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#21
Symptoms - Other / Feeling so alone.
Last post by BlueMoon_ - July 16, 2025, 07:17:45 PM
I have a therapist I talk to, but no friends close enough to talk deep stuff with.

I'm also frustrated because I've been applying to so many part time jobs and haven't gotten even an interview. I know the job market is hard now but I just feel so helpless and like I'll never get a job, I'll never be able to be financially independent and not have to rely on my parents.

It feels like no one's coming to help, you know?
#22
Recovery Journals / Re: Post-Traumatic Growth Jour...
Last post by SenseOrgan - July 16, 2025, 03:56:09 PM
Again I'm in an EF. I woke up scatter brained. That I skipped meditation because I didn't feel like it, should have been a red flag. That very rarely happens. My state got worse. I had great trouble selecting something to focus on, or to get it done. I needed to create more order in my chaotic environment. A good thought. I picked something involving a new operating system [OS] on a computer, which I had been working on for a while. Wrong choice.

Something very simple became something impossible. Not because of me, but because of the OS. In order to do A, I first had to do B. And to do B, I first had to do C. And so forth. In the end I ran out of options and everything failed. I got nothing done, except exacerbating my state. I was growling and cursing. I felt so bitter for life working against me all the time. Why do things have to be so * hard and complicated all the time? Give me a * brake for once!

I'm desperate and panicky. It scares me that I'm questioning the possibility of having a life instead of a survive. I'm convinced there's no hope for me. After all I've done, I'm still back in this horrible place. I see what's happening, and I don't care anymore. I'm sick and tired of working so damn hard and not getting anywhere. This state is a lot like I used to be in a very long time ago. I need a good night sleep. A benzo tonight. Tomorrow helping in the garden. I don't feel like it at all.
#23
DR - Disturbed Relationships / Calling someone out
Last post by NarcKiddo - July 16, 2025, 01:28:39 PM
I started an art course with a new teacher some weeks ago. A friend who had been to his classes before told me what to expect - which is actually that he does very little in the way of teaching. This particular group has been going for over 10 years. Basically you can just do your own thing and he will occasionally wander around to give helpful suggestions. He has given the occasional demonstration, which I have politely watched. I was not actually going there because I wanted formal teaching as such, so that was fine.

The class is very quiet. Two women chat to each other and there is occasional desultory chat within the group - usually prompted because someone asked a question. I have always participated in the desultory chat where appropriate.

The teacher makes the same comment on all of my work. Which is justified and fine and I agree with him. Most of the time I am planning to do x in due course. However I work slowly and build each part of a picture up in layers, so when he says "you need to do x" I do not rush to do x immediately because I am working on another section. I have explained this to him, although he seems not to hear me.

The course is ending soon. Next academic year he is running classes at a different time. The time clashes with a pre-existing exercise session so I will not be doing it. I told him this a few weeks ago when he brought up the subject. Yesterday he confirmed the new day and time, so I confirmed I would not be attending unless things change with my exercise class. He will be running occasional weekend days and I said I might attend some of those. All seemed fine.

At the end of class I left my equipment trolley and coat outside the classroom so I could go to the bathroom. As I came out to put my coat on I overheard the teacher and a classmate talking in the classroom. They could not see me. The teacher said "Oh and that other woman isn't doing the new course either." The classmate asked what other woman and the teacher said "Narckiddo. But I'm not surprised." Classmate asked why he was not surprised. Teacher said "Oh, NarcKiddo isn't at all interested." Classmate queried this and teacher said "No, she's not at all interested." Classmate asked why I would attend the classes if I was not interested (tone of voice implying that teacher is right - NK is weird) and teacher just insisted I was not interested in his classes. In a somewhat petulant tone as if I was somehow being insulting to him.

I was tempted to keep listening but I had called the lift and it had arrived, plus I did not want to be caught eavesdropping. So I left.

The thing is that I have become annoyed by what I overheard. It should not matter because I am not particularly sorry that I can't attend the new classes. The group does not really chat or engage so I have not made new friends there. I did not like to start chatting or looking at other people's work because it seems not to be the done thing there. I just kept myself to myself. The teacher did not really "teach".

