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  #26  
Old Dec 03, 2018, 03:45 PM
DechanDawa DechanDawa is offline
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Originally Posted by tecomsin View Post
Thanks for sharing your thoughts and experiences here, DechanDawa. Looking for a job can be a stressful experience. I went through that recently with my son but eventually he landed a good job. I read it is a good time to be looking for work in many places. You are fortunate to have your health.




Thanks for this. I am glad to hear your son landed a good job. My adult child also has a very good job. I am not surprised. I had good jobs at their age, too.

The last time I got a job I applied and go hired within a day. Everyone here knows the saga. I got injured on the job and the next day was fired. It was so stressful and so stupid. Now I look back and consider myself lucky. The equipment they had was not properly maintained. Better to leave with a minor injury than to lose fingers. It was also in food service and the prepared meat there disgusted me so much that I was prompted to become vegetarian. I will never eat meat again, ever. I am a very happy, very peacefully happy vegetarian now.

I don't really think I can handle the stress of working, continued living on my own, moving to a cheaper apartment all by myself, figuring out how to not become homeless, on top of the social isolation. It seems so difficult it almost makes me laugh. I just feel like I am headed for a certain breakdown.

My attitude could not be worse.

But we don't know what is around the corner! For instance, you might stabilize and never again have another break. You can recover completely. People have done it. So that's my wish for you.
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  #27  
Old Dec 03, 2018, 04:34 PM
tecomsin tecomsin is offline
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I don't believe I can recover completely because I have had some brain damage from all the manic episodes and also the heavy medication I was on, never mind brain fog from chemo, which is a real thing. I am injured, truly disabled and fortunate to be protected financially.

I am sure you have thought of everything, and tried many options but was wondering if the local crisis line could put you in touch with some services or get some counselling to prevent a breakdown.

I am medicated and see a psychiatrist at least monthly, sometimes more often and I have a armoury of medication I can take if things start to go out of control but you are on your own from what I understand.
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  #28  
Old Dec 03, 2018, 05:28 PM
DechanDawa DechanDawa is offline
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Originally Posted by tecomsin View Post
I don't believe I can recover completely because I have had some brain damage from all the manic episodes and also the heavy medication I was on, never mind brain fog from chemo, which is a real thing. I am injured, truly disabled and fortunate to be protected financially.

I am sure you have thought of everything, and tried many options but was wondering if the local crisis line could put you in touch with some services or get some counselling to prevent a breakdown.

I am medicated and see a psychiatrist at least monthly, sometimes more often and I have a armoury of medication I can take if things start to go out of control but you are on your own from what I understand.




No kidding I have probably called the local crisis hotline about 60 times in the past year to hammer out everything from every angle. The people on there are wonderful and tell me to call back...so I do. I called them three times this past weekend.

I think I am what they might call treatment resistant in that not much works. As well...because of my situation I have to be completely functional. I am not protected financially, socially, by family, by a partner or anything. I have been trying to work things out for two years and I guess I am at the end of things. I had a therapist who did nothing for me. Medications made me insane. Everyone has washed their hands of me. IDK. Maybe that is what is supposed to happen. I saw a psychiatrist and he refused to diagnose me saying I had situational stress. He did not recommend medication.

Maybe this is how the story is suppose to go. That's my new thought. I once had a professor who would tell me that I pushed the river too much. He would say, "Don't push the river. Let it carry you."
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  #29  
Old Dec 03, 2018, 06:13 PM
tecomsin tecomsin is offline
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"Don't push the river, let it carry you." Maybe I can remember that the next time I start to freak out wondering how I ended up so alone in life and knowing there are many more people in the same boat out there.

My psychoses are treatable it seems like, but I am almost permanently depressed and have very negative thoughts about myself and that seems to be 'treatment resistant'. I cannot take Antidepressants because they either cause mania, anxiety or just don't work.

Your situation seems very complicated and a professional might need a number of sessions to decide. My signs of bipolar were supposedly unmistakable but now my long term pdoc thinks it could be SZA. Now I take a med approved for schizophrenia but not bipolar yet and am psychiatrically stable but chronically depressed. Low Energy is my name.

