For example, we are working on one particular incident from my military days. I was in a situation where I ended up in a fight with a terrorist. As in physically fighting for my life. They think I should be angry about that. My reply is why? I lived. He didn't. Nuff said. They want me to see the chain of events that led to the situation, how I ended up being on my own in the first place, that I didn't get any medical attention for a sprained wrist and broken foot, that no one really thought it was a big deal, blah blah. My response is ...I was in the military. That is just how it goes. Suck it up Cupcake and move on. I honestly don't understand what they mean when they say that I need to allow myself to feel angry. Why??
LMFAO :roflmao: :hilarious:
Okay... So take this with a whole damn margaritas worth of salt :
There are things worth being angry about. And if
anything is something you would raise hell over for someone else? Like ripping new assholes, having come to Jesus meetings, dragged to the carpet, or going blouses off for? It's probably a thing worth being angry over. Even if the end result is eyes forward and yessir & drop it, and go blow off a f*ckload of steam elsewhere (ie venting some pent up rage before it can burn you)...
Here comes the salt
...there's also things that are just the f*ckin military. There have been a grand total of TWO therapists I've actually been able to seriously break shit down with... Because A) they could laugh with me over the f*cked up bullshit that just is what it is, & B) the things that were reeeeeeally hard? They got. No explanations necessary for either. They knew when I looked completely calm that something was seriously wrong (who's gonna die?), and when I storming up and down waving my arms in the air, or 12 kinds of f*cked up, that I was basically fine and would just sit back, kinda smile, and wait for me to blow myself out (when others would be trying to calm me down or dialing 911). And when the reverse was true. They knew that the reason I didn't go to the command master guns with ProblemX was because that man? Was basically GOD. They knew that antibiotics, duct tape, and vodka was a kindness (rape solutions 101) not a way I was "let down" and should be upset over. They understood what was important to me, then, & now. And they didn't try to attach feelings that weren't there. Some things? Were worth being angry over. Some weren't.
Sometimes not recovering medical care was a complete f*ck up, other times, it was almost pure kindness merged with some serious respect. Something to be proud over, not angry over. Very much depended on the situation at hand and people involved. Was it a betrayal? Not giving a f*ck over those they were honor bound to protect? Or was it being respected enough to know I could handle my shit, and needed / wanted enough to be kept in play, despite the personal cost? Totally depended on the situation. And it didn't end there. Things to be proud of in the field? Often rate being pissed as hell once you're back in the world, and not given proper care. You rated it 3mo /6mo / 9mo ago. You have time to sort it now and they wanna make shit hard? I don't f*cking think so. But That BS happens all the time. As do a lot of other complicated situations. The actually "thing" that people are all horrified over is just another Tuesday, but brick-wall-bang-head piece that you're really f*cked up over? Ain't that. It's a piece far distant, only barely related to the "sexy" thing people
think you should be f*cked up over. Can make the whole "feelings" thing a lot harder to sort when shit gets complicated.
Recognizing anger? Is important. But attaching it to the right thing? Even more important IMO. That? Worth being angry over. THAT? f*cking. Hilarious THAT? Something I feel deep pride over. THAT? Snort. That's just bullshit, and ain't worth sweating. >>> Regardless of what anyone else thinks I "should" feel... Knowing what I DO feel? Is the important bit.
Shrudder. Feeeeeeeeelings. :wtf:
But, for true, keeps shit from coming out sideways.