Recent posts
#21
Recovery Journals / Re: Papa Coco's Recovery Journ...
Last post by Blueberry - January 18, 2026, 12:02:23 PM
to you PapaCoco. You made it! You married Coco! Your FOO didn't win that one. #22
Recovery Journals / Re: the next step
Last post by Chart - January 18, 2026, 09:40:22 AMYou're in my thoughts this weekend, San. Take care. Sending love.
#23
Ideas/Tools for Recovery / Re: The individual Healing Coo...
Last post by Marcine - January 18, 2026, 08:17:06 AMHi Chart,
I love your idea of sharing healing recipes.
Here are the ingredients for my daily nourishment:
- morning t'ai chi
- evening yoga and meditation
- aerobic exercise outdoors (hike, bike, swim, snowshoe, xc ski— as seasons and mood allow)
- emotional literacy
* I've practiced for the past 4+ years actively noticing and naming my feelings in the moment, writing them each as single words in circles, then with 3 lines from each circle, writing 3 related feelings under each main one. I do this with paper and pen. And when I am done noting them, I say I am feeling all this and it's ok.
(This was a Richard Grannon exercise originally.)
I found it to be the key to unlock the vault where I had had to hide my self long ago. It amazes me to see the kaleidoscope of my emotions! I sometimes have seemingly conflicting feelings at any given moment—- calm and terrified... hopeful and depressed.
And I always gain insights into my self... and eventually compassion. Especially during a flashback or stress.
It was hard to start because I didn't know how to find my feelings or identify them. Wasn't sure I was worthy of feeling them.
But I just began. With rudimentary feeling words at first, then I got more literate and built up to being able to smoothly and accurately describe my feelings to myself.
It really helped me thaw out and connect with myself. I still find it useful on a daily basis as I continue my adventure of being a good friend to myself.
I love your idea of sharing healing recipes.
Here are the ingredients for my daily nourishment:
- morning t'ai chi
- evening yoga and meditation
- aerobic exercise outdoors (hike, bike, swim, snowshoe, xc ski— as seasons and mood allow)
- emotional literacy
* I've practiced for the past 4+ years actively noticing and naming my feelings in the moment, writing them each as single words in circles, then with 3 lines from each circle, writing 3 related feelings under each main one. I do this with paper and pen. And when I am done noting them, I say I am feeling all this and it's ok.
(This was a Richard Grannon exercise originally.)
I found it to be the key to unlock the vault where I had had to hide my self long ago. It amazes me to see the kaleidoscope of my emotions! I sometimes have seemingly conflicting feelings at any given moment—- calm and terrified... hopeful and depressed.
And I always gain insights into my self... and eventually compassion. Especially during a flashback or stress.
It was hard to start because I didn't know how to find my feelings or identify them. Wasn't sure I was worthy of feeling them.
But I just began. With rudimentary feeling words at first, then I got more literate and built up to being able to smoothly and accurately describe my feelings to myself.
It really helped me thaw out and connect with myself. I still find it useful on a daily basis as I continue my adventure of being a good friend to myself.
#24
Symptoms - Other / Re: Schrodingers jealousy
Last post by lowbudgetTV - January 18, 2026, 05:36:14 AMHi NK and all, reading this thread made me think of an adjacent situation with my mother. Schrodinger's Jealousy manifested for me as Schrodinger's Self.
My mother often talked about things and misrecalled details I'd mention in passing. My true self, to her, was stuff I'd randomly say or acknowledge. Somehow, My mother's daughter (me; only child) wanted to move to Paris (ew!?), loved octopi, and wanted to raise rabbits. I don't know any parent who would willingly give their child an exotic pet because they went "aw, cute animal!" once in passing, save for if that parent was a stereotypical distant rich parent of a bratty child in a film, lol.
The confusion comes in alongside like, gaslighting, I personally think. It's an adjacent or subcategory, it is! It's how they say "so I know you're so happy!" or "don't be mad" before giving you a chance to actually be a person. It makes you confused, and it creates conflict if you protest. It also makes you feel crazy (gaslighting) because you begin to wonder if you ever did like/do/feel what they're implying. And even if you DID, and now don't feel the same, they denied you the ability to grow and change and present yourself differently (I often had my parents speak for me, telling others what I was or felt...)
In short, no wonder we might all feel like we don't know who we are, what we like, et cetera. We were puppeted like dolls sometimes!
