StartingHealing, Thanks for sharing your take on this stuff. It's helpful. I'm not the only one who feels responsible for the whole world.
Armee, Our Atmospheric river never materialized on my beach. I hope it stayed away from your neighborhood too.
SenseOrgan, I clicked the link. Very powerful. My T informs me that suffering is a learning tool. But the quote you sent today is going on my wall to say it in a more positive and "blessed" way. I like it! Wounds are where the light enters. It's true.
I have long believed that pain has a purpose, which is to drive change. When we don't feel pain, we don't have any reason to change. This quote about how wounds are where the light enters is saying the same thing to me, but in a much more poetic and positive selection of words.
Journal Entry for Saturday, November 23
I guess I'm not alone in this, but I'm a zombie now. I honestly feel like my soul is disconnecting and leaving my poor body to tumble around in a stupor. Rudderless. I feel weakness in every muscle and bone. I feel like my blood has drained out and my joints just haven't seized up yet.
As I practice "letting go" by using some of the techniques in the Sedona Method for allowing my feelings to just happen without me trying to suppress or repress or distract from them, I'm finding myself feeling ageless. I'm still here in my childhood. Anything that's ever caused me to be afraid is here in this realm of sustained fear that I'm in right now.
This year I have been triggered into the same fear that I felt as a child who was once pretending to be asleep while someone was tiptoeing around my bed. At 64 years old, as I close my eyes and feel the fear I'm in today, I can feel myself as a child. I'm still in that same fear.
Some teachers teach that we are not afraid "OF" anything. We're just afraid, and all the things that we think caused the fear, are not causes, but mere triggers. Access doors into the realm of fear.
Today's triggers are getting the blame, but in truth, the fear in me began at birth and just needed a trigger to remind me that it's all still there and it's all still working on my moods but is often buried so deep in my core wiring that sometimes I forget it's there. My fears today are not new fears, but the trigger is a new one. The trigger just reminded me that the ancient fear is still burning like a perpetual underground tire fire in my gut.
If I couldn't be happy before the trigger, why should I blame the trigger for my unhappiness now? Even before the election, I wasn't terribly happy. So what have I lost, really?
I'm a zombie now. I'm still not able to maintain a balance to my moods, or to my appetite, or to my energy levels.
On a positive note, while struggling to maintain a mood, I'm experiencing random hours of gratitude and joy, but I can't find anything to attach those moments to. It started last Tuesday when I was in the grocery store, looking at the canned soups, trying to find the one I like, when out of nowhere, I suddenly felt absolute peace wash over me as if someone had just poured a bucket of warm love onto me. I suddenly felt completely connected to "god" or to the peace of the Universe. I just felt grateful to be alive and like the whole world was made of milk and honey and marshmallows and daisies and warm blankees....
Since then, this is happening to me one to three times each day. For a few minutes or an hour here and there, a deep gratitude for being alive comes over me. It doesn't stay. In fact, I'm a little concerned. As I feel this zombie-like feeling of apathetic defeat, I feel my body failing. Muscles are weak. Knees want to buckle. My head wants to droop. I feel too tired to walk up a staircase without taking a break. I've read how infants who are fed and taken care of, but who are never held or loved, have a VERY high mortality rate. They lose their appetite, and die without any medically sound reason or cause. I feel like I know now how they can do that. When one feels completely unable to figure out what's happening around us, this kind of weakness can overtake us. We see people fall to their knees, or drop their coffee cup, or faint altogether when something happens around them that shocks them. To top it off, my mother had a strong connection to spirit, even though she didn't want it. After my little sister's death, mom, who was generally healthy, vowed to not live to Mother's Day that year. 9 months passed, and when Mother's Day was 3 weeks out, she started a rapid downhill spiral. Her liver and kidneys were suddenly shutting down. In those three weeks, she went from being a normal 77-year-old, to hospice, to passing away of natural causes 9 minutes before Mother's Day that year. So I know we can will ourselves to leave. Babies do it. Mom did it. I worry that I'm doing it now too.
Well. I don't know how to conclude. I don't think there's a conclusion to be made from this topic. So I guess the best way for me to close is to just stop writing.
