I'm so adverse to change, and like to control things, that when dilemmas come up I often treat them like the end of the world. Is anyone else like this?
Of course, I'm exaggerating, but change bothers me far more than it should when it's not major.
That's one of the reasons I became such a believer in mindfulness and all that jazz. After all, all of the suffering in those sorts of situations is from negative projections of the future or ruminations or assumptions, never from actual, present moment experience. It seems to me that if we could keep our focus in the present moment more often we would suffer far, far less.
My question is, what do you deal to combat your OCD or anxiety? I take a daily med, see a psychiatrist, and I also see a therapist on occasion. But what can I do if I feel the need to pick and I'm at home by myself, or in the car? That's usually when I find myself picking. I've tried sitting on my hands, twiddling my thumbs, and a whole bunch of other things, but nothing really seems to work.
I haven't experienced OCD, LB, so I can't speak from personal experience, but the idea is that a therapist would be able to give you a hint about the questions you have - what to do, how to cope, etc. Have you had a good experience with your present therapist? If so, have you considered seeing him / her more often?
Trying to find a job, ANY job, is stressing me out to the point where I feel like I don't 'belong'. Putting in applications is a huge trigger for me because it validates that feeling. Yeah yeah I get it, it's a fucking numbers game but how many goddamn times do I have to send in bullshit resumes and hear nothing back? I am afraid of asking advice because I feel I'll be looked at some kind of freak show. Gasp! Guffaw! He hasn't had a legitimate job in 10 years? There is definitely something wrong with him!
It's also supremely disheartening to not be able to muster the motivation to draw anything because I feel like I have lost the interest or passion or whatever the fuck it is that I had going for it. Goddamn, if I had just kept with it during my teens/early 20's, I wouldn't be in this predicament, I think. However, I cannot adjust the past for future's sake. The fact is, there are days I don't know what I want out of life and some days I have a vague picture of what I want. I punish myself mentally for not figuring this shit out at 28 years old, and I question what little happiness I have. There are so many what if's in my head that it becomes crowded and I exhaust myself.
I don't want to be the person spinning their wheels not going anywhere. I fear that, even if I make the effort, I would still be back to square one but this time with the absolute burnout of trying to get better. The pessimist in me lives off of this shit and I am sick of it. I hate that this post is the opposite of what I posted last time, but I am not in a cheery disposition and I (still) fear I will never get a true sense of content if that makes sense.
I fear I'm not able to offer the specificity I wish I could in my insight, and I know this hews closely along the seams that I usually follow, but it seems to me that more than willing yourself into a new way of being or trying to force yourself to feel differently it's important to try your best to get down to the root of what your motivation has consisted of in the past, where your fear is coming from, and what has tied you so deeply to this pessimism.
I don't know exactly how to do that, unfortunately. It's all part of the process of investigating self, which is crucial to our growth in this life, but what that process involves seems to vary depending on the person and the time. For me, lately, it's been listening to a lot of romantic-era classical music that invokes certain feelings in me and reading existentialist material. At one point I learned some thing about myself from rom com movies.
The one thing I think always,
always helps is to journal. It doesn't have to be long, it doesn't have to be about what you did today. I just sit down with a notebook and a pen and put my pen to paper and see what the first word that comes out is. Sometimes the words form sentences, sometimes they don't. Sometimes I even listen to instrumental music while I do this.
I think your fears are logical - they are scary things - but they're also not totally founded in that there are many possible outcomes and we still have some amount of influence over which ones of them transpire, if only we can find the means to exert that influence. As you said, it takes a lot of emotional energy, and finding those wells of energy requires surveying and exploring the landscape.
You're never a burden! <3
I've been okay! I'm hoping for big things in the next few months.
The big thing I learned, and my big advice for people in here, is to keep some distance from people who only want to talk when things are bad. It was always clear to me who my friends were - the people who cared about my health along with their own, and who would share the good times with me too - and who treated me like a free therapist. As clear as people's intentions are, I'm good at overlooking them. I'm dumb like that.
This thread is a great place for general advice and obviously most posts are going to be more negative than positive. How much people want to participate is on them. It's great to see people trying to be helpful. I ran into trouble as I got to know people better. PMs, skype, IRC - all that stuff helped me make some amazing friends, get help, and have some great times. But I realize now how much time I...I don't want to say "wasted." I don't think helping people is ever really a waste...I guess I SPENT a lot of time and energy on people who basically wanted all they could get from me and had nothing to give in return. That was a lot of negative energy that I did not need.
People sometimes need more help when they come in here, which is totally understandable. But the people who stick around and make it a useful, beneficial thing also give back what and when they can.
