Justmehere
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I was in an educational class about PTSD and a therapist shared about their process of quitting smoking. Im going to change details in the story from here to protect their privacy.
She couldn't get herself to do it until she realized it wasn't just about trying to recover from the addiction to nicotine for the health benefits, to save money, or some other reason. All these reasons to quit smoking were good and valid, but they were not enough.
She said things changed for her when she connected to her values and what she cared about on a very practical level. She wanted to be able to do be around her niece and not smell like smoke. For her, that's what motivated her enough to endure the withdrawals.
This really struck a chord for me. She encouraged us to stay connected to what we value and why we are working so hard to recover from trauma and PTSD. She said that studies have been done that show this helps fuel behavioral change and helps people stick it out.
I am not addicted to any substance (I think I have a tendency to give in to becoming a compulsive fixer when my PTSD gets really bad. It is like I'm addicted to solving problems.)
Compulsive behaviors and addicting aside, just motivating myself to continue the painful process of therapy has been hard lately. I have had some massive setbacks.
I've been thinking about not just seeking to recover because PTSD is awful to experience. If recovery was only about that, I think I would give up. I stay in the process when I remember I am working to improve my symptoms because I want to be a better advocate for homeless and foster care children and teenagers. I think I would walk through fire for them.
In a way, I am. When I ready to give up on everything, even life itself, I think of them and something in me settles and finds a little more strength to try again. Again an again. Even when everyone else has given up.
I don't feel compelled to advocate for those kids - it's not a codependent thing. I think some motivations like this could go in that direction. For me, it just reminds me I'm working so damn hard for a reason. This keeps me going even when it seems like wrestling with PTSD only increases the pain.
Getting better because PTSD is awful to endure is a really good reason. For me, I need other reasons. Maybe it's because I am so sick of myself...
Can anyone relate? What motivates you to keep working at recovery?
The question is often what is someone recovering from? I want to ask, what are you are recovering for?
She couldn't get herself to do it until she realized it wasn't just about trying to recover from the addiction to nicotine for the health benefits, to save money, or some other reason. All these reasons to quit smoking were good and valid, but they were not enough.
She said things changed for her when she connected to her values and what she cared about on a very practical level. She wanted to be able to do be around her niece and not smell like smoke. For her, that's what motivated her enough to endure the withdrawals.
This really struck a chord for me. She encouraged us to stay connected to what we value and why we are working so hard to recover from trauma and PTSD. She said that studies have been done that show this helps fuel behavioral change and helps people stick it out.
I am not addicted to any substance (I think I have a tendency to give in to becoming a compulsive fixer when my PTSD gets really bad. It is like I'm addicted to solving problems.)
Compulsive behaviors and addicting aside, just motivating myself to continue the painful process of therapy has been hard lately. I have had some massive setbacks.
I've been thinking about not just seeking to recover because PTSD is awful to experience. If recovery was only about that, I think I would give up. I stay in the process when I remember I am working to improve my symptoms because I want to be a better advocate for homeless and foster care children and teenagers. I think I would walk through fire for them.
In a way, I am. When I ready to give up on everything, even life itself, I think of them and something in me settles and finds a little more strength to try again. Again an again. Even when everyone else has given up.
I don't feel compelled to advocate for those kids - it's not a codependent thing. I think some motivations like this could go in that direction. For me, it just reminds me I'm working so damn hard for a reason. This keeps me going even when it seems like wrestling with PTSD only increases the pain.
Getting better because PTSD is awful to endure is a really good reason. For me, I need other reasons. Maybe it's because I am so sick of myself...
Can anyone relate? What motivates you to keep working at recovery?
The question is often what is someone recovering from? I want to ask, what are you are recovering for?