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Messages - woodsgnome

#61
Hi, Transcendant  :wave:

I'm only too familiar with the outline you present of feeling violated and betrayed by both religion and familial abuse. The combination can be deadly, and it's more the wonder that some of us actually survived that sort of a double-whammy.

But survive we did, and here we are. Welcome to this forum and I hope you find its members to be understanding and supportive as you find and transition/transcend to be the whole person you are.
#62
General Discussion / Re: Help please
March 30, 2023, 03:10:20 AM
If you use the link referenced by Blueberry, that should help. It's unlike a formal manual, perhaps, but it's how I found my way into the confusion, excitement, panic, and above all -- curiosity about actually finding others journeying with the cptsd dragon.

I find the site resembles the condition -- confusing because it all seems to be, and is, troubling and I want to find the answer. Instead I find a multitude of possibilities, but not always hard and fast answers. In the end life is more about questions than answers. Especially with something like cptsd, which is so disruptive, lonely, and scary in its senselessness. Having had our souls ripped out of us isn't the easiest, but good for us knowing there must be some way to find relief in spite of it all.

So I hope you can stick with it. Thanks for sharing and hope to find you further on the trail towards finding your own deserved healing.
#63
Other / Re: Our Healing Porch Part 8
March 24, 2023, 06:22:10 PM
I came here with no intentions, with just the knowledge that there'd be something needed.

And that's what happened today -- I needed to find someone else, not searching for anything more than ourselves; and that's a lot, actually. Here it's a given that we can feel, and revel, in the freedom to find delight with the world.

The muffins and orange juice are great complimentary treats, but the highlight is finding someone else today -- someone who gets it (no explanations needed).

Thank you for being here, and for the invitation to join the dance. And now ...  :grouphug:
#64
Recovery Journals / Re: Path of Less Resistance
March 05, 2023, 11:40:52 PM
Very keen observations, Phoebes -- may this new pattern continue for you. It shows a willingness to actually turn the corner, not just know it's there. I've always found that hard; talk is easy and cheap, and then it seems like the swinging bridge scares me back to the safe point again.

I've also found an old dream recurring of late that might relate to the willingness to change. In the dream I'm stuck in my old childhood home, which appears in the dream a little worse off than it probably was. Yes, it was old and worn, but given my memories there it seemed to me as spooky and haunted, worse than in an old horror story.

Doesn't matter -- in my dream, I finally dare to open a creaky door leading to an upper area, but appearing too scary to at first risk opening the door. Finally I'm desperate, though, and I slowly open the heavy, creaky door and ... find it leads to a luxurious, peaceful space. Instead of dust and mold and creepy people, there's only an entire new space, open to the sky and with people who I can tell are much safer than those below.

Okay, lots of nuance and other parts to the dream. My point isn't so much about that as about how surprising a twist to my 'normal' state of affairs (grief, despair, self-hatred, doubt, etc.) that dream touched on, and the revelation of an entire new land, transcending the old musty tale, which is still present the  back of my mind, but diminished in its importance.

Back to the main element -- surprise! Being open to surprise is what the dream seemed to be screaming. Since then, I'd love to say I'm totally transformed. Not the case -- no great conclusive turning point but cue up a willingness to be surprised. Like opening that door in the dream, I've been able to adjust my viewpoint from the old rundown house below to the open-sky version of my life above. More like a transcendence, where the memories may still float in and out, but the new space has opened new panoramas of hope.

Wishing all the best for your explorations into accepting the view around the next corner, Phoebes. And too, hard as it may seem at first, releasing the resistance to accepting your transition to reclaim the real you.
#65
I second Kizzie's opinion -- following your own instincts seems to work best, as to when and/or where or what resonates deeply with you. With so much on this forum, that can be daunting but also lead to considering many facets of how others have dealt -- or not -- with some pretty devastating traumatic episodes. Definitive answers can come hard, but just glancing through some of the material on here can help, IMO. All part of the dance, I guess --  :grouphug:

#66
I feel a rapport with the roiling sort of pain and grief you've described here, natureluvr. After a lifetime of dealing with my own scars, I think maybe this journey is more like coming out in a totally new space, not just another side. In other words, somehow we find a new life totally beyond the one we were denied.

That old stuff might still fog up the rear-view mirror, but each moment those remnants fade further from affecting our new adventure.

This new landscape can be scary, full of fear and uncertainty. But even coming this far, you've already passed the starting point of the new life you deserve to find.

That starting point is here. You're out of the storm, where at last you can feel free to be you, safe in your own skin and more than ready to start building that new life.

Welcome to OOTS, natureluvr  :wave:


#67
Recovery Journals / Re: Master of my Seas Journal
January 08, 2023, 02:48:50 AM
What an outstanding example of your creative genius guiding your voyage into the new seas you've dreamed about finding.

Congratulations! 

:yes:  :thumbup:  :applause:  :applause:  :applause:  :yes:

                          :grouphug:
#68
The first time I read this, I tried to respond to this, as everything you brought up hits squarely and deep in my own wounded heart.

I still have no adequate words; senseless things are like that, and the more we try to find any answers, the worse we feel.

Here's what I DO find, though. I see, and admire, your efforts, Bach, in spilling out the raw emotional hurt you've endured. What your post shows is the inner courage and your strength in stepping forward with self-care.

There never can be words strong enough to fully soothe the deep hurt of it all. Still, you felt this need deeply enough to somehow find a response to a lack of love. In doing this, your self-love is like a beacon for the many here struggling to find that for themselves.

