I’ve been on this site a fair bit longer than five years. I think it’s actually coming up to 10 now. I can honestly say that I worked and worked and worked and really wasn’t getting much better until just recently .
I think there were a lot of moving parts to that situation for me. One thing I wanted to stress is that although I used my tools and they didn’t really help back then, once I was actually able to dig in and positive things started happening, my tools that I had been practising all those years have been like gold to me.
One of the things that I noticed in one of your posts, I’m sorry I didn’t quote it but I’m on my cell phone right now and don’t find that easy to do on cell, is that you mentioned that you have been told along the way literally not to go out on your own. I too was subjected to this. I feel like it’s important to mention that neural pathways have been defined that need to be undone along the way to change this behaviour. When you are ready.
In all seriousness I was on able to go out unaccompanied for approximately seven years. I am still working on on doing this behaviour modification that was necessary for my own safety but is no longer serving me.
I had some very very large triggers that were happening ( homelessness ) that played a large part in keeping me symptomatic. That was part of my root trauma that just had me spinning around in circles. It took a great therapist, an aligning of the stars the moon and the sun, also known as luck, a larger support system which my therapist helped with, and a community of peer supporters to get me out of the hole I was in. Just for the record, I still haven’t been able to get to the very root of this homeless thing. I still get triggered up by it even though I am properly housed at this point. I’m not entirely certain that that trigger will ever get totally kiboshed.
If your brain has been trained to not be able to go outside on your own, then I’m gonna say that’s part of your trauma at this point. That’s a really difficult thing to work through I know.
So honestly, maybe you’re setting your sights too high With what you are aspiring to accomplish. I literally had to congratulate myself for brushing my freaking teeth in the morning. I double congratulated myself when I hopped out of bed and popped into the shower sometime during the course of the day. I really had to lower the bar and trained my brain regardless of how ridiculous it sounded to be ecstatic about The fact that I was doing these Simple Simon things.
Talk about humbling. I also had to learn to be grateful that I was actually able to brush my teeth in the morning. Gratitude, or thankfulness, were two really big pieces of the puzzle. Those two things alone allowed me to re-pattern my brain in such a way that I could actually see that I had been making positive changes along the way.
Shocking how this may all sound these things allowed me to really grip in and iacknowledge the fact that I was moving in a positive direction and once I caught grip of those concepts things just got better really fast. So fast that I could barely keep up. Still struggling with that whole thing.
I say it would be of great help to you if you just really lower the bar for yourself and get excited over little things. If you aren’t attaining the goals that you’re setting for yourself then those goals are too high. Also my goals were set from hour to hour. I wanted the next hour to be better than the last one. So I would set myself up for one small task every hour of the day. And no matter how ridiculous it seemed, it was of the utmost importance that I gave myself credit for even the most tiny accomplishment.
PS I have just finished editing this post that had a ton of errors in it. Please forgive. I need a better voice dictation system or I need to take the marbles out of my mouth while I speak. Thanks for your patience if you read this before I edited. Be well sandstone.
I think there were a lot of moving parts to that situation for me. One thing I wanted to stress is that although I used my tools and they didn’t really help back then, once I was actually able to dig in and positive things started happening, my tools that I had been practising all those years have been like gold to me.
One of the things that I noticed in one of your posts, I’m sorry I didn’t quote it but I’m on my cell phone right now and don’t find that easy to do on cell, is that you mentioned that you have been told along the way literally not to go out on your own. I too was subjected to this. I feel like it’s important to mention that neural pathways have been defined that need to be undone along the way to change this behaviour. When you are ready.
In all seriousness I was on able to go out unaccompanied for approximately seven years. I am still working on on doing this behaviour modification that was necessary for my own safety but is no longer serving me.
I had some very very large triggers that were happening ( homelessness ) that played a large part in keeping me symptomatic. That was part of my root trauma that just had me spinning around in circles. It took a great therapist, an aligning of the stars the moon and the sun, also known as luck, a larger support system which my therapist helped with, and a community of peer supporters to get me out of the hole I was in. Just for the record, I still haven’t been able to get to the very root of this homeless thing. I still get triggered up by it even though I am properly housed at this point. I’m not entirely certain that that trigger will ever get totally kiboshed.
If your brain has been trained to not be able to go outside on your own, then I’m gonna say that’s part of your trauma at this point. That’s a really difficult thing to work through I know.
So honestly, maybe you’re setting your sights too high With what you are aspiring to accomplish. I literally had to congratulate myself for brushing my freaking teeth in the morning. I double congratulated myself when I hopped out of bed and popped into the shower sometime during the course of the day. I really had to lower the bar and trained my brain regardless of how ridiculous it sounded to be ecstatic about The fact that I was doing these Simple Simon things.
Talk about humbling. I also had to learn to be grateful that I was actually able to brush my teeth in the morning. Gratitude, or thankfulness, were two really big pieces of the puzzle. Those two things alone allowed me to re-pattern my brain in such a way that I could actually see that I had been making positive changes along the way.
Shocking how this may all sound these things allowed me to really grip in and iacknowledge the fact that I was moving in a positive direction and once I caught grip of those concepts things just got better really fast. So fast that I could barely keep up. Still struggling with that whole thing.
I say it would be of great help to you if you just really lower the bar for yourself and get excited over little things. If you aren’t attaining the goals that you’re setting for yourself then those goals are too high. Also my goals were set from hour to hour. I wanted the next hour to be better than the last one. So I would set myself up for one small task every hour of the day. And no matter how ridiculous it seemed, it was of the utmost importance that I gave myself credit for even the most tiny accomplishment.
PS I have just finished editing this post that had a ton of errors in it. Please forgive. I need a better voice dictation system or I need to take the marbles out of my mouth while I speak. Thanks for your patience if you read this before I edited. Be well sandstone.
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