Sometimes you will be too much for people.
Sometimes you won’t be enough. Sometimes they will find you too sensitive Sometimes they’ll say you are too insensitive. Sometimes you will make decisions that hurt others. Sometimes the decisions of others will hurt you. Sometimes you will be lonely. Sometimes you will wish for solitude. Sometimes you will feel like all eyes are on you. Sometimes you will feel invisible. Sometimes the people you need to cheer you on won’t be there. Sometimes people around you will shout things that aren’t true. Sometimes you will feel too focused on a goal. Sometimes you will feel lost and directionless. Sometimes you will lie awake at night unable to find sleep. Sometimes you will crawl under the covers, afraid to face the world. Sometimes. Not all the time. Sometimes you will feel valued, seen, and appreciated, despite your flawed parts. Sometimes you will find your confidence, support, and direction. Sometimes you will be at peace and rest easily at night. Through all the sometimes, there will be constants to hold on to. You matter. Your life has meaning. You are not alone. Tomorrow is always a new day. Sometimes you just need to hold on.
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Sometimes the darkness sets in.
Like many people right now, I am emotionally spent. Empty. Exhausted. Broken. My thoughts are cloudy. My creativity is stunted. My attention span is non existent. The arguing and tension and constant back and forth of the past week has completely drained me. The anger, hatred, mistrust, and insults have deflated my hope. I could feel the darkness coming this time and I tried hard to make it stop. I decorated my house for the holidays to usher in some cheer. I rearranged my living room to give a refresh to my surroundings. I limited social media. I firmed up my boundaries with people that drain me. I spent time being with and talking to people I love. I clung to anything that felt remotely like hope. But the darkness still came. I opened my eye this morning and felt it - the crushing weight of depression and anxiety. The air was thick with it. So, I stopped fighting it. This morning I let the tears come. I moved some of my “to do” items to later this week. I gave myself permission to be gentle with myself. I leaned in to the things I can control. Although I feel the weight of the darkness, I will show up today for the people who need me. I will be kind to myself. I will keep looking for signs of hope and cling to them tightly. I will continue to try to spread lightness, even in times of darkness. I will celebrate the little things. For those of you feeling it all too, remember that you are not alone. This hard time will pass. Brighter days are ahead. They have to be. Life is messy today.
Right now from my home office window, I can see the first snow of the season as it drifts gently down into my backyard — a backyard that still is somehow straddling not just summer and fall but now also winter. The hammock that I like to lounge in on hot summer days is still sitting under my favorite tree. That favorite tree is still in the process of shedding its vibrant orange and red leaves, many of which now cover my backyard. Summer, fall, and winter are alive in my backyard-all at once. My yard is in the space between. The space where nothing is clear. The space of messy overlap. My life feels like it is in that messy space too. My kids are remote learners but also attend school in person a few days each week. I am working full time but I haven’t seen the inside of my actual office in months. I am exhausted but also cannot sleep. I am content but also cry at the drop of a hat. I am hopeful but also anxious. I feel loved but also lonely. I long for the warmth of summer but also enjoy the forced hibernation winter brings. I crave connection but also need time to be alone. I am like my backyard — messy, unclear, and clinging to different seasons all at once. Today I will embrace the beauty that this in-between space brings. Today I will marvel at the scene of summer, fall, and winter co-existing in one messy space. One beautiful messy space. Sometimes there is beauty in the mess. Even my mess. Even yours too. Today my laptop crashed.
