Guide on the side
One of my first jobs in libraries, was working as a reference librarian in a small public library. It was a fascinating job, as nearly every patron came in with a different information need. There is one man whom I will always remember… he was probably in his mid to late 50′s, and very intelligent. He approached me with confidence and told me what information he needed… “Where are your books on how to build an aviary”… taking him at his word, I showed him to the aviary construction books. As he was enjoyable to talk to, and unfamiliar with the inner workings of the library; I walked with him over to the books. As we walked over, we started talking. After a fairly short, informal discussion, I found out that he’d never owned birds before, and was looking at different aviary designs so that he would know which birds to put together, and how to care for them. I immediately knew that he didn’t need aviary designs yet… he needed bird care books, which are in a totally different section of the library.
When I talked about this incident with my manager, his immediate response was “don’t blame the customer… no matter how intelligent they are, they don’t know how to navigate our systems, or to identify what their real information need is”.
Later, when I was working in a tertiary library; I worked closely with many highly respected academics. Despite their skills within their own area of expertise; they would regularly ask me to come in and teach their students how to find information, and for help with their own research. One academic called librarians a “guide on the side”… that is, we were there to guide the user through the maze of information retrieval and management. We help the user to gain skills so that they too can learn how to retrieve information… and therefore become a “lifelong learner”. This academic was vocal that her expertise was in academia, and mine was in information seeking… she saw them as complementary, rather than conflicting, skill sets.
Why I mention all of this seemingly irrelevant waffle; is that I realise that I place absolutely no value in Allison (or any therapists) ability to be a “guide on the side” during my healing process. I don’t trust their skill, intelligence, or abilities. This, despite researching their qualifications, seeing their skills in action, and being nearly six years into therapy. Part of this is because I have seen a couple of therapists whom I didn’t respect their intelligence… basically, I could destroy them in an argument. But a greater part of the problem, is my need for control. I don’t trust anyone else to tell me what to do – that got me into too much trouble when I was young; and, more importantly, my ability to escape into my head was my saving grace as a child. It’s where no one could touch me, and where I could control what happened. It became my coping mechanism… I entered school and realised that intellectualisation was something to be valued… suddenly there was something I could do that would get me approval on a grade sheet… My imagination, coping and intellect became something that I could control, and now a therapist wants to come in and mess with that? No way was that going to happen!
Then, last week, I had a Twitter conversation which helped me to rethink how I was viewing Allison, and all therapists… I made the leap from thinking of therapy as this thing that happened “to” people, to being an interaction that I could relate to… I put it into context of the intelligent gentleman who came and asked me about how to build an aviary. Something clicked internally, and I could see that I was walking into Allison’s office as that man… I came in wanting to “have a life worth living”, and I was walking over to the “life” section of the library; but what I really needed, were the sections about self soothing, nutrition, boundaries, physical health, etc. Without all of those basics, the “life” that I built would always be hollow and meaningless. I would always be falling back into dysfunction, and struggling to find meaning in what I was doing.
What does this mean? Well, Allison has said several times that it’s her job to guide me through the healing process… my response has been to roll my eyes, and go do some more research… difficult, me? Never! Yes, this is the sort of thing that the poor woman puts up with every week. I now know, that what I have to do is ease back on that control, and put some trust in her skills. I need to realise that she is my “guide on the side” in healing… I can, and will, still question everything; but I need to listen, and have more patience.
Sounds pretty simple for a sarcastic, control freak… right?
A special thanks to my Twitter buddies who helped me realise this… probably without even knowing what you were doing!
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Now playing: Taylor Swift ft. The Civil Wars – Safe and sound
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
Don’t look down
Don’t look down, just keep on walking the tightrope…
People want to cut the rope, and knock you off balance by throwing more things at you to juggle. At the moment I don’t seem t have any option, other than to keep taking them on board, and adding them to my act. Because it is all just an act. If the rope gets cut, then so be it. No great loss.
Reminds me of a PostSecret I came across recently -
I only know how to be a supporting character… helping them solve their problems, while giving nothing away of my own struggles.
One day I might be strong enough to send in my own secret; until then, I’ll keep on identify with others.
Edit: Please note that this is about a situation at work. I’ve become a dumping ground for the different factions at work who can’t play nicely with each other in the sand pit. It’s doing my head in.