Part of me feels I should just let it pass. But part of me wants to ask the teacher why he thinks I am not interested in his classes and what I should have done differently because maybe there is something to learn. And part of me wants to call him out because I'm angry that he would chat about me behind my back with a classmate and say things that are not true.

What I have no idea about is whether "normal" people would mention it to the teacher. I guess they would not if they were going to continue the classes, as that might be embarrassing. But I don't care if the teacher finds it embarrassing, and if I have done something wrong or been too reticent I might benefit from knowing for future reference.
#24
Sleep Issues / Re: Nightmares That Seem To Hi...
Last post by Armee - July 16, 2025, 01:14:23 PM
I wonder about this too Blue Moon. Sometimes my nightmares have recurring  themes that are clearly related to trying to work through some specific traumas. But every once in awhile I have one that seems as though it is an exact memory coming to me in my sleep. But it's hard to have faith in knowing what is real and true memory and what is not. I suppose that is true for memory in general too.

I guess one thing that helps though is knowing our minds are trying to work through things that need to be worked through. Even if we can't remember the dream or the memory enough.  :grouphug:
#25
Recovery Journals / Re: Post-Traumatic Growth Jour...
Last post by sanmagic7 - July 15, 2025, 02:00:13 PM
very insightful stuff, SO.  so glad you went with your gut all those times.  unfortunately, the therapeutic field is filled with too many people who are unaware of what trauma contains, what it's made of, or what horrible consequences it's left on a client.  and, dang, my dander was raised about blaming you for not 'getting there'.  that's never on the client.  rather, it's that the therapist doesn't know (yet or ever) how to help the client get to where they want or need to go.

unfortunately, it's a mindfield (i know the word is supposed to be minefield, but my fingers spelled this out instead, and i think it fits, too) out there when it comes to getting proper help from professionals.  my very first therapist ended up being a NPD, but of course i didn't know anything about me or any of this stuff at the time, and took her word on everything as gospel, so to speak.  it wrecked me, i pressed charges against her with the state board eventually, (it took me 8 yrs. to be able to finally get up the courage) and they told me i was correct in doing so. 

so, yes, going w/ your gut is so important.  i'm glad you can see more clearly now, even if you weren't able to do so at the time.  and i had to wonder inside what a bossy and controlling anybody was doing at a shamanic ritual in the first place!  so we live and learn.  i'm glad you made it out, and have made it thru until now.  keep going, ok?  love and hugs :hug:
#26
Recovery Journals / Re: Post-Traumatic Growth Jour...
Last post by SenseOrgan - July 15, 2025, 09:16:13 AM
NarcKiddo
Thanks for dropping by and sharing some of your own experience. I feel so lucky to have found a community with people like yourself. It's so important to be able to communicate about EF's with people who've been there too. It's great you're getting better at sitting with emotions. There's a limit to that, isn't it? Being alone with it is the factor that makes it so unbearable and seemingly forever in my case. That part of the EF is the pinnacle of what went wrong, which is relational. I find it very hard to organize a relational container to provide a safe enough space to process this. It's like no part of me is big enough to hold something of this magnitude on his own. A very good therapist I once had framed it as the feeling having you, instead of you having the feeling.  :hug:


sanmagic7
Good observation. That very much happened with the woman who organized the whole thing, who was present throughout. It was all sorts of unsafe for me to be there. As you know, that can get wildly out of hand when psychedelics are involved. Since the shaman was from a completely different culture [Shipibo], and I wasn't much into the shamanic side of things, or the worldview of many other participants, that felt very unsafe. It was an unwise decision on my part to attend. Even though I had talked to the woman who organized it quite extensively via e-mails. When I saw her IRL, I should have walked away. She was a trigger fest for me. Domineering and all over the place. It doesn't get much worse than to be at the mercy of somebody like that, when you're defenses are stripped down by psychedelics. It's a horrible combination with developmental trauma.

The environment triggered such alienation and fear in me, that my paranoid mind came up with that vision. I didn't expect there to be so much ritual involved, which triggered me like mad. I felt utterly out of place. My fawn response went through the roof. And a big dose of freeze was mixed in with it. I was reduced to a terrified, helpless little boy. I temporarily lost a lot of autonomy/ego strength that week and in the aftermath of that.