I appreciate the insight, Bagels (and I'm also glad you checked in!). I've tried my best to be very structured about how I interact with the community precisely to avoid emotional burnout. If there were a way to put data on the length of my posts next to my current emotional climate one would see they're very related.
It's taken me roughly 2 years to get over a long term relationship breakup. Looking back at me of over 2 years ago is like holy shit, what a different person. I was in a terrible state.
I still suffer from anxiety and depressive episodes which I always will (diagnosed before relationship) but I'm in a much better place now. Still struggling to find someone new but I won't force that.
I guess you can insert the old and repeated bit of advice of time being a healer here.
In the wise words of Ben Folds: "time takes time, you know?"
I'm glad to hear you're healing, Audioboxer. It takes a long time, and that's okay. Finding someone new also takes time, and that's okay, too.
Just need to vent. I am currently on health leave from college due to depression and anxiety and won't be allowed to come back until September.
I'm not sure what I'm suppose to be doing home to get better. I am seeing another therapist again once a week but I'm bored out of my mind.
I feel as if the hardest part of this is deing with the anxiety. I keep thinking that I'm gay and repressing it. I force myself to imagine different scenarios and watch different things to see if I get aroused. The funny part is I absolutely don't care if I was gay, at least that's what I think but maybe I've been lying about that too. My therapist said it's just anxiety and now I'm on 20mcg of Prozac but the depression and anxiety is still there. It's ruining my life.
For a long time I harbored an intense anxiety about whether there were things I was deeply repressing, so much so that I wasn't even aware of them. I worried that I was gay and hiding it, along with other things like worrying that I was going to snap and turn violent or lose control and kill myself.
It's been long enough now that I've been forced to reason that it's
much more likely that I'm anxiously worrying about the possibilities of the human mind than repressing my true self. For the gay thing, it helped me to talk to a friend who came out of the closet fairly late (mid-college) about his experience, and how he KNEW he was gay. Hearing him talk about how he knew gave me a lot of reassurance that, well, I'm not gay, as what I was worrying about was nothing like the feelings he had had.
Not that there's anything wrong with being gay, of course, but the anxiety about whether or not I really "knew" myself was tearing me up.
As far as being bored, well, it's a good time to explore structuring your free time in such a way that you keep a sense of momentum and learning about where you can find the motivation to do so. For me, I eventually found a core group of activities that gave me a daily sense of purpose (exercising, practicing piano and meditating) along with larger scale "projects" that I'd work on every day (such as listening to a new artist's discography or organizing all of my old family photos). I made a list of short, medium and long term goals - short being things I could work on TODAY, medium things I could work towards in a few weeks, and long term a few months.
I'm still trying to figure out what happened, I came back from a student exchange and everything was fine like always but a month after that I noticed that they started to excluiding me from all and when I wanted to tell them about the things I accomplished they didn't care much. Since that day I stopped talking to them because I didn't want things keep getting worse.
I feel that everything is my fault that's why I would like to try and ask them about what's wrong with me but I'm afraid that they are not going to tell me the truth. Although things are getting worse I'm going to try to do my best and learn from this experience, maybe I can fix this or make more friends like you said.
Thank you for your reply and your welcome Piano, I'm still depressed and crying but I feel a bit better after writing here because I don't have anyone to talk to right now.
As tough as it is, CW, it can be very helpful to take space when things aren't working in a friendship or relationship. Perhaps this is a good time to find others to reach out to and then there will be a better time in the future to reconnect with those friends. In the mean time I think writing, in general, helps a lot to get feelings OUT instead of just letting them fester inside forever, and you're welcome to post here whenever you need to.
I've been feeling better this week than I have for the past month. But I feel like that's going to come crashing down soon. I've never had therapy, but with everyone telling me it's what I need, I'm pretty set on going for the first time. But, I've been talking to someone new and we're very kindred - mental health wise - and she's told me that her sessions each cost 25,000¥. That is a huge amount of money for me. I mean maybe once a month it would be OK, but now I'm feeling extremely put out on how to go about this.
Ah yes, the "other shoe is going to drop" phenomenon! I've worried about the other shoe for years now. When things are good they might suddenly become bad, and when they're bad, what if they get worse?! The best antidote I've found is learning to live, the best I can, taking things one step at a time. It's so senseless to make myself suffer in the present over the fear of suffering in the future.
Do you have health insurance? Is there a possibility of checking with your insurer about the costs and who is and is not covered? I'm not familiar with how these things work in all areas of the world, unfortunately, but often there is a reasonable option available.
<3