Searches that Lead to this Vortex
April 28, 2008 at 3:57 am | In anxiety, change, eeabee, needs, pain, shame, support, vortex | No CommentsTags: 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.
Linky Bits
January 26, 2008 at 1:04 pm | In eeabee, pain, support, trauma, writing | 2 CommentsTags: abuse, fear, healing, love, pain, recovery, survivors, writing
by eeabee
I thought I’d share this poem by Austin of The People Behind My Eyes, especially because of the way I think it captures how deeply early-life pain wounds us and just how hard it is to live with.
What really sucks is that the person who’s been hurt is left holding the burden, the burden which belongs somewhere else.
This is when I like to say that the person who does the hurting loses a bit of their soul, that there is a cost to them too. I want to say that there is some comfort in at least not having to be like them. Cold comfort. I kind of like cold comfort though, and it’s more than nothing.
And there’s the warm stuff out there too–like in the way we can share our pain with each other. Love. Which not-so-subtly segues into another link–to ama’s post called love and pain.
[I posted this on my blog, sparks in the night, but it's got a link that might be of interest for us too.]
The Mind is a Dangerous Place to be Alone (or at least mine is)
Big Fat Baby Crybaby Whiny Needy Baby. These are the kinds of things my brain tells me about myself sometimes. And I do cry and need things (this needing business is a huge point of crushing shame for me so it’s hard to even say). But even I can see that these labels are a tad extreme.
Rising Rainbow replied to a comment of mind in a thoughtful and helpful post that I’m linking to here. Maybe it’s a tiny bit because she said nice things about my comment, but mostly it’s because what she said was clarifying and also affirming for me. I think it’s sometimes quite hard for me not to discount how I feel about things (any/all of them, really)–it’s such an ingrained reflex–but others’ words can help a lot to counter what my own brain tells me.
So let’s try this:
Big Fat Baby Crybaby Whiny Needy Baby.
Person. Regular old human being, plain and simple.
I Object, I Protest, It’s not Fair, If it’s Going to be like that I’m Taking My Toys and Going Home.
January 25, 2008 at 5:44 am | In depression, eeabee, fear, rejection, shame, support, work | No CommentsTags: anxiety, communication, fear, panic, relationships, shame, support, therapy, work
by eeabee
So. My friends here reassembled me after falling apart over various things the other day, and I’ve got a new project for you all already! The previous project is a little hard for me to untangle/piece apart, but the basic idea is that I keep having the experience of feeling some trust (for people like my spouse and therapist) and being startled to find that I’m feeling hurt by them, while at the same time knowing they don’t want to hurt me, thus making me get all confused and feeling like my cat looks when he’s running in circles after his tail. So that’s been a whole big thing lately.
And I really felt that this was plenty of this sort of thing thank you very much.
But (complain, complain) yesterday I was back at work for a whole new batch of students and classes and fairly wound up because I was so reminded of last spring, which is when my father died and everything was just a big boggy mess. My employer overheard me talking to a friend about house-hunting, and I live a ways from work and my employer does not appear to like of this situation, so she did this whole pull-me-into-her-office-close-the-door thing, accompanied by some very alarming comments. It was very out-of-the-blue and strangely without context. I handled all this with extreme dignity, of course, and burst into tears (and I do not cry glamorously but blotchily and puffily). Turns out that she wasn’t saying anything new at all and hadn’t meant to be threatening (it had sounded to me like I was on the brink of job-losing), just worried that I wasn’t getting to know some of the people I work with well enough because that might have effects on decisions they make about me in the future or something. Not quite how it came out initially, and certainly not to my ears. I had felt more like an abject creature halfway firing-squad victim and the other half small child who’s been sent to the principal’s office and is imagining catastrophic consequences awaiting. The said spouse and therapist helped me to not freak out any more than I already had–nice twist isn’t it? Maybe the next thing will be my employer helping me deal with whoever the next situation is who gets me all confused. I’m not quite ready for that though!
