I need to move on, and I need to do it by myself.
Someone suggested a long time ago that " all the drama around the NHS was a distraction from healing" I don't think that was true then, but maybe now? I do know I have to accept that they are in too much of a mess to give me anything useful or soon. I can't pay for therapy, so I'm on my own with it.
I have always done most things for myself, so maybe in itself this will enable me to reclaim the strength I used to have and have no sight of now. Yet I know I have a dismissive - avoidant attachment style, so I'm not comfortable with asking for support.
I'm feeling reasonably strong now, having just come back from a two week break in the camper van. I will get less stable and less determined.
I've asked lots of questions - please tell me what has worked for you. Or what hasn't worked, or if you think this is a crazy and unrealistic idea. My judgement is appalling nowadays.
I find routine and structure liberating, so I'm aiming to create a plan that looks a bit like a school timetable, but with more breaks. Has anyone done this, or are there examples online?
I also need a syllabus, of what to study, what to think about, what to practice in what order
Someone suggested a long time ago that " all the drama around the NHS was a distraction from healing" I don't think that was true then, but maybe now? I do know I have to accept that they are in too much of a mess to give me anything useful or soon. I can't pay for therapy, so I'm on my own with it.
- What useful suggestions can people make for putting together a practical applied plan?
- What shall I do, for how long each day / week? My time is very free, so I can put in as much as needed, but I know I need lots of down time or I get overwhelmed.
I have always done most things for myself, so maybe in itself this will enable me to reclaim the strength I used to have and have no sight of now. Yet I know I have a dismissive - avoidant attachment style, so I'm not comfortable with asking for support.
- Do I need to build more inter-personal stuff in to my plan? I've just arranged to volunteer once a week - at the moment I don't do anything out of the house, so that is a big step.
I'm feeling reasonably strong now, having just come back from a two week break in the camper van. I will get less stable and less determined.
- How shall I deal with the fading stability?
- How shall I deal with the risk to consistency? When I make a commitment to someone else to do something I will follow through, but for myself I tend to fade out. However, I know that I am quite good at climbing back on the wagon.
- Where do I get an objective view? I will always make everything my fault and use that to demonstrate that I am too foul to deserve anything.
- How do I judge when to push myself and when to hold back?
- How do I know when I am no longer present?
- What grounding and stability tools can I work on?
- How often should I rehearse them?
- How can I overcome the shamefulness of needing them?
- How shall I remember them when I need them?
- How can I recognise when the build up to crisis starts?
- How can I act when it is there?
- Is there a best form of exposure / processing therapy for me?
- Does it need to be done with another person? Do I risk simply rehashing my current responses and beliefs without a referee?
I've asked lots of questions - please tell me what has worked for you. Or what hasn't worked, or if you think this is a crazy and unrealistic idea. My judgement is appalling nowadays.
I find routine and structure liberating, so I'm aiming to create a plan that looks a bit like a school timetable, but with more breaks. Has anyone done this, or are there examples online?
I also need a syllabus, of what to study, what to think about, what to practice in what order