My mother often talked about things and misrecalled details I'd mention in passing. My true self, to her, was stuff I'd randomly say or acknowledge. Somehow, My mother's daughter (me; only child) wanted to move to Paris (ew!?), loved octopi, and wanted to raise rabbits. I don't know any parent who would willingly give their child an exotic pet because they went "aw, cute animal!" once in passing, save for if that parent was a stereotypical distant rich parent of a bratty child in a film, lol.
The confusion comes in alongside like, gaslighting, I personally think. It's an adjacent or subcategory, it is! It's how they say "so I know you're so happy!" or "don't be mad" before giving you a chance to actually be a person. It makes you confused, and it creates conflict if you protest. It also makes you feel crazy (gaslighting) because you begin to wonder if you ever did like/do/feel what they're implying. And even if you DID, and now don't feel the same, they denied you the ability to grow and change and present yourself differently (I often had my parents speak for me, telling others what I was or felt...)
In short, no wonder we might all feel like we don't know who we are, what we like, et cetera. We were puppeted like dolls sometimes!
#25
Other / Re: Strange Occurrence: Deep D...
Last post by lowbudgetTV - January 18, 2026, 05:06:13 AMThank you NK, Teddy and Chart! I do agree. It must be something about my childhood experience that got blocked, and now it is strange trying to feel it now.
I especially agree with your Ancedote NK!
I relate to this a lot. I would feel repulsed often by my mother, especially when she would verbally whine and get fustrated. Perhaps this is the through-line. I saw her and was fustrated with her for having her life be harder than it needed to be and she refused. I remember many times when I got older that I shut down, became the adult, and then solved her problem to get the sound of that screeching whine to go away. It was textbook!
Additionally, to the second point, I would hate when she was vulnerable with me. I would hate being loved. It was not typical teenager angst. I knew somehow that it was different and worse. It felt fake and wrong.
Yet I am protective of children. I love how many stories there are nowadays of--and I suppose anywhere but here would this be an off color thing to say--genuinely abused children getting happy endings. I learned about the eucatastrophe in University Lit Classes and I identified with it ever since. (Wikipedia explains it perfectly well: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eucatastrophe) I really liked watching the Owl House, a fairly recent Disney TV show, for a character in that. A even younger me would've loved it.
I think that really sums up what I feel too. I like cute things, but I'm also rough. I am hard with a soft interior (though IRL I probably usually appear soft with a very hard interior; some people do think I look scary sometimes... I think its my "RBF")
This is all to say that I'll probably be exploring these feelings through art. I like stories and comics, so I need to draw it out more. I did recently finish an art piece, actually, that depicted a strong emotion using a character I connected with.
Anyways, to end my ramblings (I approve of them; ramble on my threads if you have thoughts!), I do think my feelings reflect my thoughts and experiences with the people I fear and loathe. There were times I was made fun of for liking "weak, childish" things. There were times I was made to feel less by being treated like a baby. Studying Disability Rights and Culture too, I have seen so many instances where certain people are treated a certain way and it feels so dehumanizing to be babied. My mother and other family definitely did that specific stuff in addition to how they treated me. Not to mention how sensitive I was to situations where nothing was being done but could've been done, and the only way to free myself was to grow up.
I want to be treated, rewarded, celebrated, sometimes babied by the ones I truly loved--but I also want to be an adult with my own individuality and changing interests. I am intelligent, and I also happen to like soft things. Then, it is perfectly normal to turn around and like dark things too (I wrote this and recalled a time where my mother got mad at me for drawing a bloody vampire, saying it was too scary. Too bad! My art makes people feel emotions and that's the point sometimes, to feel uncomfy!). I am a human and I am complex.
I especially agree with your Ancedote NK!
Quote from: NarcKiddo on January 17, 2026, 02:19:27 PMI had to "mature" extremely fast for my life to be somehow tolerable. In with that, my mother was and is very immature. She is like a giant, vindictive toddler and actually is not shy of acknowledging she is childish at times. So for me, the thought of possibly being vulnerable like a child is awful.
[...]
The instant my mother tries to manoeuvre me into a child position, however, I am on full alert. She is not safe, and my child parts are not yet convinced that I am able to protect them.
