So... some more dissociation realisations on the way home today.
I'm currently having "issues" with a colleague at work, who's been behaving badly and disrespectfully and ignoring everyone's boundaries. I called her out on it a few days ago (which she didn't appreciate, lol) and we shouted at each other in the staff kitchen today. :facepalm:
Anyway, driving home, I noticed that I also have a type of dissociation where there's lots of static in my head and something that's a stressor (situation with colleague) will just run through my mind in a sheer endless loop. I guess it could be called ruminating or mulling over, but kind of in a hyper/ obsessed way... Just that situation/ those thoughts looping through my brain at high speed and I can't stop them.
So I actually *noticed* today that it was happening and I *noticed* how weird it was... Usually when it happens, I just assume "well of course I would be thinking about this obsessively - it's cos I'm upset about it!"
But today I really noticed that - hang on, something's weird here - because my brain was just in this weird auto-pilot mode and these thoughts were just spewing out a mile a minute and it was constant loops of this stuff.
So I tried some grounding techniques, but wow - they weren't strong enough, they weren't working at all - thoughts just kept racing round in circles, totally involuntarily.
So I figured, okay, I'll have to ramp the grounding techniques up and get really heavy duty about it - and I did some really heavy focus "thought stop" stuff... Like basically *banned* my brain from going near that topic... At first, my brain would manage about 5 seconds of not-thinking-bout-it and then - woosh - be back on the topic again, so again, I'd be like "STOP NOW" and eventually the gaps of not-thinking-bout-it got longer and longer and I could feel my brain actually starting to calm down again and come out of the dissociation and start being grounded again.
This obsessive-thought-loop about stressors is a type of dissociation I've done countlesssssss times over the decades :facepalm:
I can get stuck in it for hours and hours and hours. :facepalm:
So that was quite a revelation - realising my brain is on auto-pilot - that it's not even noticing my surroundings anymore - or noticing *anything* in life other than the one issue/ stressor that it's fixated on - that I can't feel my body - that I'm shallow breathing...
So that's another type of dissociation I'll be having to watch out for in future! :p
But if I can spot it and do grounding techniques, then that will also spare me a huge amount of distress, so it'll be worth it :)