The Pete Walker book was enormously helpful to me. I don't think I realized the extent of my worst-case scenario thinking until I read that. (Except of course for the fact that I once got roped into playing the "game" called Worst-Case Scenario and it sent me into massive anxiety and panic for months afterward).I can worry endlessly (and have catastrophic/ worst-case-scenario thinking) about the smallest screw-up or disagreeability of others. Not because of people-pleasing so much as that default thinking. Peter Walker I think describes that well- how we 'all' feel we will end up as a bag lady on the street. :( Oh boy. His work is very helpful, that I too will return too.
Yes, the loving-kindness meditation is really important. You do one for yourself, one for someone you feel close to or are thinking about (could be anyone), one for someone you have a really hard time with (for me, that's usually my mother), and one for all beings in the world. I have a very hard time with the one for myself. I was surprised by how powerful was the one I did for my mother--it helped/helps me deal with her a little better.I will check out the meditation. Do you think it's good to still try if the 'meditation' (phrase, I'm guessing) makes me feel uncomfortable? I was thinking about what you said about looking in the mirror, and about being good 'enough'. I never look in the mirror (except to throw my face on), it's hard to say things to myself.
Also, you might enjoy watching the TED talks by Brene Brown. One is called The Power of Vulnerability, the other is called Listening to Shame. They're both good, but I think the newer one may be better. I haven't watched them for a while, so I can't remember. I might watch them again though. It wasn't her talk (I think...but I have real memory problems), but another TED talk I watched in which the speaker said she wish she could tatoo across her chest the words, "I am enough!" Something about that really stayed with me. I am holding on to the idea that I AM ENOUGH no matter what. As long as I AM, I am enough. It is a very hard concept to hold onto and believe in, but I'm getting it...slowly...3 steps forward, 5 steps back, 6 steps forward, etc.
I am so sorry for this. How painful for you, especially the caretaker part of you.I watched almost my whole family too, get cancer and or die from their 20's to 50's (and they were told they should have died 10 years prior), without even going to Doctors (mostly).
My father had all the obvious symptoms of a heart attack about 6 years ago. He told my mother. Neither of them did anything about it until hours later when my mother went to go to bed and found him in her bed, gray and barely breathing. She called me instead of 911. That tells you something about my dysfunctional family...they were playing out at 80 years old the same old scripts.
These terrible situations dear @Junebug must be a guiding reminder to us that WE need to take responsibility for being kind to ourselves and accepting healing whereever we can find it outside or from within.
Wishing you the energy to find the good in yourself.