empathetic, then our emotional reserves would be constantly running on empty… but I do think there’s a balance. I think we can treat each other with respect, without losing ourselves in the process. I once read a story about a domestic abuse survivor who used to go to her children’s weekly sporting events with evident bruises… she said that many of the people there would look at the bruises, and some would come up and ask why she didn’t leave her partner, even offer to help her leave. But the one person who made the difference, approached her, and simply said “I’m here if you ever want to talk”. There was no judgements or advice, just a respectful opening. There was no promise of help, or saving the woman, but a respectful, gentle opening of a door.
It’s this sort of respect that can change lives.
How many times when you were a child, did an adult get down to your level, and really communicated with you? I don’t remember one incident of that happening to me, and maybe it wouldn’t have changed anything… but maybe it would have… who knows?
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Now playing: Brooke Fraser – Deciphering me
via FoxyTunes