The shaman himself was actually a nice guy. He only spoke Spanish, which I don't [except for the part where I briefly could a bit!]. Since those experiences involved psychedelics, it's all kinds of unexplainable. A far away part of me remained in everyday reality, and knew the demonic vision was not real. In the midst of it. There was also a moment where the entire group, me and the shaman included, burst out laughing. A very special moment, in the otherwise dead silent, and pitch dark hall. When it was my turn to undergo the ritual that he did for everyone, I uttered "muy comico", which initiated a bit of a rerun of the hilarity for no apparent reason. It was summer 2019, and speaking with you about this now, does help to shed some light on these experiences. Thank you for that. In the end, the * is usually about the relationship with my mother.

I feel stronger today. Not so much in the EF. I wrote the below last night. It feels like I've taken some power back from the overwhelm again. Thank you for being a factor in that.  :hug:

*********************************************************************************************************

Today I spent a couple of hours with a questionnaire. A friend wants to know if he's on the autism spectrum. I'd be surprised if he isn't. If I would be asked why, I wouldn't have an answer straight away. I'm intuitive. It takes time to English or Dutch that. I just tap into that and try to translate until it feels "right". My shrink tends to believe it's perfectionism. To me it's wanting to say something that I actually agree with, and filtering out the rest.

The way I tick has been a great source of suffering. I remember drawing a translation machine in group therapy. It was tied to the ocean floor with a chain, and the machine itself was being smashed around by the waves, while it churned out unintelligible characters. Many years later it struck me how well the image captured how I often felt. The irony was that the group session ended with the therapist and the group putting pressure on me to accept some story they had formed about it. What I remember is that I felt completely misunderstood. The very kind of lonely and powerless desperation I had tried to communicate with something else than the words I couldn't find for it. A whole group of steam rollers drove over me. No space for my experience here either. No space for me. Client centered therapy. Looks great on paper. I still don't regret honoring my experience and refusing to swallow the force-fed meal. Not in that, and not in any other of the gazillion times this sort of thing happened. Sure they all meant well. And it was a very painful rerun of the invalidation that had pushed me to this place to begin with. The only place that was available for me at the time.

In all therapies in that clinic, the idea seeped through that being mentally ill is some kind of wrong view or missing insight. I never understood how clearly intelligent and professionally trained people could navigate with such a reductionist premise. Even though there's a place for questioning the patient's beliefs and experience, this kind of angle inherently further undermines the very thing which has been damaged or even destroyed by abuse. It's the opposite of helping a person to trust his inner voice and self-validating his experience. If the therapist doesn't believe in the client, who will? A therapist not placing his bets fundamentally on the self-healing capacity of the client has not understood what healing means. That is dangerous, with so much power and so much vulnerability confined in a tiny space.

Being at the mercy of these people, and having them deepening the invalidation, and insisting on self-abandonment made me want to scream at them. I did a couple of times [not that I could translate what I felt so clearly]. It was all pathological in their eyes, off course. That's how they labeled me. It was re-traumatizing to be in that situation. A whole year. I chose me regardless. Over and over. That was what I considered actual therapy. Not what was presented as such. Anger is hard for me to express. It evokes a lot of anxiety, and it takes a lot for me to go against the shame that keeps it festering in a hidden place. I don't regret ever trusting my gut over any kind of psycho babble.

Many years later I understood that a good enough therapist has faith in the patient himself. A lot of people are afraid of not knowing, of letting go. Therapists are just like people. There's a place for top down. Not so much in "treating" developmental trauma. The best therapists I had were very good at attunement, and not afraid of any emotion. It's a specific blend of humility, compassion, courage, experience, and wisdom that makes a good therapist. A prerequisite is having done a lot of your own work first. That makes up a significant proportion of where the rub is, I'm sure. Inevitably transference does kick in. As a patient, therapists basically tried to teach me how they themselves deal with difficult stuff. Which most often was a version of altering the story around it. That's not how trauma stops ruling your life.

How about those feelings being the story that needs to be finally heard? How about experiencing that buried reality in the presence of an attuned other being the very thing that sets free? How about not abandoning, about not choosing fear once again? How about staying? How about opening your own heart and connecting from a human, vulnerable place yourself? I can go on and on. I met a lot of therapists who are afraid of themselves, and therefore didn't bring their heart to their job. There's no such thing as professional distance and being there for a human being in great need at the same time. A traumatized child or a regressed adult smells that from miles away, even if it doesn't happen on a conscious level. Safety can't be faked. What kind of healing will happen if that basis isn't taken care of? Any person in touch with his own emotions doesn't need to be taught that. It's very taxing to be a therapist. Because it requires you to show up, and welcome things in yourself that get triggered. Like "failing".

