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I'm Here, I'm Calm... Argh, Not Calm At All.

  • Post starter Post starter Deleted member 28403
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Deleted member 28403

I haven't been on here for months. I'm sorry for making some worry.

I'm currently badly shaking, and full of fears. I don't know what to do. The grounding techniques are there in my mind, but I can't move, I can't stop trying to hide, compress into a ball.

I feel really unreal, I can't differ real and unreal. I hear footsteps on the roof, why won't the fears go. Why is there noone to save me, I'm scared, I'm scared.

All lights are on, yet it's still too dark. I can't...

I'm afraid.
 
@otakujome Music, gaming, watching movies, warm baths anything that occupies my mental thoughts when I'm feeling down from a bad day helps me feel better or atleast stops the downward spiral. Also just talking about it on here or to my sibling makes me feel better. Hope you feel better soon!
 
How does one become their own rescuer, or how do they rescue themselves?

The first, I don't know. It just happened one day. I was about 14, actually. I was in a bit of a scrape. I hadn't gotten myself into it, but no one else was going to get me out of it. It wasn't unusual for me to get myself in and out of scrapes, or find myself in them through no fault of my own. I did so most of my childhood. What was different was the mental shift that happened. I became my own responsibility. While I might enlist other people's help, while someone might show up, step in, or do something? They might. But I must. Because this was my life. Not anyone else's. I came into my own. It was oddly painful and oddly freeing.

((I wasn't an adult, per se. I had virtually no experience in the world, I made thousands of mistakes. But they were mine to make, and I learned from them. I still learn from my mistakes and I'm over 30. Growing up didn't mean I was always alone it the world, it meant that I could be. Even if I made mistakes.))

How one rescues themselves? That, my friend, changes in each and every scenario life throws at you.

In some, there is literally nothing one can do to change the situation. I was chained in a cinderblock room, at one point. Just my hands I could have -in theory- broken my thumbs... But I was still locked in. Wrists and ankles chained? I cannot break my feet and run away. I was trapped. Literally. So I waited. Not for someone to save me. If they did? Awesome! But I wasn't holding out on it. I waited to die. I waited to escape. I waited to be let go. I waited to grieve, to fall apart later. I waited for something to change that would let me do something. I tried to affect change. I learned to laugh, to be with my own thoughts, to be alone in the dark and amuse myself (boredom will really drive you mad) instead of terrify myself. I learned patience. Lol. I learned all of these things by not doing them to begin with. And learned that they were mistakes. Being let free? That was luck. Learning? That's what saved me.

That's a bit of an extreme example. But there are thousands of times in our lives where we are powerless over everything except ourselves. Even having power over ourselves? Pfft. Doesn't mean we get what we want. I want to not be in pain, to not be in the middle of a panic attack, to not be outnumbered, to be stronger, to be smarter, to be braver. To not, to be, to not... I may want it. But that doesn't mean I get it. It just means that I have the power to try.

In other scenarios, there are many things one might do to save themselves. Sometimes too many things, it seems. Hard lessons there, as well. Learning what the right choices -for us- are. But it starts at the same base: I am responsible for myself. Okay. So what do I need? What do I want? What can I do?
 
I know a lot of these thoughts. I can only say what helps for me.

Notice yourself, and when you can think, create easy ways to remind yourself of what works and what doesn't work. Trying new things doesn't help if you don't remember your progress. I've seen the research you've asked about on here, and I know what it's like to want to get better but not know how. Especially when it's hard to focus or think or your anxiety is out of control. If you can't get easy access to high quality medical care, research can help, but only if it's organized. A bad piece of advice can make things much worse without a doctor to help you know the risks.

One thing you can do is reach out to experts directly for insight, this has worked for me. But you must be very careful, these people are very hard to get in touch with, and, while kind, don't have much time. If you have a question, wait until you feel as calm and able to think as you can. Ask someone you trust to read it and make sure someone besides you thinks it's alright to send. I've had doctors I really wanted to talk to not write me back because I was too intense in my email.

I don't feel fear anymore because I've disconnected from it, but I remember what it was like to feel like this. Grounding techniques and learning coping mechanisms are the most critical but difficult things to learn. Forcing yourself to record what worked and what did not work so you can compare them is something that can let you learn things about yourself that end up being important. You can try to disconnect from the intense overstimulation of anxiety, but the damage won't lead to a life you can enjoy. You seem to be doing a lot of looking around into ways to get better. If you can focus that energy into developing and growing your coping skills and recording the results, progress can scale quickly as you're better able to make decisions for yourself.

My empathy isn't great, but for me, a friend cutting into the tension can help. Having another person change what I'm thinking about and making me laugh. I go places that I know I won't see any other people. Anyway, feel better. Focus on something that you can measure progress on and try to imagine that you are much more resilient than you think.
 
Sending my best thoughts to you. Maybe music by R Carlos Nakai will help. I listen often.

Please stay safe.
 
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