Needs? Not me!
March 20, 2009 at 11:05 am | In buddhism, family, fiona, needs, psychology, roles, self-care, therapy | 2 CommentsTags: needs
by Fiona
Yeah… didn’t even know about those things. My biggest surprise was getting a list of emotional needs! (I got the list from my first therapist because I didn’t know what she was talking about.) Whoa, this one backed me up. I had yearned for those things – to be seen, acknowledged, played with. I had put them under my “weaknesses” list.
I’ve kind of taken to this “getting my needs met” stuff. Seeing a list on a sheet of paper was almost like the groceries that i’d been missing. It was OK to have these; in fact, everyone did and I had a right to get them. Somehow seeing it written in a book or on paper took away the “zing” or shame of wanting these things. Because someone other than me said it was OK. Just wanting or needing them myself – I paid NO attention to that.
I realized that my anger (that I never aknowledged) was very related to not getting my needs met. I had chronically unmet needs and it made me cranky!
I still have a very hard time asking for what I need or want. There are certain people, places and times when i can ask, but others are hard. I’ll pay attention to that.
Now, what about this selfless, doing for others is the greatest good thing. Is this OK as long as I get my needs met. This is where i’m getting confused. In my Buddhist readings, selflessly doing for others is the way to go.
Gotta go and get dinner for my family. —— Isn’t this the woman’s story? I do derive pleasure from doing for my family. When is this pathological? I guess as long as I don’t ignore myself. I do know that I can avoid doing things I need to do with the thought that i’m doing for others.
I can relate to the “my compulsions are my reward.” Reward for what? For ignoring my needs. For getting through the day, usually.
Searches that Lead to this Vortex
April 28, 2008 at 3:57 am | In anxiety, change, eeabee, needs, pain, shame, support, vortex | Leave a CommentTags: blogging, change, needs, quest, shame, support, vortex
by eeabee (who is now “eeabee of the 26.2 miles”)
These are some of the searches that have lead people to our blog. Some of which are apparently from fellow silly souls, and others from fellow sufferers. Either way, we can only hope you find what you need, or a link or idea for where else to look, or even just a little company.
wiggly toes
toe of shame
toe wiggling habit
kindness to oneself
“trauma reenactment”
mrs vortex
the feeling of being in a vortex
vortex in human body
always feel shame
why do my toes wiggle
body memories
wiggly toe
what are body memories
feeling wiggley anxiety
vortex
“body memories”
toe wiggle
vortex as metaphor
shame vs fear
vortex healing depression anxiety
shame and self care
blogs about shame on oneself
trauma vortex
heart get suck down a vortex
Some of these, the toe/wiggly ones and mrs vortex especially, make me smile, and some are things I’ve no doubt gone out searching for myself. There’s a lot of this kind of pain out there, and it’s not the kind of pain we can live with alone, especially not when the heart gets sucked down a vortex, as it does sometimes.
Shame Binds or/and a Cliffside Dance Party
February 25, 2008 at 4:02 am | In change, coping strategies, eeabee, fear, needs, psychology, shame, trauma, vortex, work, writing | 2 CommentsTags: addiction, lightness, melodrama, needs, playfulness, psychology, recovery, shame, tone, writing
by eeabee
I’m reading John Bradshaw’s Healing the Shame that Binds You, and I see that he says: “To be shame-bound means that whenever you feel any feeling, need or drive, you immediately feel ashamed” (32).
Oh dear.
This does seem a bit of an awkward way to go through life, a bit inconvenient.
And so it is. I find things like this helpful though, not to weigh myself down with the enormity of an issue like this to be point of being immobilized, matted down, stuck to the floor, but because it makes me realize how huge of a deal it is to be able to move at all. This could become overly self-congratulatory, and probably already has, but there may be worse things. Clearly I like (and fear, but also like) attention, or I wouldn’t be writing here, so there’s no sense it denying it, not really. Even less so, if I admit that my job involves me having regular almost captive audiences, which I do admit, because it does.
Equally distressing are these quotes: “As each new shaming experience takes place, a new verbal imprint and visual image form a scene that becomes attached to the existing ones to form collages of shaming memories” (32); “As the years go on, very little is needed to trigger these collages of shame memories. A word, a similar facial expression or a scene can set it off. Sometimes an external stimulus is not even necessary” (33). A whole big webby network in which a disturbance (or not even) in one spot triggers the whole thing to go haywire. And so it does. Not always–not like it used to. And I was just about to write that with this collage/network thing, the situation is as likely to worsen over time as it is to get better, and I’ve experienced some of that, some of it lately. But I’ve experienced the opposite too. It has taken great labor to get this far, which, if you haven’t gathered this already, is a bit sad considering how much room there is for improvement, but it’s more dazzling to think about where I came from. End-stage addiction, for one thing. And I do mean end stage. Which is where I now live, poised delicately above the brink I was just about to plummet from. See, I’ve been starting to think that a little melodrama–or a lot, it’s not really something that works in subtle accents–has some things to be said for it. It’s not actually that I’m exaggerating, but my prose is a bit purple at times, juicy-like, a bit oversaturated. Overdecorated with swooning-couches. But it’s such pleasure to overdo a bit like this, and it lets me play with something I certainly wouldn’t be able to wrestle down without getting myself killed in the process. But dancing with my awareness of where and how I live–on this edge of disaster, having stepped a few feet back, but I don’t think it’s possible to get far–that lightens the feeling of living here. It reminds me there is pleasure and lightness even here. Or shall I say (Oh I shall, I shall. . .) “especially here.” “Especially here” it is then, because while it sometimes seems intolerable and too scary here, sometimes it seems just as right to wonder what could possibly be more surprising and exciting?
And there’s never a problem with boredom.
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