With regard to (Lionheart's post): "I am not totally clear on what is so bad about spending our lives in search of ourselves; I mean what better reason for living than the continual exploration and daily discoveries of who we truly are?"
Well, I guess that depends on how you're going about it. If I'm out there living, enjoying life, but at the same time continuing to grow, that's one thing. However, that has not been my life experience; most of my life has been spent trying to figure out how to fix myself so that I could live. I couldn't get on with living simply because my symptoms ruled my life, ran my life....ran me.
I very much relate to Johnny here: "And when you are living under "extreme" stress almost 24/7, you will never know who you are because you are simply "surviving and reacting" to the environment - nothing more."
Although, through correct diagnosis, treatment methodology, etc., I find Lionheart's statement profoundly true for me: "what I discovered was that “I” was only buried deep within myself as part of yet another miraculous protective mechanism. So that I never lost that part of me - I only temporarily “misplaced it” if you will."
I once told a counselor that, as a child, my time was spent desperately trying to preserve something of a "self", that it felt like I was playing some desperate form of shell game (where there are three or more shells and under one is a pea...the gamer moves the shells all around and you try to guess which one contains the pea - but in this case I was the gamer, my abuser was trying to get to the pea, and the 'pea' was the essential/real part of me that was somehow selected to be 'saved'.). From ages 4-17, pretty much my entire world/reality/purpose was this 'game'.
But then, when it was safe and I picked up the shells, I found that I could no longer find the 'pea', that tiny kernel of 'self' I gave everything to protect, and thought I'd forever lost it.
However, as I said in my first post, in the last couple of months through a great deal of persistence and effort in the last 4 years, I've "found" it. It was just a whisper at first, but as I continue to practice, it comes more and more "forward" into who I am and my life - for which I am grateful beyond words. Living as just the 'sacrifice', the shell, was a horrible, empty misery.
-Dylan
Well, I guess that depends on how you're going about it. If I'm out there living, enjoying life, but at the same time continuing to grow, that's one thing. However, that has not been my life experience; most of my life has been spent trying to figure out how to fix myself so that I could live. I couldn't get on with living simply because my symptoms ruled my life, ran my life....ran me.
I very much relate to Johnny here: "And when you are living under "extreme" stress almost 24/7, you will never know who you are because you are simply "surviving and reacting" to the environment - nothing more."
Although, through correct diagnosis, treatment methodology, etc., I find Lionheart's statement profoundly true for me: "what I discovered was that “I” was only buried deep within myself as part of yet another miraculous protective mechanism. So that I never lost that part of me - I only temporarily “misplaced it” if you will."
I once told a counselor that, as a child, my time was spent desperately trying to preserve something of a "self", that it felt like I was playing some desperate form of shell game (where there are three or more shells and under one is a pea...the gamer moves the shells all around and you try to guess which one contains the pea - but in this case I was the gamer, my abuser was trying to get to the pea, and the 'pea' was the essential/real part of me that was somehow selected to be 'saved'.). From ages 4-17, pretty much my entire world/reality/purpose was this 'game'.
But then, when it was safe and I picked up the shells, I found that I could no longer find the 'pea', that tiny kernel of 'self' I gave everything to protect, and thought I'd forever lost it.
However, as I said in my first post, in the last couple of months through a great deal of persistence and effort in the last 4 years, I've "found" it. It was just a whisper at first, but as I continue to practice, it comes more and more "forward" into who I am and my life - for which I am grateful beyond words. Living as just the 'sacrifice', the shell, was a horrible, empty misery.
-Dylan