In the middle of my workday, with 27 tabs open as I balanced insurance billing, reviewed new client documents, read emails from my children’s teachers, and did some online shopping before my Kohls cash expires, my laptop was like “Nah. Peace out. I’m done.” I have never identified more with a machine than I did in that moment. It reached its limit. It simply had too many internet tabs, excel documents, word documents, sticky notes, and programs running all at once. It just couldn’t do it anymore. How many of you can relate? How many of you, right now, are at the end of your rope? How many of you feel like you can’t do it anymore either. My laptop and I are right there with you! As I sat staring at the screen, unable to engage the mouse, or the escape button, or any reset tricks, I realized that I had no choice. I had to force my laptop to reset. As I pushed the power button, sending the laptop into its power down mode, I felt a twinge of jealousy. How lovely would it be to power down right now? How nice would it be for someone to walk in and say to me: “You need to reset. I’m shutting everything down for you and giving you a chance to catch your breath and restart.” I’m quite sure a lot of you can relate. As a psychotherapist, I get to have some insight of how people, in general, are doing. You know what, the pulse check right now is pretty concerning. People’s lives are filled with stress, anxiety, depression, and hopelessness right now. So many people have a million tabs open at a time and are completely overloading their operating systems, at risk of crashing at any minute. Don’t be like my laptop. Don’t wait until you have no choice but to shut down. Take a break now. Close some of your open tabs. Schedule a reboot. Give yourself a break. Recognize that we all need a break and if you don’t schedule one for yourself, eventually you will just get stuck and need a forced reset — probably in the middle of some important project or at the worst time possible. Take a few minutes, maybe right now, but at least soon, to figure out how to prevent your own crash. Today I painted my nails two different colors.
I know. I’m sure some of you are thinking “Girl, what’s the big deal? I paint my nails ten different colors each week!” But when you are like me, you get comfortable with being comfortable. You don’t stray too much over the lines. You avoid change. You order the same meals at the same restaurants. You watch the same tv shows over and over again. You wear the same clothes week after week — often buying the same shirts and pants in different colors and sometimes in the same colors because you know you like them. You look for the predictable, the routine, the ordinary — especially in the midst of a pandemic. Those ordinary things became a lifeline for me this year. As the world outside me swirled into chaos over the last several months, I leaned into the things I could control and the things I could predict. I responded to the daily uncertainty of our lives by choosing to live my life in comfort, a space that sometimes felt like control. But today I leaned a bit out of my comfort zone. I embraced something unpredictable and different. I chose change. Yes, today I remembered that even though it’s safe and cozy sometimes to live inside the lines, sometimes the things that make us feel secure are actually the things that hold us back from living life to its fullest. So, to those of you out there coping like me — by choosing order, predictability, and ordinary — today might be a good day to stray just a bit outside the lines. I can’t promise that you won’t regret it but I can promise that it’s an important exercise. Hey you out there, the woman holding back who she really is, stop.
It’s ok to step into your light. It’s ok to show up and be yourself. It’s ok to finally figure out who your real people are. It’s ok to want more, ask for more, need more. It’s ok to be the person you really are. It’s ok to ask for help. It’s ok to break a little, feel lost, and struggle with the next steps. It’s ok to make changes in your life. It’s ok to be vulnerable. It’s ok to acknowledge that life is sometimes really freaking hard. It’s ok to be 100% you. It’s ok to be proud of yourself. It’s ok to be happy. It’s ok to be ok. An important moment happened the other night.
