I'm trying to see the logic in working myself into a frenzy, putting my anxiety and stress levels through the roof and in all probability, crashing. For an exam? For a paper? It doesn't seem worth it to me. I love school, and I love learning, but this just seems ridiculous. Why would I force my own hand into a situation I knew from the beginning would only end in causing my symptoms of PTSD and my other physical health conditions to flare up? On top of a major anniversary coming up. To me it feels like I'm willingly shooting myself in the foot.
Okay, so I want to work on my disassociation and anxiety. Got that. But how do you work on it when you're willingly putting yourself into situations that exacerbate the symptoms but don't address the underlying cause?
My identity may be completely tied into my education, but the difference between the identity I want and the reality is that I tend to refuse to acknowledge the PTSD factor, if you will. Yes, my education means the world to me, but if I put my education before myself, in terms of health and wellbeing, I'm saying to myself "This is worth the pain and suffering, the anxiety, etc.. that you are going to be in after." That's just not true. This doesn't further my healing, it doesn't make me a better person, it gets me a credit, a credit that in terms of who I am, doesn't define me, doesn't change who I am, it's just a class.
So, I'm going to work on studying, but not hurt myself in the process. I have my first appointment with my new psychiatrist in a few days, and I'd rather not create a significant amount of stress right before I walk into my assessment. I think it's enough that it's the holiday season, that I have an anniversary coming up, etc...
So I'm about 90% sure I'm going to lower my courseload for next semester, attempt to get a deferral, at least for the paper and allocate (with a schedule) time to work on healing. This is my life, and I'd like to live it, not just in a reactionary sort of way. I need to own up to what I bring to the table, but also know when it's PTSD and not just me.
Here's to hoping (academically speaking, some thing are beyond my control if I defer, or attempt to defer).
Thank you.
A. Lauren