Apologies
As a child, it was often up to me to take on the responsibility of the destructive play of my siblings… if something got damaged while the four of us were playing, the others decided that, because I was the favourite, the father would be less angry if I took the blame. This sort of blame game became so advanced, that I would often come home from school to find myself responsible for another broken vase, letting the chooks out, etc. Because I was so much younger than the others, I took on the responsibility that the others gave me without question – I had little choice.
This scenario set me up for taking punishments which weren’t mine to take. It also meant that when I really did something wrong, I thought the world was going to end, because I’d been punished for things I didn’t do, so how bad was the punishment going to be for the things that I did do? I tried in very childish ways to cover up for any of my mistakes, and tried so very hard not to make any to begin with. But, mistakes were inevitable. My father is narcissistic, so often the mistakes were beyond my comprehension… spending too long with a friends family (“Do you like them more than your own family?”), reading too many books (“So you think you’re better than the rest of us, do you?”), and so on.
It seemed as if the goal posts which determined my mistakes, and what I was responsible for, kept changing.
This has lead to what has been described as one of my more annoying traits… the tendency to apologise for everything and anything. I apologise like it’s my responsibility that someone else is having a bad day, and taking it out on you; when someone else makes a bad decision; that you got an B instead of an A for that assignment… you get the idea. I realise that this is my co-dependency issues coming to the surface again… I’ll do anything to placate someone and ease a tense situation. I don’t intellectually believe that I am responsible for these problems; but I believe emotionally that if I don’t apologise, something bad will happen. The more I care about you, or the more I’m scared of you, the more I will apologise.
I’m not sure if it is associated with this trait, but I often don’t remember apologies from others. I can be sure that someone else hasn’t apologised, to then find an email where they clearly state they’re sorry for a misunderstanding. As I write this, I wonder if I don’t remember others apologies, because I don’t want to be in the role of a person doling out the punishment for the wrongs others have done. I vividly remember my father saying that he didn’t want to punish me, but he had to because it was the only way that I’d learn. I could be saying sorry, but it didn’t matter, the punishment had to be done. So now, it’s almost as if I’m scared that by accepting an apology, I’ll be responsible for that person being hurt in some way, just as my father was “forced” to punish when he didn’t want to… so I block out the apology to avoid the consequences.
I often block out the misunderstanding as well, but not always. This can create a situation where parts of me are feeling (rightly) agrieved about a situation; and while an apology has been forthcoming from the other person involved, other parts of the system have blocked the apology as an old self protection coping mechanism. The knowledge that I can block out an apology leads to a situation where I doubt my own experiences and feelings. I’m never sure whether I have a right to be upset about something, or whether it was sorted through at the time of the incident. As a result, I tend to stamp down my feelings and keep on going.
As I heal, I’m finding that the stamping down isn’t as effective. There is more tension around the issue of being hurt by others and apologies in general. I get confused about when I should be offended, and when I deserve an apology. It’s a whole other kettle of fish actually acting on any of those feelings… I often miss the mark, and ask about a situation which I don’t fully remember, and has been worked through. I’d like to think that it’s progress that I took the risk of asking… but in reality it makes me feel like a failure for not having the full picture. I’ve learned to only do this with people that I trust, and are the least likely to be offended if I don’t remember the whole incident… like learning all things new, I’ve still got my training wheels on, and one of them is a bit loose. Until I can fix the training wheel and get more confidence about what apologies mean to me, I’ll keep on apologising at the drop of a hat, and question those that let me land on a soft cushion when I get it wrong.
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Now playing: The Fray – How To Save A Life
via FoxyTunes
I hate Autumn
I have a habit at this time of year… a habit of dumping therapists. When I look back over my past experiences with therapists, the end of the therapeutic relationship has usually begun in Autumn. It usually starts out subtly, but is always aimed at undermining my confidence in their ability to guide me through the healing process. This dumping process has started with Allison.
