Nebulustrix
Silver Member
Does anyone else have a hard time with visualizations?
I have never been good at changing/altering thoughts that come into my head. Everyone talks about being able to change or control their dreams with practice, but this is a skill that has always eluded me, and I think of my difficulties with changing dreams as I now face similar difficulties trying to maintain and complete visualizations.
One of my problem areas for triggers is the gym. I can go to the gym "okay" for a couple weeks, pushing myself past the stress, but it is not really enjoyable and I feel like the stress is counterproductive to the whole point of working out. And the more I go, the more edgy I find myself when outside the gym. Since this is relatively tolerable but has remind a barrier despite my best efforts on my own, it is the first area my new therapist and I agreed to start working on.
For a week now I have been attempting to do visualizations at least once a day of myself going to the gym, smiling and interacting with others and completing my workout without avoiding everyone around me. Making eye contact with the men using the weight machines around me, smiling, and even occassionally saying hello.
I completed one successfully with my therapist during our session as she guided me through it, and I can see that actually doing them will be helpful. I felt the same fear, anxiety, and emotional rush picturing myself at the gym as I usually do when there, and was able to "warp" the scenario to make myself step outside my comfort zone and interact with people.
However, when I try to do the visualizations on my own, I seem to keep hitting roadblocks. The first attempt, my thoughts kept getting interrupted with images of myself getting choked. I pushed myself past it with the next attempt but my brain would jump through the visualization "images" so quickly I didn't get a chance to feel anything, and when I would try to slow it down and guide myself through it like the therapist did, my thoughts would scatter and jump all different directions.
I then tried writing the visualization but that felt like I was writing about a totally different person - like I was writing a story about a character instead of picturing myself interacting with people. I did not feel the emotional connection to the character - it just didn't feel like me.
Does anyone else have difficulty with visualizations? Anyone have suggestions for how to improve?
I have never been good at changing/altering thoughts that come into my head. Everyone talks about being able to change or control their dreams with practice, but this is a skill that has always eluded me, and I think of my difficulties with changing dreams as I now face similar difficulties trying to maintain and complete visualizations.
One of my problem areas for triggers is the gym. I can go to the gym "okay" for a couple weeks, pushing myself past the stress, but it is not really enjoyable and I feel like the stress is counterproductive to the whole point of working out. And the more I go, the more edgy I find myself when outside the gym. Since this is relatively tolerable but has remind a barrier despite my best efforts on my own, it is the first area my new therapist and I agreed to start working on.
For a week now I have been attempting to do visualizations at least once a day of myself going to the gym, smiling and interacting with others and completing my workout without avoiding everyone around me. Making eye contact with the men using the weight machines around me, smiling, and even occassionally saying hello.
I completed one successfully with my therapist during our session as she guided me through it, and I can see that actually doing them will be helpful. I felt the same fear, anxiety, and emotional rush picturing myself at the gym as I usually do when there, and was able to "warp" the scenario to make myself step outside my comfort zone and interact with people.
However, when I try to do the visualizations on my own, I seem to keep hitting roadblocks. The first attempt, my thoughts kept getting interrupted with images of myself getting choked. I pushed myself past it with the next attempt but my brain would jump through the visualization "images" so quickly I didn't get a chance to feel anything, and when I would try to slow it down and guide myself through it like the therapist did, my thoughts would scatter and jump all different directions.
I then tried writing the visualization but that felt like I was writing about a totally different person - like I was writing a story about a character instead of picturing myself interacting with people. I did not feel the emotional connection to the character - it just didn't feel like me.
Does anyone else have difficulty with visualizations? Anyone have suggestions for how to improve?