It sounds like you have energy and still a bounce in your step?

It is good to know you have someone familiar to call and they are familiar with your situation.
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  #30  
Old Dec 03, 2018, 06:38 PM
DechanDawa DechanDawa is offline
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Originally Posted by tecomsin View Post
"Don't push the river, let it carry you." Maybe I can remember that the next time I start to freak out wondering how I ended up so alone in life and knowing there are many more people in the same boat out there.

My psychoses are treatable it seems like, but I am almost permanently depressed and have very negative thoughts about myself and that seems to be 'treatment resistant'. I cannot take Antidepressants because they either cause mania, anxiety or just don't work.

Your situation seems very complicated and a professional might need a number of sessions to decide. My signs of bipolar were supposedly unmistakable but now my long term pdoc thinks it could be SZA. Now I take a med approved for schizophrenia but not bipolar yet and am psychiatrically stable but chronically depressed. Low Energy is my name.

It sounds like you have energy and still a bounce in your step?

It is good to know you have someone familiar to call and they are familiar with your situation.




When you call the crisis hotline you don't get the same people but they keep records and refer to them. They are usually young people...interns, I assume...but they do their job with a professionalism and caring attitude I find quite admirable. This is a state funded program and I am proud of it, really. But it does not resolve issues.

I think what I have is dependent personality disorder...but I think that isn't used anymore...and so it would be adjustment disorder, I think. I was the youngest in my family and kind of spoiled while also kind of ignored if the two can co-exist. I married a very well educated high powered Alpha sort of genuis boy...a narcissist. I also thought he would get bored mid-life and leave...which is what happened. But not before mismanaging funds causing us to lose our house, savings, and go bankrupt. I was traumatized. The marriage had shielded me. Then it destroyed me. Losing the house to foreclosure was such an impossible scenerio I couldn't believe it. The genius boy was reckless and insisted on handling the finances. I trusted him and it cost me everything.

Sigh. So...in truth...weirdly...for someone with a dependent personality...therapy could be counter-intuitive. I don't think I have organic brain chemistry problems. I think I have maladaptive coping skills. In other words...behavioral dependency. Personally I don't find therapists very intelligent these days. It's mindfulness this and mindfulness that. It's lightweight. It doesn't get to the root. I've done all the work on my own.


As well I am...too much for most people to handle. I am not manic but I am high energy and demanding of life. A perfectionist. I do not take failure well.

Social isolation is a societal scourge. People get pushed aside...especially introverts. My ex was a strong extrovert and a strong Alpha and he remarried within a few months to someone he met on the Internet. She had money so in a short time he recouped everything and he lives not far from me in a large mansion type country home. Prick! Married someone a decade younger who had never been married and was fading a bit on the vine. I mean this is what he told me! He sent me a card six months after he remarried saying he missed me and could we still be friends? I called him and said in the US men don't generally have two wives...an elder and a younger. Such a prick!

I need a radical new plan. Back to the drawing board.


Well the maintenance guy came to fix stuff for me today and he said I was one of the nicest tenants in the building. When I said, "Oh, you are just flattering me..." his partner piped up and said, "Believe him. Mostly everyone irritates him. He wouldn't say something positive about you unless he meant it."


Okay!


So there you go. Sheez, maybe I don't have a terrible personality. Maybe I am just mentally weak.
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Last edited by DechanDawa; Dec 03, 2018 at 06:56 PM.
  #31  
Old Dec 03, 2018, 07:19 PM
tecomsin tecomsin is offline
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Ok. I see much better what your perspective is more likely to be. Most people I interact with here are medicated one way or another, unlike you. But also, many are going to have mal adaptive, learned behaviours too.

Often emotionally dependent people get wrapped up with narcissists. This is exactly what happened in my last disastrous relationship.

What's also paradoxical is that dependents are often narcissists too but in an 'inverted' way. I am not saying this is with you, but I also have strong narcissistic traits some times that lead to unintended effects where I push people away without meaning too or do other things.

