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Reducing My Stories.

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Go Hungry

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Okay, so there's this thing that I've been doing lately. It's taken years of work, but I'm really getting good at it now.

I realized that my story was too long. Waaay too long.

I am the sort that ruminates a lot. I would replay the stories of my traumas in my head, and put them into words. What I'm saying is that I talk to myself a lot, both silently and out loud when I'm alone. And so I would go over them again and again, and every time it would just take me through the same horror show emotionally. Originally, it was non-stop, especially when the trauma was actually happening, which only makes complete sense.

But even years later, I was still obsessed with my stories. Again, it doesn't help that I have two additional personalities who spawned in order to deal with those traumatic periods. Both of them are consumed with what happened to make them real. However, as decades went by, I was stacking up new experiences and memories about all sorts of things, both good and bad, and coming up with new stories about those events, and I noticed that I was starting to have some trouble remembering individual details... And crucially, the stories started to bore me. Once I realized it truly was my alts telling their stories again and again, from a first, second and third person narrative (depending on the story)... It really started to bore me. A lot. I started paring down the story, almost subconsciously, because I just wanted to get through them faster and get on with my day...

I had work to do, and it couldn't wait for me to go through a total flashback. I got really good at working despite flashbacks... And then I started thinking.. if this is boring me, how excruciatingly boring would it be to another person? I mean, yeah.. Therapists are paid for this stuff, and codependent partners eat it up like popcorn. But to the average person, who had all their own stuff to worry about... How boring must the entire thing really be?

So I began making a conscious effort to pare the stories down, like you would when editing a novel. Stephen King talks about it a lot in his book "On Writing".. How no matter how big you want it to be, there comes a time when you really have to just start cutting things out. Otherwise your story just goes nowhere, and nobody will want to read it. (Considering the size of some of his books, that's amazing.)

I would edit out passages of my rumination again and again, I would simply state to myself like I would if I had to tell the story in the most concise way. So an hour long retelling of my early trauma started getting shorter. I just started glossing over some facts and events with simpler statements. I stopped thinking of Every. Little. Trauma. and just stuck to the idea of a "Greatest Hits" album. I began eliminating parts of the story over the course of time and hundreds of ruminations. It took FOREVER. But eventually I started to make some serious headway. A rumination will begin sometimes and I'll just acknowledge it.. "I was hurt very badly and it sucked a lot" instead of spending 3 hours caught in a flashback. Sometimes I just write it out on a piece of paper, because if I start going overboard my hand will start to wear out. Which is a clear sign that I need to edit some more.

Nowadays I've reduced the story to a few simple statements in my head.. "I had a violent childhood, and there was some permanent damage involved... "I got into a really bad relationship once... "God failed me, and I'm still kinda angry about it." Things like that.. Summations of my stories, clear, concise and above all: Short. Things I could tell somebody without boring their socks off.

I have my trauma diary for big long stories (and how), but in daily life I just keep it short. I found that it helps me a lot.

Does anybody else do this?
 
Yes, I used to do it when the powers that be sent me to Psych. I used to tell the detailed accounts of the terrible times and one day, I had just begun, and the Psych Doctor said '...for God's sake, don't tell me anything, I will just read the file...' That changed the way I think, made me realise it is impossible to truly share it all, impossible to cope with reliving it so often and so vividly. So like you, I now keep it short. Unless someone insists otherwise. Plus, sadly some people just love something really terrible to talk about, I try not to ' cast my pearls before swine' and give those gossipy people anything to talk about. My past is terrible, yes, but it is still MY past. I heard a guy called Angus Buchan speak about this on TBN the other night, it was really useful.
 
I can with shit that's hit me in adult life....homelessness, abusive marriage, abusive relationship, rape blah blah...I just moved on, don't go there. Most was bloody hard to live it at the time but moved on from it quickly....so obviously wasn't trauma to me. The trauma from childhood wasn't/ isn't so easy. Most of the time I'm far removed from the past but when the shit comes back, it's all from my childhood, none is from adulthood.....it is very hard, at those times, to minimise it all. For me personally, it's not a case of going over it in my mind all the time, the flashbacks will appear out of nowhere....when I'm not thinking of them. I have learned to minimise the effects. Then again.....they are not as strong...is it because I've become bored, used to them? Or is it because of the methods I use to bring me out of it? Thanks for the thought.
 
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Funny that you should bring this up right now. I have a doctors appt this week coming that my friend convinced me to go to. The first thing I said to her was 'I am NOT telling one more doctor my freaking story'. Wow. That was a switch.

Then I thought about it. I think I used my story to help people understand me.

They don't. They never will. No amount of story telling will make it clearer to anyone and I already know what I need to know. Your idea of paring it down though is really, really good. I like it. It isn't denial. It is compression into quick facts. Like it.
 
At times, reading other's shares allow introspection, opening of compassion (which can actually trickle back to one's self a smidgeon)- yet more so for them and sometimes new revelations along the way for both. If sharing may help another, it is different then...I try to reach deeper to find mutual ground, so that they may not feel alone.

However, after a bit of living with PTSD, I condense most of trauma as I have worked through it with T's and dig in different tender areas. I only elaborate on the good portions in 'normie' land, unless it is a fellow suffer that needs to talk it down. Heck, sometimes I even have days that I can pretend to be normal, you know?:clown:

Good to see you posting again. Awesome thoughts and share.
 
Yep. Absolutely.

Not just my trauma stuff, but in everything else, the more concise I am? The better off I'm doing. It's not minimizing, or obfuscating, or manipulating, or in denial, or distracting, or unable to talk, or any of the other things I also do. When I'm being concise? I can always flesh things out as needed. It's the ability to be concise that is an indicator I'm doing well. That I'm able to pick something up, instead of being picked up by it and thrashed.
 
I stopped thinking of Every. Little. Trauma. and just stuck to the idea of a "Greatest Hits" album

I liked your post, I think I get it and it has given me something to think about. I'm an "unconscious ruminator" my term....the pot is quietly cooking all the time and then boils over but I often feel so overwhelmed by it all, new memories, revelations ugh. I don't like talking about it as I can hardly focus on where to begin....I am going to start considering from a larger scale like you have done. Lots to think about, thank you for sharing!

it is impossible to truly share it all, impossible to cope with reliving it so often and so vividly. So like you, I now keep it short.

Yes, this, it is impossible to share it all, there is really no end I guess.

Interesting post

Best, Whirlwind
 
Sometimes I read stories and realize that some of my experiences are polar opposites to what others experience. This is one of those times.

I don't tell anyone my story. Even when I was at the height of being symptomatic, I still shared very little. I tried processing with a number of different therapists, but beyond that, I never really talked about it with anyone. I have horrible ruminations and obsessions, but I don't repeatedly talk about my trauma....

Are you anywhere near being ready to process? (I'm guessing you haven't processed, or if you have, its incomplete as processing should indeed leave these sorts of symptoms in the past....that is, processing lets us live in the present and this sort of rumination very much keeps one living in the past.)

I know my own ruminations are pure hell, but I know if my ruminations were about my trauma story itself, they'd be a million times worse.
 
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