"You're not even trying to help yourself!"
So stopping drinking,drugs, promiscuous and risky behaviour,...
This one resonates with me very, very strongly. In the past 7 years since coming out of the biggest of my traumas, I have been there, done that, gotten through it with alcohol/drugs, sleeping around, and all sorts of. unhealthy, risky behavior as well. And the extremes of sickening depression and manic dissociation. Through the extremes of isolation and desperately maintaining co-dependent relationships, and have been keeping such a clear "got my shit together" image that now I'm a rock for everyone else- that person they come to lean on when everyone else has given up on them, and let my emotional needs get pushed under the bus and ignored bc I'm just "too young" and "too cute" for anyone to take my suffering seriously... as if a cute face means everything in my life has always been equally cute. And...
Not only have I broken off my addictions, eating disorders, and bizarre co-dependent relationship (although I still struggle with keeping all these demons at bay), my "accomplishments" are never quite good enough for most ppl in my life, namely my family. When I found music as a way to come to a decent sense of peace and acceptance with the dark demons in my mind, parents were disappointed that I chose music as a major yet grudgingly "let" me do it, playing the victim as parents of a child going on the wrong path. When I got into one of the most prestigious arts colleges in The country, and finished a 4-year program in 2.5, they were happy for a couple weeks then went right to "now how do you expect to have a career?" When I started working as a performer/teacher, living on the poverty line for the past year since graduation but still scraping by, they go right to the "your path will doom you to poverty forever, become a financial advisor instead." And I even created my own form of experimental performance art combining hand balancing and electric guitar playing, and they find it cool/interesting but of course get into "that won't make you any money, get a certification in something else." Granted, I have always been very persuasive and can make them see my side, but still, nowhere near fully understanding why this is all important to me, bc here's the kicker: they are hell bent on pretending that "big trauma shit" of 7-10 years ago never happened and that we are all over it. Maybe them, but it is the most offensive thing in the world when someone else can pretty decently forget and not think about/act on it, while I need to relive it over and over and constantly work to maintain my sense of divinity, quelling the dark demon in my mind that tells me to go do bad things to myself, like get extremely drunk and cut my wrists, or run my car at max speed into the freeway divider.
The bystanders who can put it out of their mind cannot see the perspective of those of is who cannot stop thinking about it. Because I actually need to keep thinking about it, to remind myself of what I've learned and stay aware of what I've become. Now, let's just say that it's not enough to have been sobering up, graduating college, staying in excellent shape, creating a new form of performance art, using said art to come to terms with severe emotional pain and the physical pain that has come as a result, learning first hand the ins & outs of using self-respect to avoid soul-crushing heartbreak in an unhealthy relationship, having a solid sense of who I am and how I want my life to go, courageously pursuing the path that is meaningful to my life and inspiring others to do the same...
No f**n' way is all of this good enough. What will ever be enough? Money, that's it. But watch, when I star making $50k/yr the next question will be "why aren't you making $100k?" No, nothing is good enough as a trauma survivor who has chosen an unconventional path...