I'm new here, so please excuse me if I sound ignorant. I have been doing a lot of reading and exploring on the forum and today was scanning some of the Trauma Diaries of Sufferers. I found a common theme of making lists that I wonder if someone could expand upon or explain for me.
The lists I see are very extensive covering everything from self care to relationships to goals and everything in between. My sufferer makes lists as well. I'm not just talking about the grocery list or the honey do list. The lists she makes, and the ones I see here are more like road maps to what is perceived as the way to "normal". I look at these lists and being considered "normal" there is no way I could accomplish the things on them. Why the seemingly unrealistic expectations of ones self?
The thought struck me, that if these lists are maps to "normal" then aren't they missing life by concentrating on the map? Let me see if I can explain what I mean.
My sufferer wants to take a trip and so we sit down with a map and plan a route and where we will stop and how far we will travel each day and what we need to bring and how much, etc. I understand this is a necessary step for her to feel safe and in control and I have no problem doing this with her. BUT, now that she has this list and this map and it is loaded into the navigation of the car, she spends each step of the trip watching the navigation for how far we have gone, how far we have yet to go, when is the next turn, etc. Then when we reach that point, she doesn't stop there, she is on to the next step of the trip doing the same thing and checking and double checking her list to make sure we have everything.
My point is this, there is so much attention paid to the navigation and the list, that she misses the sights and beauty of what is outside the car window. She is so engrossed in the steps of getting from point "A" to point "B" that she misses the experience of getting there. I try to point out things I think she would like to see, like a rainbow, or beautiful landscape, or interesting birds or animals, or the blue sky, or odd clouds, but most the time she misses them because she has her eyes fixed on the navigation or the list.
As I read through the diaries, I saw that this is a pattern with sufferers. Honestly, what is normal? If I were to try and live by any one of the lists I saw today, I would drive myself crazy. I couldn't do it, nor would I want to. To me, that is not living, nor is it the way to "normal". I might be so bold as to say, it is a very self centered way of living. It doesn't leave room for anyone or anything else that might be interesting or worth looking at or getting to know.
How can I (we) as supporters fit into this life of lists? How can I (we) get them (sufferers) to see beyond themselves? The lists (in my opinion) don't leave room for living, yet that is what they (sufferers) all say they want to do. I say, then drop the list and come for a walk with me and feel the sand in your toes, or the sun on your face, or watch the birds float and glide in the sky, or lets stop for a spontaneous ice cream or coffee and just enjoy our surroundings. They (surroundings) can be good and beautiful and safe. I just want my sufferer to experience what it is like to NOT be hyper vigilant and full of anxiety all the time. Is that possible?
The lists I see are very extensive covering everything from self care to relationships to goals and everything in between. My sufferer makes lists as well. I'm not just talking about the grocery list or the honey do list. The lists she makes, and the ones I see here are more like road maps to what is perceived as the way to "normal". I look at these lists and being considered "normal" there is no way I could accomplish the things on them. Why the seemingly unrealistic expectations of ones self?
The thought struck me, that if these lists are maps to "normal" then aren't they missing life by concentrating on the map? Let me see if I can explain what I mean.
My sufferer wants to take a trip and so we sit down with a map and plan a route and where we will stop and how far we will travel each day and what we need to bring and how much, etc. I understand this is a necessary step for her to feel safe and in control and I have no problem doing this with her. BUT, now that she has this list and this map and it is loaded into the navigation of the car, she spends each step of the trip watching the navigation for how far we have gone, how far we have yet to go, when is the next turn, etc. Then when we reach that point, she doesn't stop there, she is on to the next step of the trip doing the same thing and checking and double checking her list to make sure we have everything.
My point is this, there is so much attention paid to the navigation and the list, that she misses the sights and beauty of what is outside the car window. She is so engrossed in the steps of getting from point "A" to point "B" that she misses the experience of getting there. I try to point out things I think she would like to see, like a rainbow, or beautiful landscape, or interesting birds or animals, or the blue sky, or odd clouds, but most the time she misses them because she has her eyes fixed on the navigation or the list.
As I read through the diaries, I saw that this is a pattern with sufferers. Honestly, what is normal? If I were to try and live by any one of the lists I saw today, I would drive myself crazy. I couldn't do it, nor would I want to. To me, that is not living, nor is it the way to "normal". I might be so bold as to say, it is a very self centered way of living. It doesn't leave room for anyone or anything else that might be interesting or worth looking at or getting to know.
How can I (we) as supporters fit into this life of lists? How can I (we) get them (sufferers) to see beyond themselves? The lists (in my opinion) don't leave room for living, yet that is what they (sufferers) all say they want to do. I say, then drop the list and come for a walk with me and feel the sand in your toes, or the sun on your face, or watch the birds float and glide in the sky, or lets stop for a spontaneous ice cream or coffee and just enjoy our surroundings. They (surroundings) can be good and beautiful and safe. I just want my sufferer to experience what it is like to NOT be hyper vigilant and full of anxiety all the time. Is that possible?