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Sensorimotor psychotherapy journal

I don’t know what you’ll learn from an account of today’s session with my T. I think at the least, further evidence that the power of symbols and movement of the body really does transcend language.

I was agitated, and arrived with a list, an agenda. I told her how I felt about the ice-queen I am staying with (see entry directly before this one); about how I awake each day into conflict, feeling it coiling about me like a snake as the more agreeable tendrils of sleep withdraw; about how I am conflicted between Romania and the UK; between trying to stay here in a country I definitely don’t like (in order to continue my therapy with my T, rather than a Romanian replacement) and risking the future in Romania, where it is unlikely I can continue the same career that I still have time to rescue, maybe, here in the UK.

And between the developing relationship with the architect, and the impetus to stay in the UK for access to my T.

She asked me how this conflict manifested in my body (you can expect with SP that all such conversations will be returned to how they manifest physically).

I told her of the hollow shoulders; and, especially, a twitch in my eye.

“That’s active right now.” I said.

“Can we explore that?” My T asked. “Is that okay?” Of course it was.

She asked me what the twitch would say if it could speak.

“‘No choice!’” I finally decided. “It’s saying ‘No choice!’ Which is ironic, since the twitch is there exactly because there IS a choice.”

My T asked if we could please attempt to put this conflict into tactile terms - by laying out two objects on the floor representing the conflict; representing the choices in the conflict.

Fine, I said. She put down two blue plastic cups, lip down on the floor in front of me, and asked me to reach out physically and name the choices which were causing the twitch.

(nb There are no real names used in this journal)

“Julia.” I said, naming the architect as my arm reached over to touch the cup on the left.

I moved my arm over to the cup on the right, and tapped it.

“You.” I said.

What follows does not represent a Hollywood-style therapy ‘breakthrough’. This is material that I unearthed with a short course of cognitive therapy in the early nineties - the only other therapy I have ever had. My T knew that this material was available to me and to her if she needed it, but has avoided asking about it. At that point re-treading this material seemed to her just a potentially re-traumatising re-run. But in this case, it seemed, it had direct current relevance to my current conflict. Today, I wanted her to hear it as more than just ‘background’ material.

“There’s something you didn’t want to hear before, in April, that I want to tell you now,” I said, as the two plastic cups looked up dumbly at me. She’s not keen to hear it, but this time she doesn’t stop me...

October, 1979. I’m thirteen years old and standing on the landing of the family house. Who knows where dad is today? Probably beavering away at freelance work, beyond the physical division that split off his two rooms from my mother’s larger section of the house two months ago, in the wake of the decree nisi for the divorce.

On my left is my sixteen year-old sister. She’s in tears. She’s pregnant. On the left is my mother, and she’s asking me the question that will change my life.

‘Whose side are you on?’ She asks. There’s no kindness or mercy in those eyes. They’re waxwork eyes, it seems.

In case you didn’t get it before, I’m just about 13 at this point. For context, my mother has spent the summer sealing up the gaps between the radiators and the walls with cement. We tell visitors that it’s mice. In fact my mother, who this summer past had a fling with one of my sister’s friends (also about 17), believes that this young man now lives in the attic and can crawl through a one-inch gap.

‘Whose side are you on?’ She repeats. ‘You can’t be on both!’

And I go to mum.

I’m too afraid. In my mind’s eye I see my sister’s tears deepening.

But who knows?

‘Right!’ my mum says. Victory!

And that’s basically the end of my life for 13 years, until the cognitive therapy accidentally uncovers the destructive power of this life-event in 1993. Within four months my academic record would fall to terminal decline, and my increasingly odd and obsessive behaviour would drive away most of my friends.

I had no idea what it was about, all those intervening years. Just that my life had stopped and run aground, for some reason I could never fathom.

Back in today, I am in tears in front of my T, who is moved by the story, clearly.

“So,” I say to my T. “I don’t really have a f*cking good experience with choice.”

back in the present, back in the T’s office again and no longer back in the past, the blue cups are looking up at me, representing Julia vs. MyT; my mum vs. my sister...