I'm also an introvert which makes all these kinds of problems socially 10 times worse or more. I think introversion exacerbates tendencies to social isolation and there is now almost a sport in excluding people from one's lives, if they don't measure up in one way or another.

Sorry to hear your ex husband was so awful in managing your finances and left you dispossessed when you probably thought you had made it to financial security. I can imagine that is a big hill to climb over but you can do it if you have your health and mental clarity and a bounce in your step.

It sounds like you are saying this is just something you have to go through on your own.

But I also think there are specific therapy approaches for this. No?

I would be cheered if I got a compliment like that!
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Last edited by tecomsin; Dec 03, 2018 at 07:56 PM.
  #32  
Old Dec 03, 2018, 10:59 PM
DechanDawa DechanDawa is offline
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Originally Posted by tecomsin View Post
Ok. I see much better what your perspective is more likely to be. Most people I interact with here are medicated one way or another, unlike you. But also, many are going to have mal adaptive, learned behaviours too.

Often emotionally dependent people get wrapped up with narcissists. This is exactly what happened in my last disastrous relationship.

What's also paradoxical is that dependents are often narcissists too but in an 'inverted' way. I am not saying this is with you, but I also have strong narcissistic traits some times that lead to unintended effects where I push people away without meaning too or do other things.

I'm also an introvert which makes all these kinds of problems socially 10 times worse or more. I think introversion exacerbates tendencies to social isolation and there is now almost a sport in excluding people from one's lives, if they don't measure up in one way or another.

Sorry to hear your ex husband was so awful in managing your finances and left you dispossessed when you probably thought you had made it to financial security. I can imagine that is a big hill to climb over but you can do it if you have your health and mental clarity and a bounce in your step.

It sounds like you are saying this is just something you have to go through on your own.

But I also think there are specific therapy approaches for this. No?

I would be cheered if I got a compliment like that!



I have understood that for someone with dependency issues that short term goal-oriented therapy is best. Frankly I would rather just hire a fitness coach...but I can't afford anything. I am thinking of trying to do a barter for some fitness coaching.
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Last edited by DechanDawa; Dec 04, 2018 at 01:25 AM.
  #33  
Old Dec 04, 2018, 12:19 PM
tecomsin tecomsin is offline
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Originally Posted by DechanDawa View Post
I have understood that for someone with dependency issues that short term goal-oriented therapy is best. Frankly I would rather just hire a fitness coach...but I can't afford anything. I am thinking of trying to do a barter for some fitness coaching.
You made a lot of changes. Quit drinking and smoking and eating in a healthier way. This could be a good way for you to start to engage with people again and make a few more changes.
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  #34  
Old Dec 04, 2018, 12:38 PM
tecomsin tecomsin is offline
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I often think I am a terrible person rather than have a terrible personality. I was wondering if you or someone else reading this had some insights into where such thoughts come from.
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  #35  
Old Dec 04, 2018, 07:07 PM
DechanDawa DechanDawa is offline
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I often think I am a terrible person rather than have a terrible personality. I was wondering if you or someone else reading this had some insights into where such thoughts come from.






Big mouth me here again!


Awh, why would you think you are a terrible person?

Maybe people who come on Psych Central are very sensitive. I don't think many "terrible people" show up here because basically this is a very loving, caring site.

Being alone a lot can make one feel they are being punished for being a terrible person. I know I have thought that.
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  #36  
Old Dec 04, 2018, 08:52 PM
tecomsin tecomsin is offline
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Originally Posted by DechanDawa View Post

Being alone a lot can make one feel they are being punished for being a terrible person. I know I have thought that.
Yes I have thought that too.

About dependent personality disorder it is in the DSM-5 according to wikipedia: Dependent personality disorder - Wikipedia

But it is different than having a dependent personality. I was using them rather interchangeably which is a mistake.

Hmmm. From what I can see it doesn't seem like a great fit.

Why do you think you might have a personality disorder rather than a situational depression, for instance?
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  #37  
Old Dec 04, 2018, 09:16 PM
DechanDawa DechanDawa is offline
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Yes I have thought that too.