I relate to this a lot. I would feel repulsed often by my mother, especially when she would verbally whine and get fustrated. Perhaps this is the through-line. I saw her and was fustrated with her for having her life be harder than it needed to be and she refused. I remember many times when I got older that I shut down, became the adult, and then solved her problem to get the sound of that screeching whine to go away. It was textbook!
Additionally, to the second point, I would hate when she was vulnerable with me. I would hate being loved. It was not typical teenager angst. I knew somehow that it was different and worse. It felt fake and wrong.
Yet I am protective of children. I love how many stories there are nowadays of--and I suppose anywhere but here would this be an off color thing to say--genuinely abused children getting happy endings. I learned about the eucatastrophe in University Lit Classes and I identified with it ever since. (Wikipedia explains it perfectly well: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eucatastrophe) I really liked watching the Owl House, a fairly recent Disney TV show, for a character in that. A even younger me would've loved it.
I think that really sums up what I feel too. I like cute things, but I'm also rough. I am hard with a soft interior (though IRL I probably usually appear soft with a very hard interior; some people do think I look scary sometimes... I think its my "RBF")
This is all to say that I'll probably be exploring these feelings through art. I like stories and comics, so I need to draw it out more. I did recently finish an art piece, actually, that depicted a strong emotion using a character I connected with.
Anyways, to end my ramblings (I approve of them; ramble on my threads if you have thoughts!), I do think my feelings reflect my thoughts and experiences with the people I fear and loathe. There were times I was made fun of for liking "weak, childish" things. There were times I was made to feel less by being treated like a baby. Studying Disability Rights and Culture too, I have seen so many instances where certain people are treated a certain way and it feels so dehumanizing to be babied. My mother and other family definitely did that specific stuff in addition to how they treated me. Not to mention how sensitive I was to situations where nothing was being done but could've been done, and the only way to free myself was to grow up.
I want to be treated, rewarded, celebrated, sometimes babied by the ones I truly loved--but I also want to be an adult with my own individuality and changing interests. I am intelligent, and I also happen to like soft things. Then, it is perfectly normal to turn around and like dark things too (I wrote this and recalled a time where my mother got mad at me for drawing a bloody vampire, saying it was too scary. Too bad! My art makes people feel emotions and that's the point sometimes, to feel uncomfy!). I am a human and I am complex.
#26
Recovery Journals / Re: the next step
Last post by sanmagic7 - January 18, 2026, 02:56:13 AMthank you so, TBB. i appreciate all the healing sent my way. i just need to rest off the stress of last week.
hannah1, i forgot to thank you for your validating words - haven't been thinking straight, foggy brain and all. thanks for the extra hope coming my way - much appreciated. i think i've been thru this ordeal enough times to know i want a T who wants to take care of me, not the other way around, and i'm no longer afraid to say so. i was, very much so, in the past, but it's been a long road and a lot of practice w/ much encouragement from people like you to get me to where i am. thank you so.
hangin' in. cutting way back this weekend.
hannah1, i forgot to thank you for your validating words - haven't been thinking straight, foggy brain and all. thanks for the extra hope coming my way - much appreciated. i think i've been thru this ordeal enough times to know i want a T who wants to take care of me, not the other way around, and i'm no longer afraid to say so. i was, very much so, in the past, but it's been a long road and a lot of practice w/ much encouragement from people like you to get me to where i am. thank you so.
hangin' in. cutting way back this weekend.
#27
Recovery Journals / Re: The tipping point…
Last post by sanmagic7 - January 18, 2026, 02:51:04 AMchart, your thanks are profoundly and gently received because a lot of us know how very difficult it is to take in the good stuff. we know, with bells on, how to take in the bad - lots of practice with that. here, amazingly enough, there are a bunch of honest, caring people who, as far as i've known, do not lie when they give out compliments. for me, it's been part of the reprogramming, getting pos. stuff over and over until it finally finds its way to sinking in, even if only an inch at first, but eventually all the way to the heart, cells, and soul.
we wouldn't say these things if we didn't mean it. with our experiences, we know what pos., healthy parenting looks like, and i, for one, absolutely want to celebrate it. you deserve it, chart. i hope you can begin taking it in as real. this is what we all wish we had. love and hugs
we wouldn't say these things if we didn't mean it. with our experiences, we know what pos., healthy parenting looks like, and i, for one, absolutely want to celebrate it. you deserve it, chart. i hope you can begin taking it in as real. this is what we all wish we had. love and hugs
#28
Recovery Journals / Re: The tipping point…
Last post by TheBigBlue - January 18, 2026, 12:00:37 AM
#29
Recovery Journals / Re: The tipping point…
Last post by Chart - January 17, 2026, 09:38:05 PMMarcine, SanMagic, SenseOrgan, NarcKiddo, Armee, DesertFlower, TheBigBlue, BlueSky, Dollyvee!!!