“If your body could have acted,” my T asked. “What would it have done?”

“Retreated.” I say. That’s an easy one. But at 13, not an option.

I look down with wonder at the cheap blue receptacles on the floor.

“That’s quite a language,” I say. “This language beyond words.”
 
Yesterday took it out of me. This morning I rebelled against the habitual tightening of my abdomen as sleep faded and the sense of conflict returned. I just wanted a lie-in and a day off from all the elements in my life that I cannot reconcile.

Not really possible, but nonetheless I have stopped creeping around the flat as before. The Ice Queen, my hostess, is stripped now of whatever associations I seemed to have assigned to her. She’s just a...I don’t know what she is, and I don’t care any more. I have made all the efforts I could to be social and open up to share something, briefly, in this world. She isn’t interested; not with me, and, I suspect, not with anybody. Now I just keep out of her way. She doesn’t make it difficult.

What disturbs me more is the (now online) romance with the architect. Of all the things I was expecting to contend with on this journey to the UK, a budding romance was last among them.

I have three job interviews in the next 7 days, that I know of. One was today, but I bumped it, citing flu. I just had had enough today.

Going for job interviews feels like a kind of deception against the architect; maybe more than going on dates would be.

Not that we are ‘like that’ yet, if indeed we ever will be. But we kind of are. It is that stage of a romance where both parties keep their options open - and it is, - perhaps damagingly - held back or throttled by the fact that we are not physically in the same country at the moment. We are building castles in the air, unaware of what the real solidity of the foundations might be.

It would be better if we could get together and either burn this out or start it up. It is going to be rather hard to sustain for six weeks over Christmas and into the new year. And in its defence, it might die for lack of contact in a way it would not have, had we the opportunity to connect in the real world, as we would both like to do.

But I am hamstrung; I have to be in the UK on 20th December as a witness in court, and it seems insane to go back to Romania on a romantic break, come back here and then - very likely - return to Romania again in January.

I mentioned the idea that Julia (not her name) might visit me here, perhaps as a 4-day weekend. It was a playful flirt, but she flirted back positively to the notion.

Some part of me feels that even if she took the invitation, that there is something exploitative about it from my end - that I want to ‘get something out of it’ in case, in general, the connection does not go anywhere.

But that isn’t it. Really I am looking to see what we have, because whatever I end up feeling or not feeling for her (and vice versa) will reframe the current conflict that I feel. It might help.

If we did prove to have something substantial, there is an above-average chance that she might follow me here to the UK for a year or two, if I were to find a role and have a chance to continue with my T on work that I am now committed to (which she knows about).

She moved to a Southern European country for her first boyfriend of seven years, and to Iraq for five years, following her ex-husband’s role there. She can work anywhere, certainly here in London,where the competition for the work she does is high but the demand perhaps higher. On the other hand, what I do best for a living it is hard for me to do in Bucharest, perhaps impossible.

And yes, all this is massively precipitous. But events and practical considerations force me to count the cost in advance; to count chickens, too, that may never hatch.

Or do they? Perhaps I am making too much of it.

I really like her; making her laugh on our last epic FaceTime chat was the best feeling I have had in years.

But I wish this connection had more time to breathe and be what it naturally is, or is not.
 
So...Julia is coming to London at the end of the month, for five days into the new year.

Our main ‘thing in common’ is movies, and so we get together on FaceTime and watch a movie, and then talk until my voice gives out (a couple of hours, I am still recovering from the flu).

So I bought up the possibility of her coming to London yesterday evening, and she is very keen, though cannot do it for nearly a month.

In that conversation it also became clear what I had already suspected - she is in no way married to Bucharest, or to Romania. It seems to me that if we both felt we had something, and I entered a situation where I was to be in the UK for a couple more years, she could and would join me.

I feel I am in very strange territory now. I have come here to be alone, and to combat my life-long panic at the thought of abandonment and loneliness...only to apparently be entering a relationship of some kind for the first time in four years.

As the barriers disappear, I get more and more nervous about it. Some part of me thinks of the rule that AA members subject themselves to,that they will not form a relationship in the first year of their dedication to recovery.