They blamed me for not getting "there". Like I was a recalcitrant kid sabotaging his own treatment. I was asked what I needed to feel safe. So they did pick up that I didn't. On the surface, it looks like a good question to ask. But it not being obvious that the angle they came from prevents that foundation to get established, makes that a very sad thing to say. If you ask a desperate child that question, you are stating that you are not attuned to him. That itself is the seed where attachment trauma, and thus the danger in connection, sprouted from. How therapeutic is it to recreate that environment and to blame a traumatized person in your care for blocking his own progress?

Because I listened to my gut, I knew exactly what I needed to. Even though I didn't know it intellectually. I'm so glad I didn't let these people in any more than I did. They had no business there. I guess that what I refer to as my "gut", or my intuition, is a bit like that ocean floor the translation machine was anchored to. It has always been my connection to home. Deep below all the turmoil. The sense of belonging is infinitely greater there than what anybody tried to convince me of. No words are needed to make that clear. Just like you know when you're at home. Because it's me.
#27
Recovery Journals / Re: I Am
Last post by sanmagic7 - July 14, 2025, 12:17:09 PM
Bach, i echo NK's words of wisdom.  the struggle of staying here, making it thru each day, just seems overwhelming at times.  i relate to that all the time.  looking back, it's what i see my entire life to be - one big struggle.  it's so wearing.  hang on tight, ok?  we're here with you.  you are so much more than your mother's expectations.  love and hugs :hug:
#28
Recovery Journals / Re: Post-Traumatic Growth Jour...
Last post by sanmagic7 - July 14, 2025, 12:13:35 PM
SO, that shaman experience pinged me, like it was something you've experienced in your past which is why it happened in your present.  i mean, the idea of people presenting themselves as helpers, someone there who was supposed to take care of you, but ended up doing quite the opposite, and were awful to you instead.  that's what your experience spoke to me. it must have been absolutely terrifying.

thanks for sharing.  i've actually been one who did some drugs in my past for 'fun', but ended up being quite paranoid sometimes, having panic attacks, etc., believing my friends were laughing at me - so, no, it was not very much fun at all a lot of times, altho at other times it was a laugh riot. stopped all that quite a while ago, tho.  not worth it.

and i agree, EF's seem to take all power away to make rational decisions at times.  ugh!

i hope you find some peace soon, are able to get your feet under you, so to speak, and can experience some restful sleep.  i know compliments can be difficult, but i wouldn't say anything of that sort to you unless i truly believed it.  you are wonderful.  love and hugs
#29
Recovery Journals / Re: Post-Traumatic Growth Jour...
Last post by NarcKiddo - July 14, 2025, 11:50:27 AM
Quote from: SenseOrgan on July 13, 2025, 04:00:46 PMThat experience where it feels like it'll be like this forever and there's no way out whatsoever

Yes, I find that experience very hard to bear. I am getting better at sitting with emotions as my T advises, but sometimes the forever feeling is intolerable nevertheless. Even when I know, intellectually, that it is coming from an EF.

Thank you for writing your experiences in your journal. You write beautifully.
#30
Recovery Journals / Re: I Am
Last post by NarcKiddo - July 14, 2025, 11:39:10 AM
Quote from: Bach on July 05, 2025, 06:06:56 PMThe other day, I realised that I have actually been fairly successful in life relative to the things my mother implicitly (and in some ways, even explicitly) taught me were important when I was a child.  These things are, finding someone to take care of me financially, being sexually adventurous, and not being fat. 
Oh, crikey. That resonates.
 :grouphug:

And yes, I am sure you could have done all manner of different things if you had been given better examples and proper support and encouragement. And it really sucks that you weren't. I am also sorry that the fact you are absolutely a better person than your mother does not seem like enough, because it is a big achievement. It's an achievement you have reached all by yourself, too. So well done to you and I am sorry it feels a bit hollow. That feeling resonates, too, and it is grossly unfair that life has dealt us the hands it has.  :hug: