So many things have happened in the past year that I feel like I am spinning out of control at times. Loss of my past health care and my past therapists, new health care and new therapists, major changes in other important aspects of my life, all of it combined to send me into some very deep depressions that have dominated the past year.
After surviving the latest episode I remembered a few metaphors for successful approaches to difficult situations. I wish I had remembered them sooner, I might have gotten through easier.
If you have ever been white water rafting you might know what it is like to be thrown into turbulent waters. The surest way to drown is to flail and struggle against the current and many victims die clinging to rocks or branches when just letting go would allow them to drift onto a smooth shore just downstream. Guides will tell you to stay away from the rocks and shore, floating on your back with your feet downstream, going with the flow and saving energy for a safe rescue a little farther downstream on a calmer stretch of the river.
Another thought I wish I had remembered earlier comes from the US Airforce test pilot school. An unwritten code is passed from class to class and gained some notoriety in Tom Wolfes book "The Right Stuff". The pilots' mantra is: "maintain an even strain". Test pilots are expected to take new designs to their limits, making the airplanes they fly reach the edges of their performance. When things get hectic and it feels like an airplane is going to fall apart underneath them it takes smooth control to stay in the air. Sudden panic moves will make the stresses peak and rip the wings right off in the worst cases. Even though the strain is high, if it is an even strain it might stay within the limits of the airplane and the pilot can make it home.
I will try to be mindful of these ideas, sometimes just staying calm and waiting out the turmoil life throws at us is the only chance we get. I don't want to lose my last chance by doing something drastic when I might be in calmer water or smoother flight conditions just a little bit of time from now. There are no guarantees that things will get better but the odds go way way down if you do the wrong thing at the wrong time, thats for sure.
Hope I can help someone by sharing this, hang in there everyone.
After surviving the latest episode I remembered a few metaphors for successful approaches to difficult situations. I wish I had remembered them sooner, I might have gotten through easier.
If you have ever been white water rafting you might know what it is like to be thrown into turbulent waters. The surest way to drown is to flail and struggle against the current and many victims die clinging to rocks or branches when just letting go would allow them to drift onto a smooth shore just downstream. Guides will tell you to stay away from the rocks and shore, floating on your back with your feet downstream, going with the flow and saving energy for a safe rescue a little farther downstream on a calmer stretch of the river.
Another thought I wish I had remembered earlier comes from the US Airforce test pilot school. An unwritten code is passed from class to class and gained some notoriety in Tom Wolfes book "The Right Stuff". The pilots' mantra is: "maintain an even strain". Test pilots are expected to take new designs to their limits, making the airplanes they fly reach the edges of their performance. When things get hectic and it feels like an airplane is going to fall apart underneath them it takes smooth control to stay in the air. Sudden panic moves will make the stresses peak and rip the wings right off in the worst cases. Even though the strain is high, if it is an even strain it might stay within the limits of the airplane and the pilot can make it home.
I will try to be mindful of these ideas, sometimes just staying calm and waiting out the turmoil life throws at us is the only chance we get. I don't want to lose my last chance by doing something drastic when I might be in calmer water or smoother flight conditions just a little bit of time from now. There are no guarantees that things will get better but the odds go way way down if you do the wrong thing at the wrong time, thats for sure.
Hope I can help someone by sharing this, hang in there everyone.