About dependent personality disorder it is in the DSM-5 according to wikipedia: Dependent personality disorder - Wikipedia

But it is different than having a dependent personality. I was using them rather interchangeably which is a mistake.

Hmmm. From what I can see it doesn't seem like a great fit.

Why do you think you might have a personality disorder rather than a situational depression, for instance?





Well, I had an assessment by a psychiatrist and he said in his opinion I did not have a personality disorder but, just as you said, I had situational depression. So BINGO, there you go being your usual insightful self.

Social isolation can cause a lot of crazy thoughts, I think, and I believe it is the main culprit.


It seems crazy that I think I have a dependent personality when I have run my own life for years. When I see people on their phones at the supermarket it shocks me. Like what, people can't shop alone any more, like people have to shop as a team for food?


I do everything alone...and despite my fears staying afloat. I paid off all my credit cards and a personal bank loan last year. I am never late with rent or bills, the miracles of a great affordable mechanic keep my 25 year old truck running for now, I cleaned up my physical life and literally have no bad habits. I don't define myself by others. I am always aware that married people start every other sentence with, "My husband..." or "My wife..." Sheez. I am pretty happy I to be an "I" and not a "we"...in life.

What I hate the most is social isolation. It seems unnatural. I was in the Peace Corps and lived on a South Pacific Island...very tribal with small villages. There was a rule there that no one was allowed to live alone. They believed (rightly so) that it was bad for one's health. When teens wanted independence they would build a house for several teens (same sex) to live together...sort of like a dorm. Of course all elders lived within large family units.

IDK. I am still going to look up that link you threw out because I am convinced I have this disorder.


Thank you. Hope you are having a good week.
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Thanks for this!
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  #38  
Old Dec 04, 2018, 09:34 PM
DechanDawa DechanDawa is offline
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Originally Posted by tecomsin View Post
Yes I have thought that too.

About dependent personality disorder it is in the DSM-5 according to wikipedia: Dependent personality disorder - Wikipedia

But it is different than having a dependent personality. I was using them rather interchangeably which is a mistake.

Hmmm. From what I can see it doesn't seem like a great fit.

Why do you think you might have a personality disorder rather than a situational depression, for instance?





Hmmm, yeah, I have read through this before. I know I have been in therapy before when they said for insurance purposes they would put down adjustment disorder.

It is confusing because I have a great deal of anxiety but since it is unmedicated either legally or illegal...it is pretty raw. I am a pretty high-strung person. I have always been anxious and now my son tells me he also has generalized anxiety. My ex the genius boy was so high-strung I called him Racehorse.

Could it be that situations cause one's weaknesses to increase? I grew up with five siblings in a huge house with constant visitors, cousins staying for summer etc. In other words...I grew up in a family commune. I don't think I was every alone...ever...until I was about 25.

I don't have problems with small daily decisions...but I do have problems with large decisions. Like family and friends all say I should move to another state because my state is getting crowded and expensive. Well, moving is something that causes me so much anxiety. I have done two inter-state moves on my own but it was the hardest thing I have ever done.

I am really not good at making decisions, and I have a difficult time in the professional world. So...I am pretty confused. People always seem to think I am stronger...than I feel I am.

It's mostly anxiety about money. If I won the lottery I think I would buy a house, get a dog, and a new bike and probably no one would ever hear from me. I would travel and go out to dinner by myself. To me to not have money worries would be heaven on earth.
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  #39  
Old Dec 04, 2018, 09:50 PM
DechanDawa DechanDawa is offline
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I really wish I could crack the social isolation thing. I think that is the culprit.

I kind of get angry when people say go out to coffee or something similar.

Do that all the time. My local Starbucks has turned into a satellite homeless shelter. I hate to sound prejudice but they bring in piles of luggage, talk to themselves, and smell. I feel bad but it is strange because it is just a regular Starbucks inside Barnes & Noble where I have been going for years. But now it kind of feels like a madhouse.

