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Yes!Is it because the worst thing I could imagine in therapy happened, and I still lived, even though I didn't think I'd make it through the grieving alive?
Junebug VIP Member New Dear @Hashi , I think perhaps you were saying many of the same points in a different way
Me too, thank you so much for posting that. It makes my feelings feel more normal.I just love the image of the 'formal feeling'. I'm so familiar with it.
I am Buddhist, for me to sit with it and not judge means to ground and center myself, and see the bigger picture. Often times I find the answer by doing this. I totally understand what Ms. Spock is saying because I practice mindfulness meditation.What happened to trying to understand it?
No, well yes. I was really badly off and the ER psychiatrist told me since I had 7 admissions last year, it wouldn't help to go inpatient. I was too afraid of her to say that they kept me alive. The ER nurse and the social worker didn't want to discharge me. I was just sobbing. It is alway so awful when I go to the hospital.suicidal and at times have been in need of going to hospital. Has that changed?
That is so true. When my therapist (T) emailed me to check in on Monday, I told him I was really triggered and afraid to come in, but I'm coming in anyway. It helps to tell him I'm afraid, then its not this hidden thing. That is another way of being mindful - being aware of our feelings, and how they are feelings and not fact.When the pain is too intense and we have been faced by the risk of caring then our mind can play every trick it can possibly lay its "hands" on to keep us away after.
I do. I have lots of different techniques I use. You hit the nail on the head when you said I needed sleep. It really helped when I got it.does meditation and meditation classes I presumed she would be grounding herself.
And then you tagged me... fatal!
I don't mind having a different view from other people .
I love this. Imagine that before somehow you got duped into believing that your feelings weren't normal? wtf.It makes my feelings feel more normal.
Bravo! Do you think mindfulness practices helped you with developing this skill to communicate about something highly sensitive but at the same time be aware and conscious of potential triggers?I'll try to explain the process without triggering myself.
When I was a teenager, I was in Scientology, where they teach you to be present but they don't call it that. I drilled for hours a day on being present.lot of people haven't developed that skill or ability yet.
This is a pattern that I'm noticing recently. It seems that some people who have some sort of cult like brainwashing in their past history end up with this uncanny ability to stay more conscious during emotional triggers. I was involved with Amway/Multi-Level-Marketing which had some cult aspects to it, but my brainwashing primarily came from my borderline mom and narcissist like dad within the context of a shame-based traditional Chinese culture upbringing.I drilled for hours a day on being present.
I think you got it across beautifully! The process, fully laid out.I hope that explained it but I don't think I really got my point across.
I relate to this. I like your acceptance of yourself and others in your approach now. Much of the work I've done now is because of "needing" to get over this. Others don't have the same urgency in their lives right now.I used to struggle with the reality that most people out there simply do not have the ability to stay conscious under emotional stress.