Ending any therapeutic relationship is just one of the things I do to disconnect from life at this time of year. The disconnect can be pretty harsh and sudden – I deleted my FaceBook accounts, I’ve stopped going out and taking photos, I’ve been less communicative at work, I don’t comment on others blogs like I usually do, I don’t post anything here… The list goes on. I know that under the surface, there is a huge amount of anger driving the disconnect. I’ve been trying to work with these emotions for the last year, and I was making progress; but things seem to be backsliding. I actively worked against the backsliding over the weekend by reconnecting a FaceBook account and forcing myself to get outside and do the gardens – there was even an odd peace experienced when mowing the lawns. But I know that things are precarious. The only reason I could write anything here today was because I did a Wordle exercise of free writing seemingly random words for 10 minutes. There was a jumble of positive words such as love, dance, friends… through to words such as disconnect, hate, anger… I know the reason for some of the words, and they are tied strongly to this time of year. In the Southern Hemisphere we’re heading into the Rugby season; a time historically, when most of my abuse occurred. My hope is that my awareness of these triggers will mean that I can navigate this Winter more successfully.
I read a quote recently that said it’s a lot easier to say your angry, than you’re hurt. While I agree with the quote, I also know that there are parts of me that are both. They have reasons to be both, very good reasons. I now have to find ways in which to ease those powerful emotions in safe ways. I don’t think that this year I’ll be able to distract them all away like I tried to do last year. I don’t think it’s healthy for me to do that this year, even if it were possible. That will just set-up more compartmentalisation, and I need to ease those compartments, not reinforce them. I also know that I can’t have another Winter like last year…
I really do hate Autumn, but I hate Winter even more…
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Now playing: Beyoncé – Single Ladies (Put A Ring On It)
via FoxyTunes
Sinking… no, sunk
Ever notice how easy it is to lose track of the days, weeks, months… years? At times it scares me. I know that the mother visited for three weeks. I know that when she was here, we had several lunches at The Coffee Club; went to two 3D movies (I think Tangled was one of them); I brought her a new camera; and we went to a nearby town where I purchased a small gift for a friend. The only reason I know all of that, is I have the bank statements to follow my trail. I’ve no idea what happened on the days when I might have used cash – that’s one of the reasons I never carry cash on me.
According to my computer, it’s now 10.22am on Wednesday, 12th of January. Isn’t that strange? What happened to December and the previous 11 days of January? I really don’t remember – I have some vague, disjointed images of that time, but not many.
I know friends have been struggling. I know there have been bereavements, Christenings, excited moments over hope for new life, humour in odd things… yes, I remember more about the lives of the people I consider friends, than I do my own. I don’t know if that is a dissociative feature, or just some weird thing that happens just to me; but sometimes it does my head in. Sometimes, it acts as an anchor in my own life. I use the theory that I can’t be insane, or totally stupid, if I can remember a conversation that was important to someone else.
This time loss, is one of the reasons why I have the next four days off work. I’m sinking. Well actually, I sunk a little while ago, and I’ve only just realised it… I always was a bit slow on the uptake.
On Monday I went to work and said that I needed the rest of the week off. My team leader and manager were supportive; so here I am, in the kiddie pool of life, getting my balance back.
I spent Tuesday sleeping… I went from getting 1-3 hours of sleep per night, to sleeping 8 hours straight, and then sleeping on and off for the rest of the day.
Today, I’m going to go take photos. My aim… to reconnect with the moment. I’ve lost too many moments lately.
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Now playing: Missy Higgins – Where I Stood
via FoxyTunes
Reflections: Part II
Yesterday I wrote a happy shiny summary on 2010. It was accurate, and covered many of the positive things that had happened last year, but it wasn’t an accurate reflection. The purpose of a reflective exercise is to put the past into a learning framework, and that’s what I failed to do. By looking only at the positives, I sidelined and ignored the struggles I faced, and how those struggles influenced the positives.
When looking at the overall themes of last year, it’s easy to see that I was concentrating on safety and consistency. To me, these issues are intertwined. I’m at a stage in my healing where I need a consistent structure in order to find safety. If this structure is absent, as it was when my therapeutic relationship with Liz disintegrated, and my friendship with Matthew fell apart; there were serious consequences for my safety. I lost an anchor that I had relied on – no matter how dysfunctional it was, and I allowed it to push me into a downward spiral. This was even more evident, when my cynical work friend started having an affair with a married man. The triggers associated with the relationship were too close to my parents relationship, that I was unable to relax around her like I used to. Unlike the rupture with Liz and Matthew, I was able to maintain an altered friendship with my work friend. The key difference, was that with Liz and Matthew there was hurt in the present, whereas I had the awareness to realise that my work friend wasn’t hurting me directly in the past or present. I may not agree with her moral choices, but the friendship was maintained, if somewhat modified.
