- Post starter
- #901
Dear @Ms Spock , no I understand what you mean. There is a writer that explains this far better than I, and he has said he's been acused of the same many times. Sometimes it even scares me, I'd rather like to think I could control it. (However, most 'diseases' etc don't have 'guarantees' or predictability necessarily, either. 'Life' doesn't actually, either. But it doesn't mean they all end badly.) I think the key lays in the difference between being compassionate, but not giving up (either).
So I would just say you are correct. Hugely correct. :tup: :) :hug:
You know, it came to me today, whether it be ptsd or SI, I've always tried to attempt to'fix' it in a huge go, a huge effort. Of course, I realize it's likely life-long, but my analogy would be trying to put 2 or 3 coats of paint on a wall in one go (and in high-humidity and intense heat :eek: :laugh: ), rather than 2 fine coats, with proper drying time. It's the small things- really small, and not rushed, that help me (us) to help pull us through I think. (JMHO).
So I would just say you are correct. Hugely correct. :tup: :) :hug:
You know, it came to me today, whether it be ptsd or SI, I've always tried to attempt to'fix' it in a huge go, a huge effort. Of course, I realize it's likely life-long, but my analogy would be trying to put 2 or 3 coats of paint on a wall in one go (and in high-humidity and intense heat :eek: :laugh: ), rather than 2 fine coats, with proper drying time. It's the small things- really small, and not rushed, that help me (us) to help pull us through I think. (JMHO).