:hug:   
 
#69
Thanks for posting this reference, Kizzie.

While I didn't fully realize it at the time, and for sure don't understand how I was able to pull off this attitude, I seem to now see what was going on, to an extent.

The article refers to 'positive dissociating' from these encounters with narcissistic sorts seeking to control someone else. This didn't feel right, and instead of falling into  a major fight-back stance (a big part of what they probably wanted), I early-on seemed to have found a niche where the hurt never burst out that way. Anger? Yes. Humiliation? Some. Yet somehow I never went over the edge in response to even the most horrific and unbelievable abuses.

In some other posts, I've noted how I even came to regard some or all of the abusers as behaving like buffoons (most of them outright narcissists; though I didn't have that word for them at that time).

As was pointed out in the article, it's not always best to have the blow-back ready, even if it hurts in the meantime. There were even a couple of times when I sensed my abusers hanging back when my actions didn't match what they thought it 'should' happen on my part. They were ready to drop the other shoe, as it were, but of a sudden they seemed perplexed by my actions. So while dissociation can certainly be harmful at times, I seem to have found it as a partial way around the lies (and worse) that I was enduring.

While the dissociation did hurt at the time, and I still can feel the anger and rage now, my T has also pointed out that I can NOW safely respond, be it by hitting pillows or other actions that 'gets it out' but in ways only I notice; and definitely benefit from secretly using this 'of course' approach pointed to in the article.

Thanks again, Kizzie, and it's good to see you resurface here with your valuable contributions.  :hug:
#70
Recovery Journals / Re: Papa Coco's Recovery Journal
December 26, 2022, 07:17:15 PM
Maybe this reaction will seem trite, pollyannish, unrealistic, or what have you. ... but whatever good vibes you set aside for a future time, when things will magically pop in place, can be accessed right now.

This might not seem possible in the present crises, and in the external sense, may not be. But when you go inside your heart-sense, all of the positives are there, even if hidden for long or short periods of time.

Viewing the new as new, for real, may seem awkward at best and foolish besides, yet it can help us reach heights we never imagined, where the view is suddenly pristine, where the past is dissolved of its troubles, and we can feel confident in our ability to move on.

A while ago, you never thought you'd find this site/forum, and perhaps considered it as a dim ray of hope, and not like a functioning lighthouse. Having read your story, it seems that's changed. And if it has, what's ahead needn't repeat the past.

I know, it sounds as if maybe I don't get it (per one ancient liturgy, we are in the Feast of Fools). As recently as a couple days back, I was also deep in a rough spot. It never evens out, but the nice thing is when you realize you're further ahead than you once thought possible. A glance in the rear-view mirror shows all the rough spots, but they're receding further each moment.

Okay -- lotta words, but here's a more basic way I can share my feelings --  :bighug:
#71
Please Introduce Yourself Here / Re: Hey everyone!
December 16, 2022, 02:24:50 AM
Greetings, CrackedIce. Small steps indeed, and you've already taken a huge one -- reaching out in therapy and now here to dare diving in a little more as you grapple with lots of issues. The only tip I'd like to point out is -- be kind, and patient with yourself. Parts of this trail can be rough and foreboding, so being easy on yourself is a good set-off point.
#72
Announcements / Re: Kizzie away
December 16, 2022, 02:08:31 AM
Whatever the treatments involve there, I hope you will feel the vibes here and that the best wishes of all of us will lift your spirits. All the best, now and going forward.

:bighug:  and   :grouphug:
#73
Recovery Journals / Re: Elpha's New Pieces
December 15, 2022, 12:42:02 AM
I hope it's okay to add this little quote I ran into the other day -- it's from Greek poet Dinos Christianapouls. He wrote:

"They tried to bury us, but they didn't know we were seeds."

Hope your seeding of the new you goes well and grows strong and beautiful.



#74
Therapy / Re: Not sure about latest T
December 13, 2022, 10:26:10 PM
As someone who went through various forms of therapy from an assortment of therapists, I also found a huge disparity in who I felt connected with my issues, and personally as well. It's very hard, but important to really note when the fit just isn't there.

We are all unique, as are the approaches and backgrounds of therapists. Only after a span of some years and lots of false hopes and failed promises, I found someone who met my needs in a manner I felt compatible  with; if not always easy. Mind you, comfort is difficult, considering the void we're in when we decide to try therapy. Having been in and out, though, I can't offer any specific advice -- instead just encourage you, as you seem to have a feel for what might or might not help.

"Help" is the key word -- it's not the therapist's role to fix you --   but to be help you with your own journey. They can't do therapy for you, but what they offer in assisting you can help turn the tide. This is how my own experience has grown -- after all those therapists, I kept at it and finally found someone with an approach that seems to have fit me well. May you find a good way forward, and give yourself credit for having tried so far the best you can.

Wishing you the best.
#75
Recovery Journals / Re: Elpha's New Pieces
December 13, 2022, 09:43:38 PM
It's awful to read of all the roadblocks which have lately emerged for you. Especially considering your already remarkable turnaround from not too far back.

The word en-courage-ment comes to mind as playing a needed role in all of our stories. I think it's significant that courage stands out, in word if not in how you're feeling right now. What I mean comes strictly from observing the many turns you've taken, and how at each one you demonstrated your enormous capacity for courage.

Thank you for how, even in your current desperate pain and anxiety, you've been able to again muster the resolve to see this through. May the surgery go well, and may the coming days brighten.

Gently, I'll offer this --  :bighug:; -- hope it can help you keep finding ways which will carry you on to those brighter days.