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D
Deleted member 39476
You seem to get very caught up in the hopelessness of your extreme and complex situation.
You have a really good point but in a really tragic way I'm really distorted thinking is still accurate. Are the fears people have during a panic attack realistic? Probably not, more likely not even close. What about the sense of hopelessness a person gets when experiencing an emotional flashback to a time of severe helplessness, is the feeling accurate? Certainly not. However, if you experience that in a very severe intensity, on a severely chronic basis, especially in a way that has shown to be resistant to many forms of treatment, and cripples you in day to day life, there is actually a solid argument to be made that the feelings are, in a very ironic and roundabout way, accurate. "I'm worried that I cannot successfully treat my chronic and severe worrying" sounds silly but is a very honest look at the situation. Especially given the even greater cruel irony that the more worried you are about whether or not you will recover, the less likely you are to recover.
Over-generalisation is a cognitive distortion, and it seems to be making it really difficult for you to be able to identify some pretty major successes that you've had with your recovery so far, and I can imagine that would make the future seem impossibly hopeless.
It's not like I don't think I have made steps, I have accomplished a lot in therapy. In all honesty I'm probably really lucky because I have a really good therapist that I like a lot, and have made a lot more progress than some people do in a lifetime. The problem is that in the present I'm so severely disturbed that I fantasize about death, I have felt this bad nearly 24/7 for the last year and a half, and it feels like I'm banging my head against a brick wall in therapy because almost all the techniques that are designed to help people in my situation actually make me feel significantly worse. It's really really hard to appreciate the positive aspects of it when the negative aspects happen to be totally destroying your life.
And yet you've described using distraction in this thread, and also becoming completely engrossed in video games...?
In my opinion fight or flight obsession and distraction are not at all the same thing as mindfulness. To illustrate a really potent example, I have two monitors on my desk so that I can run two tasks at once on my computer. When I was healthier I would usually only use the main one, and if I used the second one at all it was just for a secondary task like having a music library open so I don't have to switch between tasks. Right now I am always looking for something to do because my mind is racing with negativity and anxiety all the time, so I look for a game to immerse myself in. It doesn't work because I am not capable of concentrating so usually I open up a second game to play on the second monitor that I play when I experience any down-time in my main game, even if its just a few seconds of down time. If that isn't bad enough, what I find is that no matter which task I put where, I am always looking at my second monitor. I have such an extreme aversion to being mindful that I am perpetually distracted by the secondary task/game. That doesn't mean I'm being mindful at all, it just means my mind is obsessing about something secondary to keep my mind off of the primary task, because my mind associates the primary task with being mindful, being mindful with awful thoughts and memories, and those thoughts and memories with intense pain. I really am not being hyperbolic when I say I am never mindful, even right now as I write this long body of text, the only reason I can do it coherently at all is because my mind is obsessing about this as a way of avoiding what I actually should have been doing for the past hour which is brushing my teeth and going to bed.