beautifulwalking
New Here
Life is a constant battle. I am a introvert by nature...I think or maybe early childhood made me an introvert. I'm 49 and I think that I have reached a significant plateau. Even though my CPTSD is very bad (7 suicide attempts and difficulty socially), I have reached a new understanding of how I can make things easier on myself.
1) Proceed with caution in daily interaction with people.
2) It is better to spend a day isolated than to risk being hurt if I am not prepared to handle a situation.
3) There is always another day to interact. First I have to learn how to find and discern who the safe people are. Realizing this is a plateau for me.
You see. I've always been isolated but after my last suicide attempt, I tried to force myself out of this inner shell. I jumped into going to church and making people a part of my support system. I jumped into making people understand me. It was too much. I crashed after 16 months. Now I am isolating and picking up the pieces of my shattered struggle to fit into this church and have a church family. I could probably benefit by putting myself into a mental hospital but that would disrupt my job stability. I wonder a lot if I would benefit from daily professional therapy. Maybe there isn't such a thing...just a nice daydream.
My mask is now back on but I haven't given up hope for a support system. I know that friends are key to healing this CPTSD or even to having happiness. I'm determined though to be as happy as I can be, being alone. There has got to be coping mechanisms and things that I can do to make me deliriously happy. Wouldn't that be a triumph to beat the premise that you have to have social interaction to be happy. If I can develop a real strategy for being happy and not have to struggle to make friends to find that happiness, then I will have....accomplished something astounding. The ironic thing is that IF I did discover how to be happy being alone, that is when people might start gravitating to me.
No, I haven't given up on making friends and having a support system but I am going to go very very slow about it now. I'm a fragile person.....so so fragile.
1) Proceed with caution in daily interaction with people.
2) It is better to spend a day isolated than to risk being hurt if I am not prepared to handle a situation.
3) There is always another day to interact. First I have to learn how to find and discern who the safe people are. Realizing this is a plateau for me.
You see. I've always been isolated but after my last suicide attempt, I tried to force myself out of this inner shell. I jumped into going to church and making people a part of my support system. I jumped into making people understand me. It was too much. I crashed after 16 months. Now I am isolating and picking up the pieces of my shattered struggle to fit into this church and have a church family. I could probably benefit by putting myself into a mental hospital but that would disrupt my job stability. I wonder a lot if I would benefit from daily professional therapy. Maybe there isn't such a thing...just a nice daydream.
My mask is now back on but I haven't given up hope for a support system. I know that friends are key to healing this CPTSD or even to having happiness. I'm determined though to be as happy as I can be, being alone. There has got to be coping mechanisms and things that I can do to make me deliriously happy. Wouldn't that be a triumph to beat the premise that you have to have social interaction to be happy. If I can develop a real strategy for being happy and not have to struggle to make friends to find that happiness, then I will have....accomplished something astounding. The ironic thing is that IF I did discover how to be happy being alone, that is when people might start gravitating to me.
No, I haven't given up on making friends and having a support system but I am going to go very very slow about it now. I'm a fragile person.....so so fragile.