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I had a nightmare last night, during my nightmare a friend of mine recommended I take prazosin to help with nightmares. That was strange.
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So true @Ragdoll Circus . Best to find out what your own nightmares/dreams mean for you. Mine are coded in such a way that I know when it's a message from the interior or memory or a warning of an impending catastrophe. It took me years to discover my coding system. The warning ones only came to light recently. Before that I didn't know that any nightmare which starts with an catastrophe means one is coming of a certain type. Along with that I had to accept that I've always been sensitive to my environment.Dreams are a slippery lil sucker.
Chiming back in here. I don’t think anyone, struggling with a disorder or not, can say they are genuinely happy.
Besides, I don’t think happiness is a worthwhile or sustainable goal to begin with.
Yeah I'm going to side with you on this one, I would not be satisfied going through hell for 20 years and not coming out truly happy. I have faith that I can get it thoughWowza. Poor Dalai Lama.
I can say it. I’ve been genuinely happy. Many, many, many times. In countles...
I think I'll know when I've made real progress when my inner demons are successfully converted into just normal parts of self.I can't say that I'm truly happy about everything in my life but I can say that, on the whole, I no...
Yeah, I did phrase that like we're all just running around like miserable sacks of sh*t, didn't I? No, you're right, I've been genuinely happy too, deeply and sustainably. I should have put a finer point on the word "transitory." That happiness, like sadness, comes and goes, and that that's not only alright, it's normal and just part of being human. The Dalai Lama, for one, doesn't claim we're all miserable 24/7/365, but that suffering shouldn't be resisted as "bad" while happiness strived for as a sustainable status quo.Wowza. Poor Dalai Lama.
Very much agreed.I think this attitude (happiness AND sadness are transitory and that's normal) i
In this line of thought it seems like a lot of people's approach to recovery is "my legs are both broken so I will enter a wheel chair marathon." I want to actually have my health back, I don't want to be trying to tolerate and work around this stuff forever.Very much agreed.
Also that the sustained badness of <insert f*cked up symptoms here> aren’t normal...
Wow, hold on, your post just reminded me of something I read long ago and thought a lot about back then, but somehow completely forgot over time.Like a badly healed broken leg. Needs to get rebroken & set & physio.