It was just a brief moment, so brief that many people may not have even noticed it. It was a moment that was so easily eclipsed by the other moments around it that I almost didn’t even write about it. But just today alone two people have brought the moment up in session. Yes, we need to shine some light on the moment. We need to amplify the moment. It was a moment when a father from a generation not known for understanding mental health talked openly, candidly, emotionally, with rawness, and with true humanity about addiction. Yes, I am going to talk about a moment in THE debate. You know, the debate that has been talked about and fought about and debated about incessantly over the past few days. But, I don’t want to talk about the content of the debate or what led to the moment or what people think about the candidates and moderator. I just want to focus on the moment. We all, collectively, NEED to focus on the moment. It is a moment that so many people who have struggled with addiction yearn for — the moment when their loved one stands up and literally says to the world: “My son/daughter/wife/husband/sister/brother/mother/father/friend had a drug problem. They’ve worked on it. And I’m proud of them.” As I watched that moment in real time, I saw all those subtle changes in facial expressions, skin color, speech rhythm, breathing rate, and intonation that I’m trained as a therapist to pick up on. In that moment, the Earth stopped spinning for just a beat for me. My own breath caught in my throat as I realized just how powerful that moment could be for anyone who has faced addiction and how powerful that moment could be for the topic of addiction itself. How powerful are those two words for people on both sides of the addiction struggle? “I’m proud.” It was an important moment for there still is so much shame and judgment around the topic of addiction, even after recovery. That moment reminded us that not only is it ok to stand up, even when the whole world is watching, and be proud of your loved one for battling addiction, it’s crucial. It’s powerful. It can be life altering. Perhaps even more importantly, imagine the power of being able to say “I’m proud of myself.” To those of you who have been touched by addiction, I see you. I hear you. I’m proud of how fiercely you fight that battle. Change is coming. The tides are turning. The shame is lifting. More moments are coming. Share your pride for your loved ones. Share your pride for yourself. I’m proud of all of you walking through the battlefield of addiction. Keep fighting. Silence.
It’s hard to find these days. I don’t think it’s been here for over 6 months. Between the kids and 2 parents working from home and 3 noisy dogs and 2 cats (or 4 dogs and 1 cat if you count the cat that thinks she is a dog), this house is very loud. Silence here is simply not a thing. Sometimes I can sneak away and soak in the bathtub while the bathroom fan drowns out the noise of dogs barking, video games being shouted at, pianos being played, cats knocking stuff off tables, and dishes being washed. In those moments, I can almost hear silence. But tonight I found silence that I didn’t know I was missing. After my oldest and I ate dinner, he left the kitchen to take a shower. My youngest and my husband were out running an errand. The dogs were sleeping peacefully with their recently full bellies. I have no idea where the cats were but they were quiet. Work was done. TVs and radios were off. The street was empty. All I could hear was the gentle humming of the ice machine and the soft snores of the dogs. Rather than getting up to do the dishes or flip over the laundry or sort the mail or prep backpacks for tomorrow, I sat. I took in the silence. I breathed in the silence, allowing myself to be fully present for the first time all week. I felt the chair legs beneath my feet (because I’m short). I felt the smoothness of the kitchen island built by my family during the height of quarantine. I felt the air fill my allergy-induced asthma lungs and took my first full deep breath all day. I felt my mind wander but I brought it back each time to focus on my breathing and the sounds of the silence. I sat fully present in that moment for as long as it lasted. Gradually the silence was filled. The ice machine dumped its newly formed tray of ice. The shower turned on in the bathroom down the hall. A car pulled down the street, waking two dogs, causing one of them to bark and the other one to tip tap up and down the hallway, her way of asking to be let outside. As I stood to do those dishes and flip over that laundry and sort that mail and pack those backpacks, I noticed a lightness inside. The weight I had been carrying all week was lighter, somehow made less heavy just by being in the silence. Then I remembered an important fact about me. Silence refuels me. It recharges me. It recenters me. But silence is hard to find. Tonight I remember that I have to try harder to find it, even if I have to find it in some stolen moments at a kitchen island. Most days I feel like me.
On those days, I feel great. On those days, I wonder if that decades-old diagnosis of depression is accurate. On those days, I feel like being with friends. On those days, I feel like getting out of bed. On those days, I feel like working out. On those days, I feel like eating healthy. On those days, I filter out the negativity around me without much effort. On those days, finding the positives is easy. Then it happens. The bottom drops out. Maybe it’s my scale not moving quickly enough in the right direction. Maybe it’s an argument with my spouse or a friend. Maybe it’s something I feel guilty about as a parent. Maybe it’s the weather. Maybe it’s a scheduling error. Maybe it’s nothing. On those days, the darkness rolls in and hovers above me. On those days, my motivation is so low that it takes almost all of my energy to do the simple things like get dressed, put on makeup, do my hair, talk to a friend, laugh. On those days, I become a raw, open wound — super sensitive and vulnerable. On those days, everything hurts — emotionally and physically — and everything is hard. On those days, I am grateful for the tools I have to help the lows to not be so low. On those days, I can find the energy for the people that rely on me, but the other stuff just doesn’t get done. On those days, I give myself some grace and kindness. If you have those days too, let me remind you that you are not alone. You are seen. You are heard. You matter. Even on the darkest days. On those days, ride the wave and trust that the dark days will pass. They always do. I lost it this morning.