I hope that those of us who feel this way are able to cling together a bit until we start to feel better.
Armee, Our Atmospheric river never materialized on my beach. I hope it stayed away from your neighborhood too.
SenseOrgan, I clicked the link. Very powerful. My T informs me that suffering is a learning tool. But the quote you sent today is going on my wall to say it in a more positive and "blessed" way. I like it! Wounds are where the light enters. It's true.
I have long believed that pain has a purpose, which is to drive change. When we don't feel pain, we don't have any reason to change. This quote about how wounds are where the light enters is saying the same thing to me, but in a much more poetic and positive selection of words.
Journal Entry for Saturday, November 23
I guess I'm not alone in this, but I'm a zombie now. I honestly feel like my soul is disconnecting and leaving my poor body to tumble around in a stupor. Rudderless. I feel weakness in every muscle and bone. I feel like my blood has drained out and my joints just haven't seized up yet.
As I practice "letting go" by using some of the techniques in the Sedona Method for allowing my feelings to just happen without me trying to suppress or repress or distract from them, I'm finding myself feeling ageless. I'm still here in my childhood. Anything that's ever caused me to be afraid is here in this realm of sustained fear that I'm in right now.
This year I have been triggered into the same fear that I felt as a child who was once pretending to be asleep while someone was tiptoeing around my bed. At 64 years old, as I close my eyes and feel the fear I'm in today, I can feel myself as a child. I'm still in that same fear.
Some teachers teach that we are not afraid "OF" anything. We're just afraid, and all the things that we think caused the fear, are not causes, but mere triggers. Access doors into the realm of fear.
Today's triggers are getting the blame, but in truth, the fear in me began at birth and just needed a trigger to remind me that it's all still there and it's all still working on my moods but is often buried so deep in my core wiring that sometimes I forget it's there. My fears today are not new fears, but the trigger is a new one. The trigger just reminded me that the ancient fear is still burning like a perpetual underground tire fire in my gut.
If I couldn't be happy before the trigger, why should I blame the trigger for my unhappiness now? Even before the election, I wasn't terribly happy. So what have I lost, really?
I'm a zombie now. I'm still not able to maintain a balance to my moods, or to my appetite, or to my energy levels.
On a positive note, while struggling to maintain a mood, I'm experiencing random hours of gratitude and joy, but I can't find anything to attach those moments to. It started last Tuesday when I was in the grocery store, looking at the canned soups, trying to find the one I like, when out of nowhere, I suddenly felt absolute peace wash over me as if someone had just poured a bucket of warm love onto me. I suddenly felt completely connected to "god" or to the peace of the Universe. I just felt grateful to be alive and like the whole world was made of milk and honey and marshmallows and daisies and warm blankees....
Since then, this is happening to me one to three times each day. For a few minutes or an hour here and there, a deep gratitude for being alive comes over me. It doesn't stay. In fact, I'm a little concerned. As I feel this zombie-like feeling of apathetic defeat, I feel my body failing. Muscles are weak. Knees want to buckle. My head wants to droop. I feel too tired to walk up a staircase without taking a break. I've read how infants who are fed and taken care of, but who are never held or loved, have a VERY high mortality rate. They lose their appetite, and die without any medically sound reason or cause. I feel like I know now how they can do that. When one feels completely unable to figure out what's happening around us, this kind of weakness can overtake us. We see people fall to their knees, or drop their coffee cup, or faint altogether when something happens around them that shocks them. To top it off, my mother had a strong connection to spirit, even though she didn't want it. After my little sister's death, mom, who was generally healthy, vowed to not live to Mother's Day that year. 9 months passed, and when Mother's Day was 3 weeks out, she started a rapid downhill spiral. Her liver and kidneys were suddenly shutting down. In those three weeks, she went from being a normal 77-year-old, to hospice, to passing away of natural causes 9 minutes before Mother's Day that year. So I know we can will ourselves to leave. Babies do it. Mom did it. I worry that I'm doing it now too.
Well. I don't know how to conclude. I don't think there's a conclusion to be made from this topic. So I guess the best way for me to close is to just stop writing.
I hope that those of us who feel this way are able to cling together a bit until we start to feel better.