Wiggly Toes: Shame vs. Kindness to Oneself
January 17, 2008 at 3:55 pm | In body/mind, change, coping strategies, eeabee, self-care, shame, support | No CommentsTags: shame, change, toes, yoga, addiction, compulsion, recovery, coping, self-criticism, kindness, body/mind
by eeabee
–this first part is also posted on my individual blog, sparks in the night, but the end is some additional writing that has to do with the shame aspect that we’ll probably be talking about a lot here–
Yoga has gotten me more aware of my toes and what they want like and need, and for some reason I can feel all nice about them and want to do those things (stretching them out and rubbing them after a long run).
A photo from hikejmt’s WoYoPracMo posts, more of which are here: http://woyopracmo.ning.com/photo/photo/listForContributor?screenName=l9ykcnwlo6hl
This isn’t something that always comes easily to me–feeling okay about myself needing or wanting things (especially on the emotional/psyche level), but this seems like a starting point, something to work from. Maybe it’s possible to start there and work to the things that are harder for me.
I was talking to some fellow recovery people yesterday about the ways in which we seem to jump from large addiction/compulsion to a multitude of little ones (and less harmful ones, so this is no small improvement, and it’s really a matter of going from lethal to non-lethal). And I think that part of it (there are many many many aspects, a real manystranded tangle) is that we (women especially maybe, but perhaps not exclusively, but this is who I was talking with and about) often don’t feel we have the right to try to get our desires and needs met, and addiction/compulsions can be a little way of compensating, of feeling like we’re giving ourselves something over here on the side when you’re not looking. It’s not usually something that’s actually good for us, but it’s also a way of preserving or recognizing our right to have wishes and needs. Now if we could all “just” quit killing ourselves our driving ourselves crazy with this technique.
But this tending to parts of the body that want or need something seems a little more accessible to me than the whole treating oneself as deserving of existence. My reflex is to perceive myself as inherently wrong, wrongness incarnate, fundamentally faulty. But I don’t do this as much with the physical part of myself. “As much” I say because I do not always feel thrilled about whatever flaws I happen to be deciding that I have at a given time (it varies, and I think it’s almost arbitrary).
But I am going to stop writing now because my toes are saying they want to wiggle and not only that but they want my full attention as they do.
Okay, I’m back from the toe-wiggling and want to add some thoughts on how shame fits into all this.
I didn’t think much about shame until recently, which is kind of funny since it’s pretty much the core of all this difficulty with needs. It’s the feeling that I shouldn’t have any needs, even some of the most basic human ones, and certainly anything that has to do with relying on others or being vulnerable. And incoveniently (or not!) I seem to be quite open and vulnerable, not icy/thick-skinned. So it’s a recipe for difficulty at least and disaster ultimately. But it’s also a recipe for changing because I can’t not change.
Shame tells us we shouldn’t want and need things, that we have to pretend we don’t, and it even sometimes makes it hard for us to recognize what we need and want. It’s quite disorganizing. It involves a lot of nastiness in terms of the self-talk that runs on (and on!) in one’s head, all the time just about. It’s appalling, and I say things to myself I wouldn’t dream of saying to others, as if I’m somehow different (worse) than everyone else, not quite human. But somehow I held onto the feeling that all of this isn’t right. And honestly, my compulsions are part of how I did that, I think. This may not be a popular view, but I think it’s true. That doesn’t mean I want to keep being enslaved to them if I can help it; it doesn’t mean I still need them in the same way. But it’s a reason to forgive myself for having them.
To begin. . .
January 9, 2008 at 3:30 pm | In resources, shame, support, trauma, vortex | 1 CommentTags: resources, shame, support, trauma, vortex
by eeabee
I am setting up this blog for a group of women who will be posting our various reflections on some of the things we struggle with (things from our pasts, mood issues, compulsions, life, relationships, spirituality. . . who knows what else) and how we find our way through. Or sometimes, how we are stuck. One thing we all share is a tendency to fall into shame spirals, hence the need to surf the vortex.
I’m starting an annotated list of books and webpages about dealing with trauma, which I’m calling the “Trauma Resources” page as you can see above.
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