Teasel
VIP Member
A way to be more present with being too focused on self :)
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I totally get this.Hi all. I don’t know if it’s just with me, but I find that whenever I try to practice the mindfulness and meditation techniques, I only feel worse. I can never complete it because of that. If I’m doing it just to practice it, I begin to feel physically sick, with nausea, dry heaving, chest heaviness, and start to feel sleepy or zoned out, like I’m going to dissociate soon. If I’m doing it to get grounded because I’m having a panic attack or flashback or about to have it, then it just makes me feel even worse. I find that it’s not only no help for me, but it actually worsens my symptoms. I end up feeling more like the abuse is happening.
There's a lot of unskilled folks trying to push it though a lot of psychologists and psychiatrists don't do it themselves, so unless you have done it then you have no experiential reference.I don’t know if I’m just weird though or not doing it right or something because everyone seems to believe that it works and it makes you feel better. My psychiatrist and all the Ts I have and my current T keep suggesting it, and asking if I’ve done it, or if I’m still doing it. They constantly remind me to do it. When I tell them that I tried it but it made me feel worse so I stopped, they all think that I’m either lying about having done it, or not doing it right, and that I don’t really want to get better. Now I just tell them I do it, even though I know I don’t, but I just can’t bother with having that whole conversation of why I’m here in therapy all over again.
But she didn't just say do it despite how it makes you feel? She actually talked about how to more like process what is happening.I have a new T again now, and she asked me if I knew anything about mindfulness. I told her yes so she asked if I practiced it. I told her the truth that I didn’t just to see what would happen. She asked me why and I told her it made me feel worse. And then she asked me to describe what I would feel, and I did. None of my or previous Ts ever asked me to do that so I never knew that was something to talk about, and I’m not trying to say they aren’t good or anything. My current T said that the reason it makes me feel worse and even more “involved” in the past may be related to how I coped while it was happening. I’m not too sure what she meant though because she ended the session and I don’t see her for another two weeks because she’s away.
I totally get it and for some people their Mindfulness is swimming, walking, painting, drawing etcSo I was just wondering if anyone had similar reactions when practicing mindfulness, and if so, do you know why? Sorry for the long post, I don’t know why but I felt I had to explain the whole thing before I could ask this. Thanks.
Yes it can be quite dangerous for someone with PTSD or unprocessed Complex Trauma.Most of this mindfulness theory is a Westernized version of Vipassana, a practice found within Theravada Buddhism. It emphasizes three things that I think are difficult for PTSDers: breathing, eyes closed meditation and the body scan. All of this can lead you into a dysphoric trance rather than awareness. I also found it unbearable and triggering when I first began to meditate.
Yes and you don't even have to sit you can lie down, stand up or walk or move. It's really ridiculous how the West has turned this in to an extreme adventure sport that it doesn't need to be.On the other hand, Zen Buddhism comes from the Mahayana tradition. This type of meditation is done with the eyes open where one stares at a fixed point and focuses completely on everything around you that your senses can detect: traffic sounds outside, the pain in your knee, the smell of fish from the apartment next door. There are no requirements to breathe or scan or chant. You just sit.
I find that it’s not only no help for me, but it actually worsens my symptoms. I end up feeling more like the abuse is happening.
Anyway, I think she thought I just didn't understand what mindfulness is.