Abstract, we are so similar in so many ways. So much of what you wrote last night (whilst I was attempting, and mainly failing, to sleep) resonates with me.
I have never been good at being patient with myself and tend to barrel ahead and ignore any fear or consequences when I decide to do something.
This is a perfect description of myself! :D
I think my need to always look strong and "fine" has greatly stopped my progress in so many ways and ways in which I had no idea they were doing. I also thought I did not need others and that is far from true.
I am absolutely the same way as this. This morning, as I was having a shower, realised that what I was calling a 'dead end' or 'the end of the road' was actually the same as that moment that addicts need - rock bottom. Aside from one thing, everything I have tried to do since 2008 has imploded in my face. I have had an intensely awful time and because I tried to deal with that by moving to a new country and have managed to utterly isolate myself, I had no choice but to face that failure.
Also, because I now live in a small community, I had no choice but to face my utter failure at human relationships, because unlike in cities, you can't just keep trying to make friends with someone new. Then a man came very close to raping me and the few acquaintances I had made just shrugged it off, despite the fact that I had two witnesses. They just didn't think it was a big deal.
Well, that act really escalated the PTSD and I just went totally neurotic and my hypervigilance went through the roof. I ended up walled in. Enclosed. And no matter how hard I kicked, pushed, and pick-axed the walls, they kept standing, and the space inside kept shrinking and I was running out of oxygen to breathe. I had no resources left and I knew that I was very close to losing my job because I couldn't keep my temper with my boss and if I had no job, I'd have no home and then I'd be homeless (again) as I had no friends and this is one cold ass country. So, I had two choices: seek professional help or suicide.
So I smiled when I saw you said this:
I hit rock bottom and could do nothing else
I wondered: maybe you need to hit rock bottom again before you seek out another therapist? Just a thought.
My reasonable mind is there! It just seems that the rest of me doesn't agree. And is blocking me.
Because maybe your reasonable mind needs to see you in a complete and utter mess and then it can take over total control and find someone to help you..? I know I certainly needed to lose all other options than the two I listed above before I could take the reins away to find a therapist. I am sorry if I am just projecting my experiences onto you.
She never believed me. It seems my “I am fine” veneer was so good that she could not consider I was telling the truth.
now can sometimes see that her job was to realise those patterns and listen and point these things out to me rather than just disbelieve me and fall for the veneer I put on.
My first two therapists were like this and they are why I thought therapy was shite until I was forced to try again nearly 20 years later. I'm glad I did because this one is NOTHING like them. It's just a completely different experience.
I am having the same response to attempting to do this that I have when I try to take steps to get a therapist.
You know what sets me off? The word safety. It's actually really difficult to even type that now. The very word - its sound, its spelling, its meaning - sends me into a giant panic. I get really angry if anyone tries to make me think about it in any way.
When my therapist asked me to try to make a safe space, I couldn't do it in the session. I went away, had a total melt-down and couldn't sleep that night over it and wrote him a giant essay of an email the next morning about how the concept of a safe space was logically flawed. It was totally pompous! I just get cross, panicky and very afraid by the word/concept. Even when Hashi wrote it above, I had to just ignore her because I don't agree about safe spaces and it just makes me so angry to have someone tell me that I should try to have one for myself. Totally batty and it is clearly touching on something else for me, but I've no clue what. Anyway, point is, do you think that the word therapy/therapist is a bit like that for you?
My therapist says that it won't necessarily happen. She says that people can resolve their trauma by remembering enough of it to resolve without having to remember it all. I'm choosing to believe this, because I don't know what will happen so I might as well choose to believe something less scary. But anyway, by this point I trust that if I remember something, then that's because I'm ready to deal with it, and it wants to be healed.
My therapist says that too. Both that your mind only gives you enough of the repressed stuff that it thinks you can handle, and it can be through dreams as well as when waking, and also that you don't have to remember everything to heal. Both give me comfort.
Hugs to you all.