All the other things seem ridiculous, too. Like volunteering. I have volunteered for 30 years...everything from Peace Corps, to volunteer zoo keeper, to neighborhood watch, and gardener. It's nice but in general just like a job...not a social venue.

Church was a nice community but for reasons I will no longer talk about on PC I am not longer a church member.

I really have a difficult time trying to explain to people how isolated I am. People just don't get it.

I am going to make Social Isolation the Number One Priority Problem to solve. I just don't know how...
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  #40  
Old Dec 05, 2018, 12:11 PM
tecomsin tecomsin is offline
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I'm also in the group of people who would benefit from more social interaction and less isolation and get anxious if I have to make big decisions or even small ones, but i attribute my anxiety more to bipolar than anything else. I think these things depend a lot on the individual.

One reason is that the anxiety is not always the same. I have better days than others and the antipsychotic(s) I take help also with anxiety. Another is that anxiety rises up together with things like irritability and depression. Peak anxiety is really the worst thing.

I am also not religious and couldn't bring myself to fake a belief system in order to build up a social network. I am sure if I were Christian where I live, and went to church that I would have a more enriching social life. As it is my son is living at home for a few more weeks and we have an interesting conversation over meals most of the time. I find it fascinating how his mind works and am happy to not be totally alone in the world.

I've also tried meetups in the past and never made a lasting connection with someone.

I definitely get how isolated your are. I've tried meetups and volunteering too, going to the gym when I was healthy etc. I think it depends a lot on the particular group of people you run into and how open they are to new relationships and how much you have in common.

It's too bad what happened to your Starbucks. I don't like the atmosphere in any of the nearby coffee shops so now rarely go out for coffee.
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  #41  
Old Dec 05, 2018, 04:47 PM
DechanDawa DechanDawa is offline
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Originally Posted by tecomsin View Post
I'm also in the group of people who would benefit from more social interaction and less isolation and get anxious if I have to make big decisions or even small ones, but i attribute my anxiety more to bipolar than anything else. I think these things depend a lot on the individual.

One reason is that the anxiety is not always the same. I have better days than others and the antipsychotic(s) I take help also with anxiety. Another is that anxiety rises up together with things like irritability and depression. Peak anxiety is really the worst thing.

I am also not religious and couldn't bring myself to fake a belief system in order to build up a social network. I am sure if I were Christian where I live, and went to church that I would have a more enriching social life. As it is my son is living at home for a few more weeks and we have an interesting conversation over meals most of the time. I find it fascinating how his mind works and am happy to not be totally alone in the world.

I've also tried meetups in the past and never made a lasting connection with someone.

I definitely get how isolated your are. I've tried meetups and volunteering too, going to the gym when I was healthy etc. I think it depends a lot on the particular group of people you run into and how open they are to new relationships and how much you have in common.

It's too bad what happened to your Starbucks. I don't like the atmosphere in any of the nearby coffee shops so now rarely go out for coffee.








I would say I am religious and spiritually inclined. I spoke about why I was not doing church this holiday season on another thread that got closed. It was a popular topic as there was a lot of participation...and I think spirituality can be a big factor either pro or con in mental health. For me it provided a sense of community and stability...but I am going to honor PC and not discuss it.
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  #42  
Old Dec 05, 2018, 06:36 PM
tecomsin tecomsin is offline
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I would say I am religious and spiritually inclined. I spoke about why I was not doing church this holiday season on another thread that got closed. It was a popular topic as there was a lot of participation...and I think spirituality can be a big factor either pro or con in mental health. For me it provided a sense of community and stability...but I am going to honor PC and not discuss it.
Of course. I agree.
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  #43  
Old Dec 06, 2018, 12:17 PM
tecomsin tecomsin is offline
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I have understood that for someone with dependency issues that short term goal-oriented therapy is best. Frankly I would rather just hire a fitness coach...but I can't afford anything. I am thinking of trying to do a barter for some fitness coaching.
My own view of therapists is that there are a few that are insightful and helpful while the rest are not worth the time you spend and can be downright harmful too.

