Kintsugi
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Sorry this post is so long, but I stand by all the contextual information. Thanks for reading.
I've always had trouble with preventing the escalation of panicked thoughts while trying to address tasks in an anxious and depressed state, and my way of dealing with it is generally avoidance, unless I can still complete it and feel apathetic about any consequences, which is something I learned to do in college, but I find academics more comfortable to perform than any other function in life. Now I realize all the extracurricular things I had to do in college didn't get done not because I was just too busy but really because I just avoid them and can't seem to get into an apathetic "just go through the motions step-by-step" headspace.
Now I find myself within the crux of a situation where avoiding anything I should be doing any longer will have really terrible consequences that I can't afford to ignore. However, every time I think of something that needs to be accomplished, I get a half second into thinking about it and my mind flips into overdrive like a bad trip and goes down the rabbit hole of panic, articulating all the steps and the scary what-ifs in between, and I just rapidly spiral toward a total breakdown. Though I've apparently learned how to stop these thoughts from entering a fullblown nervous breakdown/panic attack since my highly episodic young teen years, that process is redirecting my attention quickly and totally ignoring my previous train of thought entirely, like slamming a door on it and locking it away.
But obviously this is a really bad coping skill because I still can't address the problem. If I go back to that "locked room" later and peep in, I see the swirling chaos and panic behind the door and lock it shut again.
I just read the spoon theory for the first time today, and while it makes a lot of sense, I feel like when I want to plan my daily spoons, I think about what I need to do and get so flustered I just drop them all and don't accomplish anything at all, except token productivity I find easy, like cleaning the house.
So I guess my question is, does anybody have any advice for how to prevent escalating into panic while still addressing the tasks they need to get done? In the past I've written down parts of tasks on different pieces of paper to pace myself, but presently even writing a list that way is too much for me to handle. I just want to be able to at least prioritize some tasks and set some goals, but I find it hard to focus without escalating, and every task reminds me of five other major tasks I should also be working on.
I'm rambling right now because I'm beginning to escalate! See? So frustrated.
Thanks in advance as always for your support and words.
I've always had trouble with preventing the escalation of panicked thoughts while trying to address tasks in an anxious and depressed state, and my way of dealing with it is generally avoidance, unless I can still complete it and feel apathetic about any consequences, which is something I learned to do in college, but I find academics more comfortable to perform than any other function in life. Now I realize all the extracurricular things I had to do in college didn't get done not because I was just too busy but really because I just avoid them and can't seem to get into an apathetic "just go through the motions step-by-step" headspace.
Now I find myself within the crux of a situation where avoiding anything I should be doing any longer will have really terrible consequences that I can't afford to ignore. However, every time I think of something that needs to be accomplished, I get a half second into thinking about it and my mind flips into overdrive like a bad trip and goes down the rabbit hole of panic, articulating all the steps and the scary what-ifs in between, and I just rapidly spiral toward a total breakdown. Though I've apparently learned how to stop these thoughts from entering a fullblown nervous breakdown/panic attack since my highly episodic young teen years, that process is redirecting my attention quickly and totally ignoring my previous train of thought entirely, like slamming a door on it and locking it away.
But obviously this is a really bad coping skill because I still can't address the problem. If I go back to that "locked room" later and peep in, I see the swirling chaos and panic behind the door and lock it shut again.
I just read the spoon theory for the first time today, and while it makes a lot of sense, I feel like when I want to plan my daily spoons, I think about what I need to do and get so flustered I just drop them all and don't accomplish anything at all, except token productivity I find easy, like cleaning the house.
So I guess my question is, does anybody have any advice for how to prevent escalating into panic while still addressing the tasks they need to get done? In the past I've written down parts of tasks on different pieces of paper to pace myself, but presently even writing a list that way is too much for me to handle. I just want to be able to at least prioritize some tasks and set some goals, but I find it hard to focus without escalating, and every task reminds me of five other major tasks I should also be working on.
I'm rambling right now because I'm beginning to escalate! See? So frustrated.
Thanks in advance as always for your support and words.