Read Microsoft Word - At Last A Life Final Copy 16-03-09 Online
Authors: Maureen
feelings, which are only natural in the circumstances, should
consume your day? Is it such a bad thing that your stomach should
churn or that your hands should shake?
If you had sprained your wrist, you would be able to carry on with
your day without much attention to it, so why pay attention to
something that is only normal in the circumstances. You may find
that the less attention you pay to your nerves, the less you excite
them. In other words, if your stomach churns, let it churn and if your
hands shake, let them shake, paying them as little attention as
possible. I used to say “my nerves are sensitised and I am going to
feel like this for the time being - it is only natural”. Again, taking the
fear out of how you feel helps them to settle and adds no more
adrenalin, giving them the space to start to recover, or de-sensitise
as I like to describe it.
Ringing ears
This is another common symptom and one I also went through. It is
said that this symptom can be due to a side effect of anti
depressants or other medication. The reasons as to why people with
anxiety can suffer from time to time with ringing ears are still
inconclusive. I put it down to the fact that the body is a little out of
balance due to anxiety and stress. As my anxiety left, so did this
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symptom. In fact it did not last long at all and after talking to others
who suffered with this symptom, they also spoke of it as being
temporary.
Feeling guilty
A lot of people who suffer from anxiety experience feelings of guilt
and somehow think that this means they are weak. This guilt is
brought about by the realisation that someone who at one time could
do things so easily, now struggles to get through the day. They may
be in a relationship, or have children, and feel guilty that they can no
longer do the things they once could with their partner or children.
They may even fight their way through the day, putting on an act to
prove to themselves that this thing will not get the better of them,
only to go to bed at night more tired and anxious than ever. Anxiety
can affect people from every profession, even doctors, the very
people we first go to for help, so let me stress that you have nothing
to feel guilty about.
Some partners may be very understanding about how you feel, but
some may not. They may put pressure on you to
‘
pull yourself
together’ and the constant strain of trying to cope can tire you
further, your partner’s lack of understanding hindering recovery.
Thankfully, I did have an understanding partner and I explained to
her that the person she could see was not the real me. I asked her
to bear with me and told her that I wanted to be the person I once
was and that, in time, I would be. I lost a few friends, as I was never
available to go out. Certain people at work would snub me as I
hardly spoke, but I did not wallow in self-pity! I knew I had to let all
this negative stuff go and because of what I had been taught, I was
not going to add any more worry to the mix. I also knew that I could
sort all those problems out later when I was better.
At times, I felt like I was playing a role in a film, acting to try to
appear normal while other days attempting to hide how I felt. The
pressure I felt trying to maintain this act, day after day, was immense
and eventually I stopped trying to be the person I thought I should
be. So if you see yourself in this way, learn to put yourself first. You
cannot keep trying to be the person you once were. You need to
stop putting on an act, admit that you are no longer the person you
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used to be and tell yourself that you don’t have to keep up this
pretence any longer.
If you have an understanding partner, then great, you have the
support you need. If not, I would suggest that you start talking to
each other and ask your partner to listen. You can even suggest that
they read this and explain to them just how much you need their
support while you recover. If they truly care, then they will
understand and give you this support. A lot of their anger is caused
by frustration, frustration that the person they see is not the person
they fell in love with and they want you back as much as you do. A
little more understanding from them may give you the freedom to
start recovering.
Self-pity is another emotion that can drag you further into your
illness. Again this stems from a reluctance to accept the way you are
as you ask yourself the question ‘Why me?’ Constantly feeling sorry
for yourself can only eat away at your self-confidence and cause you
to feel more and more depressed about the way you feel. It is very
easy to fall into this trap and I cannot stress enough just how
important it is to accept how you feel and harbour as little self-pity as
possible. Self-pity is a destructive emotion that will only prolong your
negative feelings. You don’t need negative thinking during your time
of recovery, so let all the negative thoughts go and build on the
positives.
LOSS OF CONFIDENCE
When I was ill, my confidence plummeted. I felt as if I was worthless
and had nothing interesting to say. I did not see the point to anything
and felt as if I just existed. That is what anxiety does to you. It robs
you of your personality, robs you of your confidence and robs you of
your identity. My own experience caused me to feel as if my
emotions and feelings had become frozen. Some people say they
can’t even feel love for the people they really care about and others
don’t feel any emotions at all. This is exactly how I felt. Nothing
anyone could do or say could make me happy. They could have put
a million pounds in front of me and I would not have even smiled. I
felt numb and there were times when I thought I would never smile
again. My only thought was recovering from the way I felt. I can tell
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those of you who feel like this that your emotions do come back in
recovery. Your confidence and personality gradually return in little
strips, building up in layers, until eventually you feel like the person
you were before you became ill.