I think anything that gets someone to change the way they spend their time, and what they think about, is a crucial ingredient to psychic change, expanding the horizon. It's when we can get to what they call CAVU Ceiling and Visibility Ulimited. I watched the funeral yesterday. At least most of it on tape and watched McCain's funeral too.

Maybe it is time for another Peace Corps mission? You wrote that if you solved your money problems you would be free tolive the life of your choosing rather than one imposed upon you, if I am correct?

It's also essential to have energy. We all have our limitations. Mine is I simply poop out and rest a lot.

I also heavily censor what I do and do not write about online, under any guise.
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  #44  
Old Dec 06, 2018, 03:25 PM
DechanDawa DechanDawa is offline
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[QUOTE=tecomsin;6358250]My own view of therapists is that there are a few that are insightful and helpful while the rest are not worth the time you spend and can be downright harmful too.

I think anything that gets someone to change the way they spend their time, and what they think about, is a crucial ingredient to psychic change, expanding the horizon. It's when we can get to what they call CAVU Ceiling and Visibility Ulimited. I watched the funeral yesterday. At least most of it on tape and watched McCain's funeral too.

Maybe it is time for another Peace Corps mission? You wrote that if you solved your money problems you would be free tolive the life of your choosing rather than one imposed upon you, if I am correct?

It's also essential to have energy. We all have our limitations. Mine is I simply poop out and rest a lot.

I also heavily censor what I do and do not write about online, under any guise.



I have seriously thought about rejoining Peace Corps...but its motto of, "This is the toughest job you'll ever love..." is for a reason. It isn't a walk in the park. I was young and my ex and I joined for an extended adventure/honeymoon right after we got married. It was a cool experience but also extremely difficult. The world is quite dangerous and there are a lot of places I wouldn't want to be posted. (I believe the country where I once served would now be off limits.)

With regards to mental health care...your words have an uncanny accuracy and fit in with my thinking today. I now belong to an HMO and it occurs to me that the care there is below par. I have been banging my head against the wall. I also called crisis hotlines and they have steered me towards services in my community that I have not worked out. I have been given the impression that I need to "work hard" to find a decent therapist.

What nonsense. The bottom line is that therapy has never much helped me with serious life problems...and nowadays...especially...it has become therapy light. It has appropriated spiritual practices from Buddhism such as mindfulness meditation...and since I am a Buddhist scholar and with advanced training in meditation... I find it offensive. (Probably because I relate to meditation as a salvific spiritual practice) -- finally, if it is all about behavioral modification...and a change of attitude...I don't need to pay someone for professional hand-holding in that area. I went for a few free consultations with therapists last year and it was a waste of time.

I would pay a fitness coach but I actually don't have the money.

I think anything that gets someone to change the way they spend their time, and what they think about, is a crucial ingredient to psychic change, expanding the horizon. It's when we can get to what they call CAVU Ceiling and Visibility Ulimited.

I do believe the above paragraph is the most uplifting and intelligent I have ever read on PC....ever. Thank you for your intelligence and charming way of writing...and I say charming in the true sense of the word. When depressed only the most charming ideas attract the attention. Thank you for this. Thank you, my friend, you have made my day a bit brighter.
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  #45  
Old Dec 06, 2018, 11:00 PM
tecomsin tecomsin is offline
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If I have made your day brighter, then it is all worthwhile.
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  #46  
Old Dec 07, 2018, 09:32 AM
tecomsin tecomsin is offline
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What follows is not a political statement. I watched the George HW Bush funeral and read online about his life. Learned that he had a plaque engraved with the letters CAVU at his home in Keenebunkport and it was the code his friends and family used to announce his death amongst themselves. It's a military phrase for pilots "Ceiling and Visibility Unlimited" and meant a perfect day to fly. After his airplane crashed in the ocean when he was a Navy pilot, he was rescued by a submarine.

Your life is also an amazing story. Thanks for sharing it.
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The material on this site is for informational purposes only, and is not a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis or treatment provided by a qualified health care provider.

Always consult your doctor or mental health professional before trying anything you read here.