Throughout the year, I’ve had ACC decisions hanging over my head. This was one of the drivers which lead to my suicide attempt, and to my withdrawal from life. The thought of a faceless case manager deciding my therapeutic fate, without having ever met me, basically did my head in. This is a fairly consistent story across many sensitive claims clients. The power imbalance in favour of ACC, is such a trigger to the old abusive situations, that it’s difficult to work your way through to a rational interaction with them. Despite my fears, the assessing psychiatrist was incredibly supportive and gentle. He gave me a significant impairment which should hopefully allow me to access therapeutic care for awhile yet.
This leads onto the therapeutic relationship with Allison. I’ve avoided talking about her and what happens in therapy, mainly because I want to protect the relationship. As with any human relationship, there are ups and downs, but the strength of Allison, is her ability to encourage me to slow down. My default coping mechanism is to dissociate and rush through anything that feels scary; but Allison is helping me to realise that this doesn’t have to happen. I can tolerate the emotions that are a part of living. They may scare me, and I may not understand what I hear within sessions; but what is said and felt, is me. It’s that simple, and that complicated.
I still struggle with denial, minimisation, comparisons and other circular thinking. But, Allison helps me to work through this through validation and acceptance. She doesn’t encourage blind faith, and is open to questioning about the validity of what is being said, and her experience with dealing with what I present. Not that I challenge her on a regular basis or anything… well, actually I don’t as much as I did. There is a sense of respect towards Allison, even if there isn’t consistent trust.
Last year, I also briefly saw WPT and an occupational therapist. They were at opposite ends of the helpful spectrum… WPT helped me realise that by saying how strong the young ones within the system were, I was re-enforcing the idea that they were meant to stay strong and protect me. This was so obvious, but yet, I thought I was showing respect by mentioning their strength. But the young ones need care, not more pressure. In contrast, the occupational therapist was not a good therapeutic match. She reminded me of a cross between a cheerleader and an unskilled kindergarten teacher – lots of loud enthusiastic talk, with very little substance or experience. Thankfully she discharged me after meeting one of the three goals we’d established.
One of the things that worried me about seeing these other therapists, was that I wondered if my life would revolve around therapy and healing. Considering my work commitments; this would be unlikely, and it would probably have been helpful if they had worked out. But, there was that nagging fear that I would start to define myself and my life through my mental health. Which when I consider that I spent so much time this year caught up in self injury, the change of focus to healing, might have been a good thing!
Yes, my old nemesis… self injury. It also bumped into my suicidal ideation and intent this year, which wasn’t a pretty sight or feeling. But a shock can sometimes be good for the system, and near the end of last year, I got one. It wasn’t the suicide attempt, but instead the health of a friend bringing up all sorts of memories. Consequences, accountability, fears and reality all collided. Repercussions were felt throughout the system, and as a result, one dangerous form of self injury has been largely controlled. There is yet to be any sense of accomplishment about this, and there is a fear that the triggering presence of the mother is going to release a tidal wave of self injury this weekend. All I can do is plan for it not to happen…
So much of my life now, is about trying to live from moment to moment. I had hoped to be further along in my healing than this by now, but I’m not. This isn’t to take away from the accomplishments that I have achieved, but rather a sense of “not again”. This Christmas, I did cope better than the previous year; but then I had hayfever, so could barely speak or raise my head. The hayfever has eased, and with that, the triggering memories and intolerance of the mother has returned. The mother has been here two weeks, and that’s about three weeks too long. Wish me luck for the rest of the week…
As so much of my year has been on exploring the creative arts, I thought I’d do the following summaries of the positive, and difficult work that I’ve been doing. As a warning, the second (Polyvore) video may trigger.
