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How Do You Find The Path?

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JEKBreatheandBelieve

Diamond Member
When you no longer have a job and you struggle to participate in life from the little things like making the bed to the larger things of being a mom, what do you do? How do you find the path you are supposed to take.

I just transitioned back from 3 months of in-patient. I am surrounded by the stuff from my classroom reminding me that I am not teaching nor am I sure that I ever will able to do so again or want to. I am surrounded by physical changes in my home reminding me that I have not been a part of the family for three months and they kept living without me (which they should).

And people keep telling me to be patient with myself. That shame is taking over my thoughts. That I need to accept that I am still in the recovery phase. But the more I sit with these feelings, the more I can't see a way out.

Does anyone have any advice on either how to sit with the feelings and accept where I am right now or on how to start trying to figure out how to move on?
 
I tend to take different jobs, some I'll probably end up hating & quitting, and figuring it's not everything.

There's more vital needs than that, even if money's needed. & just because you're unemployed at the moment, doesn't make you useless. There's way more ways to be useless when having one, and depends on perspective & wishes & values you hold to.
 
Celebrate the tiny victories, no matter how small. I'm in a similar stage and it's difficult to deal with the work stuff - I have done what I can do allow myself this time to rest and remove or limit what I'm surrounded by that reminds me of what I'm NOT doing. The worry about recovery is part of the process, it seems, and perhaps it's more about a metamorphosis. Spending time reminding oneself that this entire journey is about changing - the way we think, letting go of the old ways of coping, and living in a state of flux and the unknown that is meant for healing. You will get back to doing things - I keep a running list of little activities because the healing is slow and steady, and can't be noticed at the time. A month ago, I couldn't even get the dishes washed and now it's something I do every morning. I didn't even notice until I looked back. Same with other small tasks.

The only way I'm getting through this "what is my path" process is to concentrate as hard as I can on change being good, and the unknown being a place to heal. I write it on little pieces of paper and look at them a million times a day.

Shame is a process with me too - it's also getting a little better. Accepting the feelings, learning self-kindness...none of this is easy. It looks like we're not working, but we ARE working: a whole new way of life in which we come to value ourselves and be kinder to ourselves and realize that life is a constant metamorphosis...some of us just face it more abruptly, more directly....

I have a set of tiny things related to "moving on" and I locate their arrival in the indefinite future and I allow myself to think about them when I'm feeling grounded or ok. Sitting with the feelings - there are lots of tools. Imagining a magnet sucking the worries out of you. Imagining them as flocks of birds flying past on migration. Establishing a support network that reminds you of incremental progress.

There are others who probably have more insights - I'm in a similar stage as you are and the best advice I got was to just try to take one day at a time, take notes on anything that is successful (getting through a panic attack, folding a towel) and try to do it again a second day... find a support network to call (or come here!) and tell them what you need to hear is the truth: that you are brave and courageous, and you are improving steadily even if you can't alwys see it, and that this is a journey with stages we pass through one at a time, and each is necessary. And that above all, we're doing great by getting to the root of our pain and letting it out, so that our true selves can shine through after the cleaning process is completed.

you'll get through this. it is a stage. I think it's hard to move on when we really are being reminded by our psyches that we also need to get through some difiicult feelings first before we will see clearly what comes next.

here are some allison nappi quotes that help me:

Consider your depression, your bi-polar disorder, your DID, your ADD, your PTSD rites of passage. They may feel disorderly, but they are not without order. In fact, they are perfect road maps designed to bring you through your shadow valley and into the promised land.

I am willing to stand on the precipice of the greatest adventure of my inner life, and liberate all that I am from the lonely, dark , forgotten places within me. I am willing to risk all that I am for all that I might become. At least then, I will know. I am willing to leap madly into my destiny, and meet myself

“If I had not created my own world, I would certainly have died in other people’s.”
Don’t be afraid of the wreckage. Don’t be scared of the dark. You are the dark, too, and in the beginning only the tiniest spark will light your way. It’s in your belly.

You will see almost nothing but the tips of your shoes and you will straighten your ankle and sweep your foot out in front of you to be sure there is ground there, before you move: just one step. Sometimes, just a half step. And somewhere, in a world you can’t yet perceive, your greater self will step toward you 10,000 times.

You will learn to become decisive as you come to realize what’s at stake. You will find superpowers you didn’t know you had. You will pick up rings of power and rubies and emeralds that you steal back from ogres and sorcerers and creatures your ancestors wrote myths about. You will use them later to pay back the gods of karma or to cross the River Styx with Charon. Stay long enough to be reborn.
You will bump into your selves again and again, and most of the time you won’t recognize them: they will be great glowing angels, they will be raving red-eyed demons, they will be priests and will be star-dusted. You will fall out of time and space. You will tumble down rabbit holes inside of rabbit holes.

You will do impossible things. You will summon your weapons from air so thin no flesh could survive it. You will make things disappear and reappear. You will scream, and topple cities. You will cry and the mothers of mercy will come to you when you are on your knees, begging. You will shape a new earth this way. You will write your plans here, so you can live them later.
As in every hero’s journey, you will find the resources you need along the way, so don’t worry if just yesterday you were a peasant sheering sheep. You’ll remember where you left your dragon when the moment of truth is upon you. You will remember all kinds of magnificent things you’ve forgotten.
 
Sometimes it is easier to help others, than to help yourself. I find that helping others, helps me. I don't know your story, so this might not be the right suggestion for you. However, have you thought about volunteering at a local church or charity organization? I cook meals at my local Fisher House once a week, because it gets me out of the house, out of my head and gives me something to do in my down time when I would otherwise be dwelling on things. The volunteering may also help you to make connections that will foster opportunities for employment if that is what you're looking for.
 
