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D
Deleted member 39476
So you could become 95% healed with one pesky symptom that holds you back majorly and you’d kill yourself?
the amount of blatant ignorance in posts like this is kind of ridiculous, I specifically stated I'm not looking for perfection numerous times. I want to be at least 60%. Right now I'm at around 5%. That's where I draw the line, if I am ever in a position where there is no realistic way to get back to 60% functioning naturally, I'm out.
One of the massive benefits of inpatient is the removal of all responsibility. Planned inpatient - which is not the same as emergency hold - planned inpatient will just take every possible stressor in your current environment and reduce them to almost nothing. Your mind needs to unclench. If you:
I would say that your only option is hospital.
- are unwilling to try other drugs to help
- are unwilling to push past your skepticism and fear to try physiological tricks to force relief
- would rather choose suffering, because you can't find a path through the pitfalls of your belief system
It has pros, it has enormous cons. I can pretty much guarantee you beyond any reasonable doubt that not having freedom would not just cancel out all of the pros, but cancel them out at least 10 fold. I'm not skeptical of psychological tricks, I tried them and I can't get them to work. I really really dislike the language you and others are using saying things like "would rather choose suffering, because you can't find a path through the pitfalls of your belief system". I understand that a lot of what I do is self destructive. I understand that in a lot of ways I am afraid of changing, like most people. I am in absolutely no way choosing suffering though, and the pitfalls are not in my belief system at all. My refusal to try other meds stems from deeply held principal as well as deeply held mistrust of psychiatry, as well as real world examples I see all the time of people who are only made worse by meds. I have seen the stats. I know their methodology, I want no part of it.
The tolerance and maintenance exercises usually fit into one of three categories for me: I lack the initiative to actually use any of them because I spend the majority of my day avoiding doing anything at all (it's not an aversion to the exercises, its an aversion to anything,) for some reason or another they cannot work under my mental state (container exercises failing due to dissociation for example), or they just ramp up my stress instead of bringing it down. I have tried setting timers and usually after a few minutes of my stress rapidly increasing, it gets to such a high level that I cannot think or concentrate, and lose all conscious control over my breathing. If it made me feel even 2% better I would use the hell out of it, it usually makes me feel 100% worse. When I was in a healthier mindset a year ago, within a minute it made me feel significantly better, it just isn't working for me now.
As a result of incidental things I've felt a bit better a couple times in the last year, and in those cases I can use these exercises, but these exercises don't help me get to that place. I'm looking for a strategy to get to that place.