I have other doubts; some of them, if not most, are just the usual ones that anyone has who is beginning to form an intimate attachment to a new person. Others, I suppose, would qualify as ‘baggage’.

I can’t control much about this situation; it is organic, and emerges from personality and accord. I really like talking to her and listening to her...and more than anything I like that when I finally shake off my own internal barriers to real communication with her (a ritual process by now), I can make her light up and laugh. It feels very good to make someone else happy.

How can I square this against what I am trying to do in the UK, since I am here? Well, I have to continue. The ‘rock’ in this situation has to be my T and the work I am doing with her, and I have to take some comfort from the fact that this will be the first time I have entered such a situation with the aid of a rational and wise voice which I trust; a voice which will, perhaps, survive whatever it is I am currently getting into with Julia.

[ Sigh ] I wish I could just walk and walk today, walk all through London. But it is freezing, and the winds cut through you, and i don’t know what to do. I always seek that ability to act, that moment of prime motion; in myself, in relation to myself, and very often in my relation to Julia - the will to look for a thing to do and then say that I will do it and commit to it and enjoy it. But still my arms are frozen, so often, not just in a literal sense, as today.
 
Since (I recently worked out) the average time for me between relationships is about four years, I tend to forget every time what it is actually like when you get back into it.

...how your life goes from I Am Legend-style radio silence to Apollo 13-style radio chatter overload. And also how much sheer work and effort accompanies all those excited feelings.

It was only this morning, feeling very stressed out and realising that I had one beer too many last night (not for the first time in the last week), that I realised that somehow I have to keep Julia ringfenced away to some extent along with all the other not-always-positive influences that I have let, in my life, become destructive forces.

What with the disruption of the illness and the unexpected development of what Julia and I appear to be developing, I feel like I haven’t seen (or more importantly, been aware of) my feet for ages.

But with that kind of huge interval between events, opportunities to practice SP under these particular conditions are very scarce.

I feel like I am on my own a little, maybe more than a little. On the one hand, I am less on my own than I have been in years. My morning begins with Julia’s texts, and our movie nights are frequent, currently once every 2-3 days, and those massive talking sessions are only ever truncated (to date) by the expiry of my flu-ridden voice.

Julia has expressed concern to me more than once that she may be overwhelming me, and this seems to have a historical context with her and other men. Well, she is a bit. And yet when there’s too much silence, I get nervous, because we are still in that anything-could-happen’ stage of getting together.

And yet, our plans are set, despite the great difficulty in finding an affordable amount of privacy for the week of her visit, which includes the New Year in one of the most expensive cities in the world. But we are long past daintiness or delicacy about the domestic arrangements for that; we talk very casually about sleeping together, and about future plans in general.

My last relationship was also very quickly forged. She was a very attractive Russian mother of two with dual passport nationality between Russia and Britain, and wow, she got us saying ‘I love you’ real, real early. Isn’t that my job?

But some part of me says take it easy and let it breathe. It did then and it does now, however promising the whole thing feels. That’s a surprising thing to realise about myself - it seems not just like fear or trauma-related circumspection, but common sense. That you start with the foundations and take it from there.

So at the bus-stop a half-hour ago, I tried to tune into my body again, and put the pressure with Julia (even together with the good feelings about her) into the same space as all the other formerly-ungovernable storms which I felt I had never handled well.

Interesting time for my therapist to take her early Christmas break. :S It reminds me of the old (early) Woody Allen complaint about the exodus of Manhattan psychologists to the Hampshires every August. “Every August, a city full of people who are crazy til Labor Day!’
 
I’m not in a good way at the moment. Pretty depressed today, feeling that upper abdomen tightness that indicates something is very wrong with how I am feeling about things.

Eating and drinking too much, putting weight on, have hardly done any of that good long walking in ten days...

The illness, now pretty much gone, really wrecked my fledgeling routine, all the things that supported me. And in that period of time that it happened I realised that Julia was practically...has been practically the only person I have spoken to in a week and a half.