Two things: It is what it is, and I don't conscript/sign up for a life of diminishing returns. The first one I recognize why things are the way they are, the second one... well, I don't volunteer unnecessarily for a limited/smaller life. It was (default to the first one) what it was AT THAT TIME. Now it's up to me to deal with the consequences.

I'm good with "the best I can do AT THAT TIME:" Though of course cleaning up/repairing the fences/reasserting relationship is no ParTAY... it is part and parcel of stepping back up to the plate and being responsible for my part life "in relationship" with others.

Shame to me is an out that keeps me stuck so I tend to muscle over it.
 
tell them what you need to hear is the truth: that you are brave and courageous, and you are improving steadily even if you can't alwys see it, and that this is a journey with stages we pass through one at a time, and each is necessary. And that above all, we're doing great by getting to the root of our pain and letting it out, so that our true selves can shine through after the cleaning process is completed.
Exactly what I needed to hear. I loved your whole message and quotes. Thank you.
 
Wow, @MesaRock, I wish I could like your post a thousand times. You are a poet, and what you say cuts right to the heart of the matter. Being in a similar place, I was touched by your message and the reminders of what courage there really is in getting to the bottom of that dark pit and beginning to claw our way back out again.

The one practical piece of advice I would add is if you can put the things reminding you of your teaching job away somewhere where they aren't reminding you all day long, it might help. Do you have a storage room you can put them in? You don't need to be surrounded by reminders of the past. Makes it harder to remember you are on a transformational journey.
 
As a bit of a practical addendum...

This can actually be an exciting time :) As you literally get to create your life to suit yourself for the time being.

Realistic Appraisal
I often kick myself following a period of unemployability, because I didn't "take advantage" of all the time I had available to me to _________. (Fill in blank with all the things I love to do that there is simply not enough time for.) The thing is? When I'm not working, it's usually because my day is still laid out by necessity. Last year, for example, I was spending about 10 hours a day struggling with hard symptoms (flashbacks & anxiety attacks, SI & Rage... Just getting through second by second... And then the remaining hours a day in large part recovering from them). At most I usually had maaaaaaybe a couple hours left over. Far less time that I have to allocate whilst working! Often? Riding out the attacks and recovering from them took all of my waking hours.

Snort. It's not unlike how non-parents often assume SAHPs (stay-at-home-parents) "don't have anything to do" all day. :rolleyes: Let's see here, Nannies make $2500 a month plus vacation, sick leave & time off, working 9 hours of the 14-18hour day SAHPs. Raising children isn't "doing nothing" and it's hardly vacation. It's working double shifts, with no sick leave or vacation or time off, 7 days a week. Or (since you've been in education) how non-teachers often assume teachers only work while there are students in the classroom, when the day actually starts before the kids get there and ends log after they leave.

So my first question to you, in designing your days... How much time is actually yours to allocate, and how much is still laid out by necessity?

Smacked in the face with my own prejudice / Work smarter, not harder!
When beating myself up, sometimes I am blame free. I am holding myself to a standard I apply to absolutely no one else. More often? I'm finding myself running face first into a wall of my own prejudice. Belief structures that are simply wrong. Homeless people are X, unemployed people are Y, fat people are Z, etc. It's a self defense mechanism, to blame others, for things that scare us. Gives us the illusion of control. The thing I fear won't happen to *me* because I'm not XYZ. Allowing prejudice to remain in my life? Creates an uphill battle. Means not only am I fighting to do ABC, but I'm fighting against the belief that if I'm doing the thing I fear? Then I'm also XYZ (lazy, stupid, taking advantage of others, etc.). Much, much, much, much better to realize & admit I was wrong than to continue to cling to biased & short sighted belief structures that help no one, least of all myself.

My next question for you, in designing your days... Do you have any negative or biased beliefs about other people in your situation? Those living off of alimony, welfare, independently wealthy, a spouse, etc. instead of working?

Fun questions :

In designing your days... What do you want your day to look like? What elements do you want (even if you can't do them right now), what elements do you need (ditto), and what elements are things you might like to explore?

I usually start pie in the sky / no limits whatsoever when designing my days... And then work backwards to what is reasonable / attainable. Like I might want to wake up, walk out of my house, and dive into a swimming pool every morning. Not having a house with a pool? Makes that a bit problematic :p I still put it in my list of "everything". The bigger my list of elements, the more I can see patterns, and start to work within those patterns as well as start to create goals for the future.
 
What do you want your day to look like? What elements do you want (even if you can't do them right now), what elements do you need (ditto), and what elements are things you might like to explore?
I wish I knew. I am so stuck in my black and white thinking that I can't make any decisions and can't figure out what I want for fear of hurting others (in other words not living up to what I think other people want me to be) even if I can logically know that that is not realistic and not what I want. I am just paralyzed from the unknown. I am trying to take things second by second and make lists of what I am able to accomplish but I still feel frozen. I really liked your response and ideas though.
 
The one practical piece of advice I would add is if you can put the things reminding you of your teaching job away somewhere where they aren't reminding you all day long, it might help. Do you have a storage room you can put them in? You don't need to be surrounded by reminders of the past. Makes it harder to remember you are on a transformational journey.
I started doing that this morning. My solution was to put boxes under the bed. They are more out of sight that way. There is a closed under the stairs where I can fit some things, too, but my problem is just the little I did this morning sent me further into my quandaries, but it was a start.
 
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