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#151
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Can you spend as much time as possible outside of the house? Even just walking somewhere? Is there a bus system you can walk to? Hang out in a bookstore, mall, something like that? I think distraction from the space in your house would be helpful.
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#152
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But yeah, getting out of the house would be good for me. I've been in here for a week only getting out to drive around yesterday which wasn't exactly a break from the anxiety I experience while being here. |
![]() feralkittymom
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![]() Bill3
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#153
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![]() possum220
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#154
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#155
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Nope , even a hot mess can hold a job... you just have to be unmessy for your shift, I am living proof.
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![]() Anonymous58205
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![]() Marsdotter
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#156
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Growlithing, it sounds like you are holding up okay so far. Good job! It sounds ultra stressful but you seem to be holding your own. I loved the post where you explained some of the ways in which you are able and competent and resourceful and resilient and strong. Hang in there!
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![]() feralkittymom
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#157
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27 days.... |
![]() FeelTheBurn
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![]() Bill3, feralkittymom, growlycat
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#158
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Actually, I'm proof that a manager can be a hot mess. It may be a job requirement!
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![]() anonymous112713
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![]() Bill3, growlithing, Marsdotter
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#159
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![]() Bill3, growlithing
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#160
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I talk myself out if doing it a lot. Granted, I haven't been doing that too much recently because SI helps keep the sui thoughts away, but I don't really praise myself for it anymore. It was kinda like when I was having huge problems with binge eating. I'd decide to not eat something and I'd think "this is good. This is the start of something." And then a few hours later I'd eat something worse. |
![]() Bill3, feralkittymom
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#161
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But thank you. Your response sounds a lot like what my T would say if I told her that I didn't SI. I don't know why it makes me so uncomfortable when she says stuff like that. Maybe I just feel undeserving of her praise.
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![]() Bill3
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#162
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It sounds like you put a lot of pressure on yourself to be perfect. Relapses happen to all of us--but they don't negate the previous success. So the next time you have the thought, think about your success resisting it. That has value, regardless of the outcome.
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![]() Bill3
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#163
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![]() Bill3, feralkittymom
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![]() Bill3
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#164
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Hey this has been sitting hard on me since I have been in a dark place lately.
"It's been nearly a year since my patient killed herself. My patient is etched in the record of my heart. I wish I had thought to tell her this when she was alive. In her death, she taught me never to make that mistake again. This past year I've seen my own work transform. I find ways to invite my patients into this private space so we both can discover the ways in which we have impact on each other and etch our experience of each other upon the surface of our hearts and souls. Maybe that's enough to save a life. Maybe it's not. It's the best I have. As I sit in my office chair and feel the pull of depression on all life and light around me I become increasingly aware this that is all I have. It's all any of us have. My patient carefully selected the method of her death. After years of talking about suicide, and having therapists talk with her about the trauma she would cause others who found her, she selected a method that had the least impact. I'm sure she did this in an effort to begin the erasure of herself from the record of the world. She didn't want to hurt anyone--and she didn't want to be remembered. The tragedy of this suicide--and any suicide really--is starting to surface for me in this space between light and dark. As this past year has elapsed I find myself overwhelmed by an understanding that the only tool left my patient had to make an impact--to show others how she felt and what she was experiencing--was to kill herself. In her attempt to erase herself through suicide, my patient ended up doing something else. She seared a memory of her experience in those of us who knew her. She made an impact on us. The tragedy was that she never experienced that impact--and that connection--in her life. Treat people like they matter. It's the most important thing you will ever do. |
![]() anonymous112713
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![]() Bill3, BonnieJean, FeelTheBurn, Marsdotter
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#165
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Why praise makes you feel uncomfortable: Here are a few possibilities.
--maybe you sense a jarring inconsistency between compliments and what you were taught at home. --maybe you feel dishonest: like you are in essence lying to people by acting good when you believe you are bad --maybe you feel a dread that people don't see through you now but soon they will What is your reaction to these possibilities? |
![]() feralkittymom, growlithing
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#166
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![]() Bill3
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#167
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I also kinda feel like if I was someone deserving of any recognition, I probably would respect myself enough not to harm myself. That sounds like something that a stupid person would do. It's weird though because I don't consider other people who struggle with SI to be stupid by any stretch of the imagination. I think they developed a coping skill that doesn't really benefit them and maybe got addicted to it. That's just the way I view myself. I also don't know if I take SI seriously at all actually. I have a hard time understanding why something I chose to do to myself hat makes me feel a little better is so wrong. Me choosing not to self harm feels only slightly more relevant than me deciding not to watch TV or something. It is different because there is more social stigma against SI than watching TV so I feel like I should feel proud of myself for not doing it... but I guess I just struggle to accept that it is inherently bad. If anyone can explain to me exactly why SI is wrong, I'd appreciate that. |
![]() Bill3, feralkittymom
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#168
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http://www.angelfire.com/bc3/secondc...sinotgood.html |
![]() growlithing
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#169
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"One of the main problems I see with self injury is it IS just another form of ABUSE. Many self injurers were abused at some point in their life (emotional, physical, sexual, any kind). By abusing your body, you are continuing the cycle of abuse." - okay I can see that. It just really doesn't feel like a big deal. I guess the recurrent abuse I experienced as a child didn't seem like a big deal after a while either. |
![]() feralkittymom
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#170
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from another angle.... a person who SI's and an emotionally healthy happy person are never synonymous. |
![]() feralkittymom
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#171
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![]() feralkittymom, growlithing
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#172
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Yeah--I remember a student I had once who was in pretty bad shape. When I was sitting with her going over an assignment, she shifted herself and I saw the scars on her wrists, barely healed. It took all my control not to just cry.
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#173
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The last thing I want to do is trigger or hurt anyone, but I can't be held responsible for if I do on accident. I get triggered by lots of things like really nasty looking scars or the sound of footsteps. If I see someone with a nasty scar or someone walks loudly enough that I can hear them coming and I get triggered badly, that is on me, not them. I don't mean to say that people should go outside and start shouting really insensitive things about really heavy topics, but if a mark on my body deeply bothers a stranger, that is on them. However I can understand that SI could upset my loved ones. I would be upset if one of my friends hurt themselves, I would be upset about it even though I have mixed feelings on the issue. [EDIT] maybe I'm being too insensitive on the whole stranger thing. The scars I have that are visible when fully clothed don't necessarily look like SI scars. |
![]() Bill3
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#174
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You wouldn't do it by accident, if you never did it in the first place. Comparing your fear of Footsteps ( unavoidable , as people walk) and the display of a SI scar ( completely avoidable) is hardly comparable. I'm going to shut up now, as I find this conversation non productive. Good luck, I hope things improve for you. |
#175
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I'm not trying to argue for self harm at all. I know it is wrong and I know that I need to stop. I'm just trying to understand why. I can see that it continues the cycle of abuse and I can see that it does hurt people outside of myself. |
![]() Bill3
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