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Will I Ever Be Able To Cry?

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I didn't cry for years...then my eyes would fill but I'd push it back down again......then I'd cry only on my own, hated anyone seeing me. Now, my tears flow easily in front of my partner...from anything from tears of happiness to pain of the past...only recently accepted a hug when I'm like this, so that's a huge step for me. It seems to have come in stages and has taken years.
 
I rarely cry. It takes a lot to make me cry. I used to be able to cry.

I think the meds I am on that have stabalized me have something to do with that now. I am just not able to cry.
 
Has anyone here made it a goal in therapy to learn to cry? I told my therapist that I won't to learn to experience sadness but I haven't explicitly told her that I want to be able to cry. I cry sometimes in therapy in she encourages me. Thinking out loud here, if I make it a goal I may be able to do it. Just reading this thread, I was able to identify few memories where if I cried I was told they will leave me, people will laugh at me, or I was hit. Damn, I love this web site and the people here.

:hug::hug::hug:,
UniversalBeing
 
Acupuncture helped me be able to cry again. Helped release me from the frozen state, fighting it all down. Then at first only on my own. Then sometimes in therapy, then often in therapy.
Still not much in front of those I'm close to. By myself I can let it go.
 
@watundah I definitely fight crying too. It's like an internal battle where part of me sometimes wants to but then a protective part holds me back. As a child, crying only made things worse. It's seems better to shut it down now still. But I really long for the catharsis it could bring.
 
I haven't been able to cry for several years now. I have been thinking it's because of the medication I'm on -- lorazepam, celexa and clonidine -- but I don't really know. When the PTSD first came on I cried all the time. Now I have a lot of times where I feel like I'm crying inside, but can't let it out. I just wonder if it's because of my medication.
 
Cool Cat this is a great thread. It's something I've been thinking abt the past couple of weeks. I have some early childhood attachment stuff.

I've been working hard on it the past few weeks w my meditation teacher and my therapist, and sometimes I can feel it all in my body for a moment but I shut down before I emote. I often identify myself as someone who is very emotional but who does not emote. I do not recall any instance of being told it was wrong to cry. But I know of many instances of crying because I was emotionally hurting and it was ignored. It didn't occur to me until y'all wrote all this that this early attachment stuff and my experiences are the reason for all this. I mean of course it makes sense but I needed that connection clarified. Thanks.
 
I used to think like this, now I ask how do I turn it off :confused:. I think for me what changed me from empty, numb and afraid to cry in therapy or anywhere was self acceptance and learning to trust my therapist, and controlling my fears of what I believed would happen if I cried. I believed so many false beliefs about what would happen if I cried. I believed I would be unsafe, rejected, ridiculed, look stupid, be out of control, unable to stop once I started, and I would dissociate and panic the second I would get the hint of a tear, feeling teary etc.

I learnt to cry in private, that took about a year before I had stopped numbing long enough to feel sad without panicking because I was so afraid of emotion, and not being able to switch it off. I had a lot of reasons for learning as a child not to cry, the usual threats of "I'll give you something to really cry about" or "get that look off your face," from a young toddler I learnt don't cry if you don't want another belting, or a bigger belting once she got me alone.

Be careful what you wish for though, when it all started coming out I had to learn how to start regulating it, these days I cry most weeks in therapy, a sad song or story on the radio can make me a soggy mess driving to work. I am still working on regulating it better, I guess I had a lot crying to get out.
 
@Biz.."emotional but don't emote." I love that. I'm an artist, a sensitive person and even write poetry. But aside from occasional silly glee or anger, I run flat as an ironing board. Must...control...expression. Like a cat in the wild I guess.
 
I lost the ability to cry for seven years. I think it came back when I saw my first therapist when I was at university. However, for me its not like I just regained the ability. I can cry now, but not for myself, and never in front of people. I cry at sad things in films, and in books. Sometimes, when I'm feeling blocked up I will intentionally watch something to make me cry. I don't know if I'm ever going to be able to cry freely. I would love to. I can't imagine ever crying in front of my therapist. That involves a level of trust I'm not sure I'll ever be capable of.
 
The same has happened to me I have cried in therapy, but not much just a few sprinkles in comparison to letting it all out I suppose. Childhood trauma thought me to keep those emotions locked away. At therapy my psychiatrist will tell me its okay to be sad or angry seeing those are the two emotions a have trouble expressing. I know its there I can feel the anger and sadness, but the expression of those emotions are completely different. Like yesterday for my nieces birthday I took he to see Thomas the tank engine for some reason when ridding Thomas I burst into tears and my sister kept asking me if I we're alright but it sounded muffled almost like a lo-fi sound. The whole ride everything felt dream scape like. It has been the first real heavy cry I have had in a while, but it was very awkward and embarrassing. I know crying is okay it just seems like it doesn't come as naturally as before not sure if that makes me numb to it or do I just mentally avoid that emotional repose.
 
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