ihateusernames
Gold Member
Sometimes I don't even know whether I should even respond to things like this. I have never been diagnosed with ptsd, my therapist said ppd, but "probably ptsd," I certainly didn't push and have shied away from one, honestly whether or not it fits, I don't want one right now, (I don't know, I just like to kind of go through life side glancing at things, not ever fully facing them) and I've had too hard a time talking about actual traumatic events- she only actually knows about the most recent one and some general discussion of past situations, not events.
So, anyway, take my opinion on this article for whatever you think it's worth.
There are some useful ideas here and some that are completely impractical and nonsensical. For instance, from the article: "Living 'pathology free' is nearly mandatory." Mandatory? Impossible. Even if you set yourself up to live in complete isolation you'll only increase your own pathology. Greatly I'd think. Living in society means encountering pathology. And living means encountering stressors. Like, for instance, I'm trying to respond here and my son is in my face saying "bubbles, bubbles, bubbles" so there's no way any of this will make any sense...
Exactly.
Also, exactly. That's ultimately why I've set out on this thing to begin with. But I don't think the trick is to sequester yourself to a zen retreat. Incorporating stress reducing techniques like exercise, which is an excellent, excellent, excellent one and something that can usually be done no matter how crazy your life is (hint, hint self). Meditation- I don't understand "regular" meditation, but mindfulness meditation is a wonderful tool, at least it has been for me. Changing my thought patterns and catching my own panic responses to things has proven a lot more difficult than those things, but I can certainly see the utility in that. I cannot handle the news, I can't handle certain scenarios in movies, and I can't handle loud noise or music, so my own home is free of those things and has been for as long as I've had control over it. I can't expect the rest of the world to conform and to hide from the rest of the world is not going to cut it so I maintain my own sanctuary to come back to.
okay... bubbles, bubbles, bubbles...
So, anyway, take my opinion on this article for whatever you think it's worth.
There are some useful ideas here and some that are completely impractical and nonsensical. For instance, from the article: "Living 'pathology free' is nearly mandatory." Mandatory? Impossible. Even if you set yourself up to live in complete isolation you'll only increase your own pathology. Greatly I'd think. Living in society means encountering pathology. And living means encountering stressors. Like, for instance, I'm trying to respond here and my son is in my face saying "bubbles, bubbles, bubbles" so there's no way any of this will make any sense...
"Stress" doesn't come from the world. It comes from our reactions to the world.
Exactly.
I often wish I felt better for my family so that I could bring them a "me" with more peace inside
Also, exactly. That's ultimately why I've set out on this thing to begin with. But I don't think the trick is to sequester yourself to a zen retreat. Incorporating stress reducing techniques like exercise, which is an excellent, excellent, excellent one and something that can usually be done no matter how crazy your life is (hint, hint self). Meditation- I don't understand "regular" meditation, but mindfulness meditation is a wonderful tool, at least it has been for me. Changing my thought patterns and catching my own panic responses to things has proven a lot more difficult than those things, but I can certainly see the utility in that. I cannot handle the news, I can't handle certain scenarios in movies, and I can't handle loud noise or music, so my own home is free of those things and has been for as long as I've had control over it. I can't expect the rest of the world to conform and to hide from the rest of the world is not going to cut it so I maintain my own sanctuary to come back to.
okay... bubbles, bubbles, bubbles...