sun seeker
Diamond Member
I considered putting this in the Depression forum, because it is going to sound like a depression-related topic, but I really don't feel it is.
This September marks 11 years since an event that left me with a disturbing symptom: a complete inability to feel joy. It wasn't what I'd call a traumatic event exactly, but the loss of connection to some very important people in my life, and there were other stressors (big ones, now I think of it) going on at the same time. I suppose the event reminded me of other losses in my life, and the way I was treated at the time was demeaning and disempowering. I went through a long period of crying myself to sleep every night. Eventually things got better enough that I went on with my life, but the grief never really resolved.
Since that time I have not been able to feel joy. I can be in situations where I can reason with myself that, were I able to feel joy, this would be a time to feel it... but it's as if the impulse gets interrupted between my brain and my heart. It makes me feel like a robot. I'm wishing I could find that warm, excited, expansive feeling again.
I don't know if I've already answered my own question by calling this "unresolved grief." Is that the answer - more processing of the grief (and probably, all the previous losses in my life that this one reminds me of)? It feels like I've cried my eyes out over this time and time again. Not really in the presence of supportive others though; as soon as someone empathizes with how hard this loss must have been I shut down and feel like it wasn't that bad and I should be over it by now. Is that the problem?
Don't know why this is coming to mind right now when I have so many other pressing issues going on, but there it is. I don't know if there is a magic bullet for this kind of thing, or is there something obvious that I'm not seeing? Could someone please point me to it?
This September marks 11 years since an event that left me with a disturbing symptom: a complete inability to feel joy. It wasn't what I'd call a traumatic event exactly, but the loss of connection to some very important people in my life, and there were other stressors (big ones, now I think of it) going on at the same time. I suppose the event reminded me of other losses in my life, and the way I was treated at the time was demeaning and disempowering. I went through a long period of crying myself to sleep every night. Eventually things got better enough that I went on with my life, but the grief never really resolved.
Since that time I have not been able to feel joy. I can be in situations where I can reason with myself that, were I able to feel joy, this would be a time to feel it... but it's as if the impulse gets interrupted between my brain and my heart. It makes me feel like a robot. I'm wishing I could find that warm, excited, expansive feeling again.
I don't know if I've already answered my own question by calling this "unresolved grief." Is that the answer - more processing of the grief (and probably, all the previous losses in my life that this one reminds me of)? It feels like I've cried my eyes out over this time and time again. Not really in the presence of supportive others though; as soon as someone empathizes with how hard this loss must have been I shut down and feel like it wasn't that bad and I should be over it by now. Is that the problem?
Don't know why this is coming to mind right now when I have so many other pressing issues going on, but there it is. I don't know if there is a magic bullet for this kind of thing, or is there something obvious that I'm not seeing? Could someone please point me to it?