A Forum friend used an analogy in a PM to me the other day that I found quite apt.
He said it's like entering a new level of a video game.
Everything is way harder and more intense. But you're progressing.
I try to hang onto that, or the idea of an upward spiral, whenever I start to feel like things are getting worse.
The problem for me when I (as @Whirlwind so aptly described it) blew apart, is that a lot of big thick impenetrable walls came down and now there is utter chaos. Trying to find a self in the armageddon is rather more challenging than Mario's attempts to save the princess (to go back to video game analogies). Ugh.
Stick with what you're doing. In all the chaos and upset, use your therapist and your regular therapy as a predictable lifeline you can hang onto. You may still feel like you're drowning (sorry...yet another metaphor)...but the lifeline will give you the support you need to keep your head above water, until you're strong enough to climb back on board your lost ship.
He said it's like entering a new level of a video game.
Everything is way harder and more intense. But you're progressing.
I try to hang onto that, or the idea of an upward spiral, whenever I start to feel like things are getting worse.
The problem for me when I (as @Whirlwind so aptly described it) blew apart, is that a lot of big thick impenetrable walls came down and now there is utter chaos. Trying to find a self in the armageddon is rather more challenging than Mario's attempts to save the princess (to go back to video game analogies). Ugh.
Stick with what you're doing. In all the chaos and upset, use your therapist and your regular therapy as a predictable lifeline you can hang onto. You may still feel like you're drowning (sorry...yet another metaphor)...but the lifeline will give you the support you need to keep your head above water, until you're strong enough to climb back on board your lost ship.
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