The weight of the past 6 months caught up with me. Again. My favorite time of the year — the reset provided by fall and back to school — finally made it to my house, albeit 3 weeks later than usual. It’s my annual chance to reorganize my life, my routines, my systems, and my brain. New clothes for the boys for back to school, expanded hours for my clients, new classes for me to teach at the college level, and evenings spent on a sports field watching my boys play their favorite game usually fill my life this time of year. Of course, none of that happened this year. But today did mark the start of the in-person portion of the school year for my boys — the first time my oldest would step foot inside the high school as a student, not a visitor, and the same for my youngest at the middle school. It was kind of a big deal. But, I lost it. I slept through my first alarm and spent the rest of the morning playing catch up, racing through our morning to do list with one eye on the clock because they couldn’t be late — not on their first day. Then the negative thoughts started. I felt the weight and guilt of having to turn yet another handful of interested clients away because I cannot increase my hours this fall due to at-home schooling 3 days/week. The state of disarray that is my house with backpacks, school supplies, masks, half-finished projects, dog toys, and a weird blend of clean and dirty clothes was all I could see everywhere I turned. The bickering on social media flashed before my eyes as I absentmindedly scrolled through my feed while waiting for my tea to steep. Negativity and stress was everywhere this morning. When I went to wake up my now middle schooler for his first day of school, I found the grumpy, moody, developmentally appropriate but patience-testing version of him before me. I lost it. Everything boiled over. The doubts about whether this hybrid model is the right choice for him, whether this school was the right choice for him, whether this town was the right choice for him, it all rushed to the surface and I yelled. I lost it. I imposed an early bedtime, said I would take away all electronics, took away his option to walk home from school today, and I cried. Today was our big day as a family and I lost it. I failed to see that everything I was feeling, he probably was also feeling. Six long months without being in school. Six long months of hearing about this virus. Six long months without the routine and structure that had filled most of his 12 years on this planet. He doesn’t want this. He wants the world back to the way it was. He wants to play football. He wants to go to school full time with ALL of his friends. He wants to ride the bus while sharing a seat with his friend. He wants to sit across from his friends at a lunch table. I failed to recognize all of that this morning and instead focused on how he wanted to wear ratty sweatpants with a hole in the knee to school and had a negative, grumpy attitude. We were sure to say I love you and hug goodbye after our meltdowns but there were no cheerful first day of school photos for him. Because I lost it. We all have mornings like I had today — mornings where everything feels rushed and wrong and the choices you make are just the wrong ones. The guilt from those wrong choices is heavy and thick and can stick with us long after the bad moments have passed. The truth is, no amount of “hold onto hope,” “be patient,” “give it time,” or “find the bright spot” memes or stories can actually take the stress of reality away. Sometimes life is just hard and it all catches up to you, washing over you like a gigantic rogue wave. Sometimes you just have to feel your feelings. I guess this morning was one of those times for him and for me. So, what do you do after you lose it? What do you do when you regret the choices you have made as a parent, a partner, a friend, a worker? Sure, I could sit in this guilt and negativity all day but that will probably only set off a whole big chain of further negativity. Today I choose to reflect on it, learn from it, take ownership for my actions, and reset. Tomorrow is another day and I will try my best to do better, to be better. Also, maybe I will set a back up alarm. |
Mental healthNow, more than ever, we all need a little support to help get us through the rough spots. With all the pressures of life, it can be a challenge to find time to not only take care of yourself but also to truly understand who you even are anymore. Archives
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