DogTired
Silver Member
I am really happy tonight as I've been freaking about my "switching off" moments which can last up to 10 minutes and finally found out why.
There is no apparent trigger apart from I'm not too happy with life at that time. Problem is I haven't got a "graduated" emotion switch. So I'm either smiling or crying, quiet or raging, well down or flying high. The end result is. I just switch off, aka zone out.
I don't collapse or anything dramatic. I just stand, sit, and it even happens when lying down. Sometimes I'm immobile, sometimes not. Bottom line I think is I'm not seeing, hearing, or thinking. My wife describes it as the lights are on, but nobody is home.
To wake me all it takes is a light touch from anyone, wife, or my dog, and I'm awake. After a few seconds of confusion, I'm back, way calmer, and not knowing I had switched off.
The BIG CONCERN is it's getting more frequent, and a couple of times I've kept walking, literally on some sort of autopilot. So day or night and near roads, I'm an accident waiting to happen. The GOOD NEWS is my dog has a lot more sense than me and leans hard into my legs which is enough to stop me and I wake up. Yep, the dog has stopped me blindly crossing a busy street before now. (Good dog, have a treat or ten!)
Apparently it's a survival response where you freeze into some sort of brain lock to stop you moving. Only something is triggering that response in me when there is nothing wrong (except what I was thinking about). So how can you turn that evolutionary survival response off?
Apparently there are tell-tales you can pick up before you zone out. If there are, they must be too subtle for me. So I need something more positive as a tell tale. The good news is I'm seldom without the dog, usually with the wife, and still have a few friends that recognize I'm in trouble. They touch, I wake up.
I did read something about EMDR as a tool and yoga????.
BUT, as I don't even know I'm zoning out, it looks like I'm going to be dependent on others for a while.
My question? Does anyone else suffer from this and what have you used to 'wake up' before something bad happens?
There is no apparent trigger apart from I'm not too happy with life at that time. Problem is I haven't got a "graduated" emotion switch. So I'm either smiling or crying, quiet or raging, well down or flying high. The end result is. I just switch off, aka zone out.
I don't collapse or anything dramatic. I just stand, sit, and it even happens when lying down. Sometimes I'm immobile, sometimes not. Bottom line I think is I'm not seeing, hearing, or thinking. My wife describes it as the lights are on, but nobody is home.
To wake me all it takes is a light touch from anyone, wife, or my dog, and I'm awake. After a few seconds of confusion, I'm back, way calmer, and not knowing I had switched off.
The BIG CONCERN is it's getting more frequent, and a couple of times I've kept walking, literally on some sort of autopilot. So day or night and near roads, I'm an accident waiting to happen. The GOOD NEWS is my dog has a lot more sense than me and leans hard into my legs which is enough to stop me and I wake up. Yep, the dog has stopped me blindly crossing a busy street before now. (Good dog, have a treat or ten!)
Apparently it's a survival response where you freeze into some sort of brain lock to stop you moving. Only something is triggering that response in me when there is nothing wrong (except what I was thinking about). So how can you turn that evolutionary survival response off?
Apparently there are tell-tales you can pick up before you zone out. If there are, they must be too subtle for me. So I need something more positive as a tell tale. The good news is I'm seldom without the dog, usually with the wife, and still have a few friends that recognize I'm in trouble. They touch, I wake up.
I did read something about EMDR as a tool and yoga????.
BUT, as I don't even know I'm zoning out, it looks like I'm going to be dependent on others for a while.
My question? Does anyone else suffer from this and what have you used to 'wake up' before something bad happens?