All this in the context of being increasingly trapped in the ghastly and cold atmosphere of the Ice Queen’s flat; for over a week because of illness, and the last three or so days because of the horrendous cold of the outside world in this period.

Whatever else happens, whatever else I do from tomorrow, I have to get back on the path I was on before; to keep working SP, and keep walking, keep the physical movement going; and to go to some Meetups, meet some people, get back to it...

Between the cloistering at the Ice Queen’s flat and the fact that Julia and I communicate pretty much all day, combined with the fact that it is all going too fast with Julia...I feel suffocated and panicky and conflicted.

If I lay it out rationally, nothing is that bad; and in addition to it not having been that bad before, I now have a mutually enthusiastic romantic connection with someone I really like.

But that causes triggers, fear...will I hurt her? Will she hurt me? What am I getting into here?

I need some other voices to talk to besides Julia, and the unfriendly fragments from the Ice Queen. At the very least I need to man up against the freezing December weather, get some warm jumpers and thermals, and get out there...get moving.

God, once again it is taking sooo long to get unfrozen in the morning (I don’t mean literally - I mean in how long it takes me to decide to get out of the house and to do those things that will get me out of it).

I wish I had some friends left in London, but they all moved out. On top of everything else I am feeling right now, I look out into the outside world and see pretty much the thing I least ever want to see - London in the run-up to Christmas.

Feel horribly stressed, nearly all the time. It won’t be a good thing for me (or for Julia and I) if I start relying on Julia as a source of sole interaction with the world.

Goddammit, I have got to get up and act again; take action; move. That flu reset me so badly from where I was that I can hardly see the way back at this moment. But I am going to look for it.
 
The illness, now pretty much gone, really wrecked my fledgeling routine,
What happened was, you got sick. That's all. You got sick, listened to your body telling you you were sick, and took care of yourself. The routine is still there, waiting for you to pick it up again, now that you're feeling better. You still know all the things you learned and can just move ahead from where you are. Not a problem! (Unless you decide to make it one, which is an option.)
But that causes triggers, fear...will I hurt her? Will she hurt me? What am I getting into here?
What about that? Something I tend to do is latch on to things like that, and then behave as if "getting hurt" is the end of the world. I think, maybe, it's a version of black & white thinking? That things either have to be perfect or they're catastrophic? I don't know that you can BE in a relationship without one or the other of you feeling hurt from time to time. It's what happens next that matters. And, really, a relationship can be good, and valuable, without being perfect, or the one and only relationship for the rest of your life. Be careful you don't put more pressure than you have to on yourself, the relationship, and her. (Glad to hear you're starting to feel better!)
 
Thank you for your advice, Scout86. It is good advice. When you are in the middle of a perfect psychological storm, everything becomes black and white, as you say; it’s pretty much one of the central premises of sensorimotor psychotherapy - to get the higher functioning of the brain able to engage during these episodes of catastrophising, so that you can see things a bit more rationally and start to dig your way out.

And the other plank of SP is to gain control over the lower brain functions which have been triggering the fight-or-flight response, surplus to the original requirements, for years or decades by conscientious and consistent practice.

I woke up earlier today, and blazed back through my morning routine like someone fleeing a sinking ship. I am out, intend to do a ton of walking today and am going to a pub quiz this evening.

In the meantime Julia and I continue our temporarily online romance, and that is becoming part of the landscape of my life now, another element that has to be brought into the wider experience of my life.

And of course you are right - the only way to be sure you won’t get hurt is by retreating from intimacy. It’s the difference between the possibility of a sharp pain and the guarantee of a lifelong suffocation from lack of engagement in life. Looking around me in these days, I see so many examples of it, or seem to.

Thank you for your support. It is all about developing new habits that stop the panic-storms getting a long-term foothold.
 
A very rough few days. Wednesday morning I had a phone interview for an unlikely-to-get job. I could tell from the way that the interviewer was baiting me that he had already found who he wanted, and was going through the motions. But for some reason that chat triggered the worst feelings of conflict that I have had since I came here.

And to boot, in the week my T is on holiday. This week I could really have done with our session.

