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What Do You Do With The War In Your Head? (not Literal War)

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Justpassintime

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Sometimes I am so dam tired of fighting the war. No more self talk, no more distraction, no more whatever, I just want it to go away. Suicide obviously is not the answer as I am not willing be dead behind this no matter what. To me, that is like letting them "win" .

What do YOU do with it? I understand my results may vary from yours, but I'm all in for trying something new.
 
I am a very very new supporter here and I have nothing to offer you as far as thoughts on your post - but I wanted to reply just to let you know I'm thinkin about what you're going through and want you to have the best thing for you. Please don't give up:)
 
Can you take a vacation? I know you didn't mean it literally, but can you do something different you never tried before? If you don't feel like re-evaluating therapy just yet and trying a new kind, could you do something you always dreamed of doing but never did?

I know PTSD can keep us isolated and sometimes homebound with symptoms. Is there anything your imagination and dreams might offer to break out of it for a day even?

I remember once when I was 29, I hadn't gone to work for a month. I was terribly depressed, sleep deprived, hyper-everything - the whole gamut. It was unbearable. There was no air conditioning in my suffocatingly hot apt. No air blowing thru with any window. Suddenly the thought came to me that there were stables a block away where the city carriage horses were kept. I didn't have enough money for rent but I took what little I had and walked over there and rode a horse for an hour in the indoor ring. It was heaven and for a few weeks, I was alive again.

I hope you get a break from the internal war. You deserve it!
 
When I am feeling strong, I go into battle with my thoughts. I push myself to strive forward (overcome my fears and negative thoughts). When my energy drains, I force my mind to switch off, by, reading a book, watch fast paced movies or leave my surroundings, get on my motorbike and head for the mountains where my concentration has to be focused on what I am doing, which in turn stimulates my mind and relaxes me. I also stay away from needy or demanding people as best I can as they drain a lot of my energy , by having them believe that I am not available until my strength is rebuilt without them knowing I am feeling weak.
 
I used to think of myself as a kind of "Thought Warrior"...no way those thoughts were going to "win"...I was going to beat them at their own game, and emerge victorious. After all, I was "an intellectual", right? Any intellectual worth his/her stripes should be able to out-think his/her thoughts, right?

For some reason, however much an "intellectual" I liked to think of myself as...it never occurred to my how patently ridiculous a concept this was...how oxymoronic...that I could "out-think" my own thoughts, with the emphasis on the word's second syllable..."moronic"...

That was for me, anyway. And that's not to say that it's unimportant for me to use the "innermost mind" to control the outer, to "practice mindfulness".

But I've come to realize that it's equally as important to "get out of my head", when the battle seems to be going the other way.

I am, after all, trying to fix a broken machine, WITH a broken machine, in many ways--attempts at repair are implicitly flawed, at this point, doomed to result in further aberrations.

I find myself having a fight with an invisible spider's-web, of sorts...spinning and flailing at nothing.

In these times the most important thing is not exactly WHAT I DO...but that I DO something, rather than just think more.

..Get OUT of my head...not entangle myself more in it...through action of some kind. Often, the more physical, the better.

The book "Waking the Tiger" by Levine, as well as others, is based on the idea that not only is trauma "stored" in the body, and so a physical phenomenon which can't be entirely addressed with "thinking" strategies...but that more thinking can be an unconscious strategy to stay as far away from feeling, as possible...when it's more feeling we need, at least in the long run, in order to really find a "way out" in a practical sense...that this is the context in which most people live their lives, and so not only more natural than taking refuge in "intellectualization", but is the stage on which the stuff of human interaction takes place, rather than the exclusively "mental machinations" I know I have a tendency to use as both my shield and sword, in what is destined instead, thereby, to become a full-on "me-against-the-world" war, which becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy--of course.

When you have the sense that your back is against the wall...what else do you want to do but shout F-U at the universe, in defiance, after all (as I think you implied, if I've gotten the gist, that is). And that's not a bad thing. Shows a winning spirit.

But I have to think in terms of relaxing, in order to loosen the "knot" I'm struggling with... not trying to pull at both ends of the rope, gritting my teeth, only to make the knot itself more impossibly tight.

Suicide obviously is not the answer as I am not willing be dead behind this no matter what. To me, that is like letting them "win" .

I'm so glad to hear you've made that resolution! But the question then had to become HOW I was fighting-I had to begin to realize that the best way to win a fight with ME was to learn (over time, of course), to stop fighting myself with sheer force, and ALLOW myself to stop fighting the war--with me.

And I'm only just beginning, really. I'm not an expert, by any stretch of the imagination. But I've learned that acceptance, even of my symptoms, is key--the "simply noticing" of Zen practice. It's almost as though I'm fighting a child--the more attention I give them through staying focused on them--the louder and more combative they become. If I can learn to just walk away, it takes the air out of it, and there's no more fight to have.

Easier said than done, and I know I haven't given you any specific activities or strategies, per se. Just a perspective.

Meditation (especially involving deep breathing), of whatever kind, "Listening Practice", as it's referred to in Zazen. And exercise, are my best concrete recommendations. There are also exercises recommended in "Waking the Tiger" which are designed specifically to "discharge trauma" (although it's recommended that it should be done with caution, and with the input of a trained counselor, if possible. Sometimes we have so much stored trauma that it can open us up to feelings that can be overwhelming)

So glad you've resolved to fight. I'm right there with you. Take care, and know there are others in the same place, fighting the same fight.
 
I often wonder... Is it better to have a mind like Albert Einstein or Forest Gump. Intellect works on facts not emotions and when you mix too much intellect with too much emotion, then you start looking at insanity
 
Thank you for all the above. I am in therapy, somewhat "newish" a few months with someone I have seen before and that I trust to the highest degree. She is mind altering, and while she definitely has this affect of turning down the volume on the war, what happens then is you notice, I mean really notice and experience the fact that someone in your foxhole hums all the time, someone else has a watch that is ticking way too loudly. (if that makes sense, visuals are pretty much my crutch, the only way to explain a "feeling").

Lately I realized I have made a lot of excuses for people to make my life more managable. I tell people my mother is a great person but that she does not have a maternal bone in her body and probably should not have had children. Really? Ugh, I don't even know what sentence "should" follow that one other to say, that wow, I'm really tired of making excuses for other people's bad behaviors. She was not actively abusive, but she was aloof, uninvolved and oblivious to what was really going on. I guess I'm not really sure which is worse, the loudness of that war as a whole, or those moment's in time when it just stops and you notice one thing.

The one thing I have done for myself is I bought myself six pairs of new shoes. This for me is huge because I never buy new anything much. I was like screw it I want what I want, not just what I can have. (no worries, I only spent like 60 bucks because I am an awesome shopper). That was strangely liberating and I quickly realized shopping like that should probably be kept in check. The other thing that is going on that is "good" and blowing my mind is that I started selling on ebay again and I'd never been as successful as I would have liked and this time it's insane how well it's going I am having a hard time keeping up with it all.
 
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