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Now playing: The Beatles – Here Comes The Sun
via FoxyTunes
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Now playing: Yo-Yo Ma – Unaccompanied Cello Suite No. 5 in C minor, BWV 1011: IV. Sarabande
via FoxyTunes
Reflections
Note: I have removed commenting from this post, as it was written from one perspective only. While I need to honour that perspective by leaving it up here; it doesn’t fully indicate where I am, or how the year has gone. I’ll have another go at writing something after the medication has kicked in :)
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A few of my fellow bloggers are doing reflections on the past year. I initially balked at doing something similar; because, well, I didn’t think that I had all that much to reflect on, or to be positive about. But then I got to thinking, and actually came up with a few… here they are, my random reflections, in all their crazy gloriousness…
I ended some extremely negative relationships:
- Kriss – who was psychologically abusive through his manipulation and inconsistency.
- Matthew – who the day before I attempted suicide, told me that we were all worthless in the big scheme of things, and that I would not be missed. This was not the reason for the suicide, but I think it acted as a final straw.
- My divorce became final. I am no longer tied in any way to that man.
- The last relationship was possibly the most important, as it was with someone who knew how to use my dissociation for his own gain. He shall remain nameless and faceless, but I’m glad I stood up to him and took steps to ensure my safety.
I meet some incredible people through the blogosphere, and even made some friends – despite reverting to “pompous mode” (otherwise known as insecure mode), on occasion. I’ve learned, laughed, got angry on your behalf and even occasionally shed a tear because of you all – thank you!
I attempted suicide, and survived. I meant to die. I wanted to die. But I didn’t. Some wizardry of the medical kind, protected my liver; while in the aftermath, the nurses treated me with professionalism. The suicidal ideation and intent hasn’t vanished, but it’s back to a level that is manageable in my daily life.
I said No to physical touch for the first time in my life EVER. Allison was saying that when she feels upset for her clients, she often wants to put her arm around them and give comfort through physical touch. As soon as she said this, I stamped both feet on the ground, like I was getting ready to sprint out the door, and firmly said No. Ok, so I said the word in a therapists office, where I have established that she will never touch me without consent, but still… I said the word. Loudly.
I started working with Allison. It’s been rough, and I still don’t understand her. But there’s a consistency in staring at her coffee table, feet, bookshelves or her rather sad pot plant. We talk. She forces me to slow down, to notice when I have reactions, to accept that I do react, and that it’s ok to do so.
I had brief contact with some of the ones within my system that I didn’t previously know about, but feared. All I knew was that there was something “bad” in The Basement of my internal house; but that “bad” turned out to be ones which are very hurt. I know my work with what they hold is by no means complete, but it was started.
I was reminded that I can’t work on one part of the system, to the exclusion of other parts; instead, I must think of my being in it’s totality. I still struggle with this, but if I wandered too far into a particular coping mechanism, or way of being; there would be a reaction or incident that would remind me that I’m not dealing with one aspect of my life at a time anymore.
At work, I received mixed messages about my performance. I was given an excellent performance review, asked to act as team leader and manager during absences; but was not given a pay rise. The high performer within me wants to know how to be perfect, and therefore be worthy of a pay rise; while the realist in me knows that the pay issue is tied to the economic and political times, more than my performance. It’s a good reminder, that I still need to work on gaining satisfaction from my job that is independent of others. I still rely on others to prove my worth and validate my existence. I need to shift that, so that I can gain job satisfaction without needing others approval.
I did my little bit to fight the changes brought about by the new ACC clinical pathway. I wrote a couple of posts, got into some verbal exchanges on some forums, and even ventured into other peoples blogs to discuss the issues. Sometimes, I didn’t cope well… but sometimes, I was proud of what I was doing. I may not have made any impact on the policies, but there were big changes in my healing as a result. I stood up for myself, and that caused a positive flow-on effect. On a personal level, my struggles with obtaining ongoing ACC coverage aren’t over, but that’s another story.
I worked on creative expression. I found that although I can rarely “look inside” and get a direct answer, I can do a Polyvore set or write a poem, and find an answer. I often get scared of what is communicated, or don’t understand it. But, I’m a work in progress, and I can learn. There is more trust from the system because of my willingness to work in this way.
I’ve learned an awful lot this past year. I think that’s possibly why I fear 2011 so much… the stakes are so much higher.
I wish you all the best for the coming year. Take care out there…
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Now playing: Pink – Trouble
via FoxyTunes