We who have lived our lives traumatised...we've known what it is to live in a state of constant fear and feelings of crisis, whether they were real or imagined. Perhaps the thing we're all most afraid of would be our feelings. You know how it is...you have your first panic attack one day, and thereafter you're having panic attacks about the possibility of having panic attacks!

I don't know about you, but I don't have direct access to my feelings any more. Can't remember when I last did. When some bad feeling overwhelms me, as it has done the last three days (to the point of 4-5 abortive attempts to make this latest entry), I have to wait and wait for whatever is working itself out in me to become manifest.

Do non-traumatised people just know how they feel about things immediately? What a luxury!

Me, I have to wait for a dream, a movie, a conversation...something external to my inner world before I can really see what is going on inside myself. And it is just the same this week. I can't say I am much better today; I keep going to the cinema to escape, or back to the flat early to watch movies...and until this morning, it was taking me an age to leave the flat. But this morning it just felt too serious - I knew I had to get up and immediately get in the shower etc. and out of the Ice Queen's palace.

Another movie in London's West End (The Death Of Stalin - not that great, certainly in terms of being a comedy), and now fleeing the skin-blistering cold of London's latest cold snap here in the warm and mostly free Southbank Centre.

So what am I conflicted about? To what extent am I able to line up the roads ahead and evaluate them?

One road is Julia and Romania. Our romance has become so intense, as we count off the weeks until she arrives here for her visit. Sometimes it is just too much, too much to try and process maintaining and building this affection with her at the same time as trying to reconcile the warring thoughts I have about what I must do next with my life.

Let me try and say what is on the table:

There is Julia - we are falling in love, and spending so much time in contact, that it is hard to keep up with sensorimotor psychotherapy exercises here. And becoming emotionally...what, thralled? Dependent? Too harsh..? Attached. Becoming emotionally attached to her is pretty much at 180-degree variance to what I am supposed to be doing here. But what, will I throw her away after waiting these years to find someone I connect with so much again? It was the reason I went to therapy.

But if I return to Romania and commit to trying to see what Julia and I might have, I will probably never be an editor again. From what I can see (I have looked), there are not more than a handful of jobs of that sort in Bucharest. If I stay here in the UK, chances are I can get another one...another comforting editor job that won't quite pay a mortgage or allow me to get any kind of property, but which will be familiar to me and provide that little fire-warmth of authority and temporary security and self-reinforcement of the ego...

That I must leave behind if I go to Romania, and commit to it.

And then I must return to a place I have not been for a long time, the world of freelance journalism, and the necessity to fight for a foothold in a fiercely contested space. I have been on the other side of it too, that world, commissioning the gannet-like freelancers who never stop, never stop pitching and trying and (if they are able) charming in order to continue their existence. It is the equivalent of putting yourself permanently into 'interview-space'...a place most people are reluctant to re-enter and glad to leave at the earliest opportunity.

It challenges my belief in myself, this prospect. I would need not only to act but to act daily, to get out and push against the weight of (at the beginning) global disinterest in me or what I want to achieve.

On the other hand, even this week I have seen around me people who put faith and effort into this and prosper, who are using their talents (often no better than my own) to carve their own place in the world, on something close to their own terms.

Else...

I stay here. I keep doing those interviews...my credibility as an editor/manager in full-time, on-location employment still has acumen to spend, though that will diminish through the winter and be gone, pretty much, by spring. But I don't have to give it up, this life-long dream that I attained in the last ten years, despite how little actual happiness of living it brought me (as opposed to the immediate satisfaction of the working day).

Julia has just got a commission to design a house in Romania, the first actual architectural work she has got in years. If we continue on our trajectory, I believe she would follow me here to the UK, because she has done such things several times before; but now she would be giving up more.

Else I give it up, cut the comforting moorings to this apparently endless train of editor roles in London, and try something new, and see if I can find and maintain the fire to do it and to break through to solvency.

I should be clear that I have enough money to live for 3-4 years in the UK without working at all; in Romania, many more years than that. But I will not be able to buy back what I currently have, and what is fading as I write...the currency of a media worker with notable and recent in-office employment.

I have such a good feeling about Julia, but I could be wrong.

I have such a bad feeling about cutting that chain editor jobs, even though none of them seem likely to give me a sustainable life in London.

And so while I delight in what Julia and I are developing, I wish I could take what I have (for a little while longer) with me. It will not do me any good to become Julia's 'house-husband' (she has plenty of money too, particularly for a Romanian). Writing, much as I may have turned it into an unhealthy addiction many times in the last ten years, was always there when women failed me (or I failed them).

And the old adage is correct: 'A Writer writes'. That's the basic difference between someone who wants to be paid for writing and someone who gets paid for writing.

Time was my material was regularly enough in the papers. And since then I have added so many specific strands to my specialisation. On paper, since I have the time, and since I have the money and the breathing space, and the support of someone who seems solidly on my side...perhaps I should try it. I don't know.

But I can't turn the clock back if it goes wrong.

Anyway, this is what has been tormenting me in these 2-3 days, as far as I can tell. It is mixed in with the intensity of this romance with Julia, and my determination to continue with the therapy that I feel is necessary for me; mixed in with the thought and the certain knowledge that there must be things in my life which are mine, and which stay mine, else I cannot be a worthwhile partner for anyone.

But the way things are lined up at the moment, I have to give up one of those strands in order to go any further.

I don't know if this entry is even intelligible. But it is clearer than I have been able to think in these days, and I am going to push 'Post' on it without, ironically, further editing.
 
Hard to get up again this morning. The wish that sleep would last longer, followed as usual by the inevitable tightening of the upper abdomen as I realise it is time for another freezing day.

Had another lovely chat with Julia yesterday evening after we watched a great movie together that she chose, about an Egyptian police orchestra lost in Israel. Julia said explicitly that she would move to be with me if I needed to work outside Romania. Since she did it for her first love (of seven years, moving to Greece) and her four-year marriage (moving to Iran), I believe that she would - if our relationship survives this very mooney phase.

If I look at it logically, there is nothing too much to worry about. But lack and loneliness are more familiar and frequent landscapes in my life, and so I am rather lost.

From the SP point of view, this has been a hard time not to see my T due to her early xmas trip home, but she is back this week. I can tell that the sense of oppression since last week’s interview has re-hunched my shoulders and compressed my spine again, and it is hard and infrequently that I remember to straighten up.

Some of the exercises that are core to SP involve self-touch (no, not that, who needs instructions for that?). The idea is to ground yourself in the current reality of where and who you are, and that physical sensations support that. So, besides pressing against a wall to make your struggle or currently oppressive feelings have a real world aspect, the exercises also include pressing against your own sternum and kind of pinching or lightly slapping your arms and/or legs. All in the service of understanding that today is today, not yesterday or some feared tomorrow.

I am in the middle of so much right now that I feel I have no clear vision of what is happening, like someone driving on faith in a snowstorm with two metres visibility. So there are not many conclusions or reflections in what I can write now. But I feel better having this place to record it. This site, and the fact that I am in ‘good company’ here means a lot to me.
 
Halfway through this strange sojourn in the UK. It is hard to believe I have only been here a month.

It all began as one thing and became something completely different. I came here to be alone, and found instead the connection that I was looking for, the very reason I first went to therapy - even though there were deeper underlying reasons why it would have been a good idea.

It was so good to see my T on Wednesday after two weeks. I had missed her, and told her as much!

The Wednesday session was basically just me unburdening myself on her and telling her all the conflicts I have felt in these days. It is good to have one voice in my life that I truly trust - something that is consistent. I need it so much - these last fourteen months have been so crazy, seen so much change, and I have made so many expensive and precipitate decisions, that I fear to make any more. I wish I could just freeze myself until the inner conflict abates.

But I have to work it all out in real-time. There is no fast-forward option.

It was our friendliest session ever, with my T. We have been through some wars together by now. She seems very pleased at what I am developing with Julia,just the same as any friend would be pleased to see someone they like getting a break; a break we all need now and again.