Good lord, thank you! I feel like my thanks are so insufficient. But, lordy, your presence, it helps so much. I still feel like a fraud, but I know the inner critic does fraud really well... so I just try to ignore the IC as much as I can. It's such a struggle for me to receive. I can give. Was trained to give. Was trained to climb up on that cross and give until my last breath, but receiving is a million times harder. I breath, I relax, it's okay. Might never go away... completely. It is such a funny feeling... people always say "Trust your feelings"... sadly, with Cptsd, it's just not possible, so many of my "feelings" are just dead-wrong.
Thank you all again soo much.
Good lord, thank you! I feel like my thanks are so insufficient. But, lordy, your presence, it helps so much. I still feel like a fraud, but I know the inner critic does fraud really well... so I just try to ignore the IC as much as I can. It's such a struggle for me to receive. I can give. Was trained to give. Was trained to climb up on that cross and give until my last breath, but receiving is a million times harder. I breath, I relax, it's okay. Might never go away... completely. It is such a funny feeling... people always say "Trust your feelings"... sadly, with Cptsd, it's just not possible, so many of my "feelings" are just dead-wrong.
Thank you all again soo much.
#30
Recovery Journals / Re: Hope's Journal 2026
Last post by Chart - January 17, 2026, 09:16:21 PMHi Hope,
I read your opening post for 2026 and was very touched. But I didn't respond immediately, probably related to being interrupted by a child or suchlike :-) Anyway, I'm back and I wanted to say how much I sensed self-care and understanding in your objectives for this year. It was very touching to read and feel the love in your words to yourself. It was inspiring, thank you.
And your comment to your husband about your night cries was touching too. I totally agree, it's probably better that it comes out, than it stays in. This has been a thought of mine since my last EF. I had the strange thought last week, when I was feeling pretty terrible, something like, imagine if I DIDN'T feel this? That is to say, it's there, but I don't feel it? And the next thought struck me... is it possible that it's actually "healthy" to feel the pain? That the "negative modality" (the Trauma) that must/needs/wants to come out, is much much better since it IS coming out? Imagine it's there, but it stays inside, hidden, crushed, throbbing...
This has been along the lines of my thinking for a long time about the purpose of pain. I feel a little childish thinking this, but I've not really understood why there's so much pain... And the idea has slowly been forming that pain is part of healing... or even, pain "initiates" healing. Whether it's the start of healing or integral to the process, I'm not sure...
Sorry to divert a little bit on my ideas, but your experience of night terrors brought it up in a very interesting way for me. Though I am very sorry you are experiencing that.
Sending love and hoping for peaceful rest.
I read your opening post for 2026 and was very touched. But I didn't respond immediately, probably related to being interrupted by a child or suchlike :-) Anyway, I'm back and I wanted to say how much I sensed self-care and understanding in your objectives for this year. It was very touching to read and feel the love in your words to yourself. It was inspiring, thank you.
And your comment to your husband about your night cries was touching too. I totally agree, it's probably better that it comes out, than it stays in. This has been a thought of mine since my last EF. I had the strange thought last week, when I was feeling pretty terrible, something like, imagine if I DIDN'T feel this? That is to say, it's there, but I don't feel it? And the next thought struck me... is it possible that it's actually "healthy" to feel the pain? That the "negative modality" (the Trauma) that must/needs/wants to come out, is much much better since it IS coming out? Imagine it's there, but it stays inside, hidden, crushed, throbbing...
This has been along the lines of my thinking for a long time about the purpose of pain. I feel a little childish thinking this, but I've not really understood why there's so much pain... And the idea has slowly been forming that pain is part of healing... or even, pain "initiates" healing. Whether it's the start of healing or integral to the process, I'm not sure...
Sorry to divert a little bit on my ideas, but your experience of night terrors brought it up in a very interesting way for me. Though I am very sorry you are experiencing that.
Sending love and hoping for peaceful rest.