But for me, my relationship with my T is still, and will remain, the most important in my life in this time. One voice which is for sure on my side, and which will still be there if things do nit work out with Julia, or with so many other possible aspects of the road ahead for me.

I have other things to say, since I have not posted in a while, by my own standards, but here I am outside a coffee shop in Wimbledon, with cold fingers. I will continue this later. I just want to keep in touch with what I am trying to achieve in this period of my life, by keeping my work with SP and my recording of it in this journal central to my life.
 
The last two days I have woken up without the crushing feeling of dread in my abdomen. As far as I can tell, the conflict is over - the conflict between the UK and Romania, between Julia and what I set out here to achieve; between the relative ease of walking into a job here (however little a job in itself is the answer to my problems, as it has proved not to be in recent years)...

Given the caveat that you cannot really know if you love someone until you have had a chance to forgive them their faults in the run of everyday life...given that, in the last couple of days, it has become obvious that Julia and I are in love.

I came here to grit my teeth and be alone and see what I could do to face up to that terrible inner sense of ‘homelessness’...only to find love and, I guess, some kind of an emotional ‘home’.

I have been resisting it; but in the last couple of days, she and I just never stop talking, and I never stop loving that process, and delighting in the new things I know about her, and in the fact that it is wonderful, just wonderful to be able to make someone happy. Above all, that, more than receiving happiness.

Any road ahead is hard, but by now she is probably on any of them. I am, I can see now, half of a couple. Not that the rude interruption of reality cannot break this spell, but we have worked so much on what bonds us by now, that it is not a fragile solder.

So I cannot do else right now but look on my fate with a certain resignation.

And the gratitude with which I behold these prospects is still tempered with apprehension about the future...but it is a future with her. Maybe a short future, or a long one. But it’s just how it is.

I just resisted her for a long time, because it is hard to trust anyone. It was hard to trust my T - six months’ worth. And I never can speed up that process, that road to belief in another person.

Interviews for jobs still flourish about me, including the apparent prospect of an offer...but never at a salary level which would inspire me to take Julia up on her offer to move to my country (or, she said, any country I want to go to).

I can’t tear her away from her own country, little attached as she clearly is to it, right now, under those auspices. These jobs are in the range 35-40k GBP. In London, thanks to nine years worth of right-wing government propping up a housing market which should have been allowed to naturally collapse and regroup after the global financial crisis...thanks to them, that’s an insignificant, flat-sharing wage at best. It would be hard to establish myself here even enough to prepare a domestic situation that would be tenable for Julia joining me here. At 45k, it would be worth considering.

This country is now just phenomenally expensive, entirely due to housing costs and how they have rocketed. Hell, that was my original nominative reason for moving to Romania in the first place.

So I’m going back, to try freelancing. And to see what I have with Julia; what we have, and what, if anything, we can build.

The last four weeks have had the feverish tinge of early Polanski...the gradual dissolution of clear daily actions into paranoia, illness and self-doubt. It’s taken a physical toll, particularly because of my beer consumption. Late last night I felt my liver complain for the first time since March, and the ‘bad time’ where I nearly died.

And the weight I have put on...disheartening. But that’s how I am; when the stress and the conflict absolutely will not abate for a protracted period, I end up where I am now, in need of a diet.

I am sitting in my local right now, but just drinking black coffee with sweeteners. Next week I just want to walk all day, eat only in the evenings, and not much...try and undo some of this damage that I feel I have just woken up to.

I may be the only person who has seen the Christian Bale film The Machinist, who considers that it has a happy ending - as the character finally confesses about what has literally been eating him up for more than a year, and gets to finally sleep, the first night in a cell, with many hard years ahead of him beginning that night...but you can see the relief on his face.

That’s kind of how I feel at the moment. I lost. I love her.

On a practical level, I discussed with my T that I do not want to migrate from her just because I am going back to Romania. She suggested that ongoing therapy with her could be viable if we could see each other in person a few times a year. She suggested twice a year, and I thought maybe every four months..skip a few Skype sessions that month, and save up 2-3 for real-world meetings in the UK periodically. I just do not have the will to start over with someone else. Or the will to sacrifice another six months learning to trust yet another new influence in my life.

And my mission here in the UK, such as it is, needs to change, and be revised. But I am glad to be entering a relationship while I am in therapy. Julia knows about the therapy, and the ten year age gap between us (that was nerve-racking when it came up recently, for me),and my history.

All I could advise her in general was that if you’re going to go out with a messed-up guy, at least go out with one who is already in therapy. And that’s me.
 
I haven't written in this journal for a while because I have found events so overwhelming recently, along with the flood of feelings that they have brought with them. But I don't want to abandon writing down what I have been through, and will go through yet, in trauma therapy, so thought at least to write something.

Yesterday Julia left for Romania after six days together. They were really, really happy days. Late next week I return to Bucharest myself.

Today I turned down a fascinating job at a London data analytics company as an editor. It took all my courage to turn it down, and a fair bit of today's session with my T was about the difficulty in doing it. A nice office, in a nice part of London, with really lovely people and no commercial imperative to poison the whole experience...but it was just not enough money, and taking the job to me seemed to be like a step backward; like taking the easy route into a situation which would sustain me without giving me any future. Just...more of the same.

Editor jobs of the type which I am so well-suited for have been stuck at around £35k for nearly ten years while London property prices and rents have doubled in that same period. If I had taken this job, I would once again be making the uncomfortable trade-off between interesting work and a sustainable lifestyle that might build, at my relatively late age, some kind of a medium-term future. The salary which rented me a reasonable one-bedroom flat ten years now, I think, would not now extend to any kind of non-shared flat in any commutable part of London.

Without doubt Julia would have come to London to be with me, if I had taken the job, but I hesitated in the end to bring someone that I love to a city that I do not love. Perhaps I have made a huge mistake.

Any job can become a 'McJob', in terms of representing a career rut. In my early twenties I worked in camera shops; it was always very easy to get another job in a camera shop, and practically impossible to break through that economic ceiling into anything better. And now, at least in this period in which I was relatively recently employed in an office, it it still easy to get another job as an editor. But for any London role which offers over £35k, there is an increasing commercial factor. By the time the salary reaches £40k+, the role is either practically a sales job, or in some sector so vilified and hated by society (pornography, banking, etc) that it carries a 'shame bonus'. And any editing job over £35k is fought for ferociously; the competition doubles.

Oh...something inside me says, inevitably, 'You idiot! That was your last chance! We laid everything in front of you and you blew it!'.

I am a bit of a catastrophist. I was thinking this way also when I was 27, I know that for sure. But just as a stopped clock tells the right time twice a day, I guess one day it will be 'the last chance'. Perhaps that was today - who knows?

Let me be more positive about work: I sent out a mail outlining what I have to offer and what I would like, to a number of recruiters late last week, and have received a number of requests for my CV, even though I mention in the mail that I am seeking something like a 75% remote working situation from Romania, with maybe one week a month in the office. Additionally I am getting more and more requests to be included in freelancer directories.

If I am to get the kind of post that I want, I think it will be through recruiters suggesting to companies that they should loosen their reluctance to consider remote workers (since the only alternatives they have is to train up less experience people, which they don't want to do, or to offer enough money to support life in London, which they certainly don't seem to want to do). But it is a long game, what I am trying to accomplish now, as well as a risky one. I am planting many seeds in all parts of the field in the hope that something may flower sometime next year...that someone who knows I am out here and have what I have to offer can solve this recruitment Mexican stand-off in a less-familiar way than usual.

I have more to say, much more, about Julia, and about the time. But today's session with my T was a heavy and tearful one, and I don't have the emotional resilience to write it down much at the moment.

But I will say that this London trip has been a strange journey indeed. That I came here to find myself and instead found somebody else to be in my life with me. And that I remain committed to my therapist and to sensorimotor psychotherapy, but that I have to concede (as I did with my T today) that sometimes you have to accept to take a step back in anticipation of taking another step forward. And that this period represents that situation.
 

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