If you do suffer from a lack of confidence, then there is no better
boost to your self-esteem than getting on the road to recovery and
feeling the joy that comes with it. If you were a confident person
before, that confidence will return or become even greater. I feel
more confident now than I was before I became ill. All the hurdles I
have passed and the experiences I have come through have helped
me to grow into a stronger person. Can I just share with you a
sentence that I believe helps to build confidence, and it really works:
Never say
yes when you mean no, and never say no when you
means yes
- simple but effective. I am sure most people can identify
with this statement.
Trying to find a cause
Too many people spend too much time trying to find a reason for
why they feel like they do, searching for that childhood memory that
they believe must have triggered it off in the first place. In some
cases, something may have happened in a person’s earlier life that
they may need to talk through with a professional and, if this is the
case, then it may help to do this before they can start on the road to
recovery. In a lot of cases, however, too much importance is placed
on finding a root cause. Surely the only thing that really matters is,
not why we began to feel like this in the first place, but how to
recover.
So if you find yourself back tracking in an attempt to find a root
cause for the way you feel and you believe that gaining this
knowledge is an important part of your recovery, then go ahead and
find a professional with whom you can talk things through. If,
however, you are like me and it no longer matters how it all started
and all you want to do is recover, then let it go, just move on and
concentrate on what is important to you - recovery. You have no
control over the past but you do have control over your future.
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WE NEED ONE ROAD
One point that I think is extremely important, and I really would like
to get through to you all, is that we need one way, one road and one
that feels right. You can't have three different therapists, numerous
different books and two different programmes all running alongside
each other. All this does is to confuse you, putting more pressure on
your tired mind, which needs rest more than anything else. Your
mind is just too tired to be bombarded with different information
every day. Find one way and put all the rest to one side. Find one
road, one that feels right, and stick to it.
Do you see how this works? Yes, we all want to be better today, not
tomorrow, but this is what keeps us ill -
impatience
. We search
around thinking there must be something out there, something we
have missed, so we go from one idea to another, praying that each
will work and within a couple of weeks/months, we feel we are back
to square one. Do not be impatient with yourself, watching the
weeks go by and thinking you should be better by now. You are just
putting more pressure on yourself. Let your body recover at its own
pace and do not watch anxiously for recovery.
Just choose one road to follow and stick to it. It stops all that
searching around in your mind for an answer, tiring your mind even
further and putting you under more stress, when this is the last thing
you need. Forget that miracle cure that has eluded you, it is not
there. You did not feel like this overnight and you won’t be cured
overnight; your body needs time to heal. This statement can
sometimes help people as it makes them finally realise they don’t
have to keep searching for an answer or looking for that elusive cure
- the cure lies within them. Once you are on the road to recovery, it
can be great just to experience the improvement in the way you feel.
Before I recovered I was the same, searching for that elusive
treatment, and I can honestly say that I tried every treatment going
and not one of them felt right. At times I felt as though I was taking
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my driving test again as I struggled to learn how to get on the road
to recovery, but the more knowledge I gained, the more everything
made sense.
Recovery will come, but let it happen in its own time. Please do not
put a time limit on it. Everybody is different and some people will
recover more quickly than others. Trust me, just be patient and your
body will take care of itself.
Look at it another way:
If five million people around the world had a broken leg, not one of
them would be healed within 24 hours. If five million people around
the world had anxiety not one of them would be anxiety free in 24
hours whatever treatment they found - FACT. But this is what you
are asking of yourself when you search for that miracle cure.
When I first heard the words “Paul you don’t have to fight this thing”,
I felt so relieved. It was such a weight off my shoulders. I said, “Oh
my God, that’s such a relief. I thought if I didn’t fight this thing and try
to stop it coming, I was somehow failing myself”. It was like the end
of a war, the battle with myself was now over and it was such a
relief.
Can you see how this one sentence took away so much stress from
me? It meant I did not have to tense against it and constantly search
around in my mind, day in, day out, trying to discover the miracle
cure. I could also stop running around from one therapist to another,
one treatment to another, wasting more and more money and being
deflated yet again as treatment after treatment failed. I am sure most
of you will recognise this pattern. It is the people who make it their
daily aim to get better
, who may find they are getting worse. This
makes total sense, as their whole day/week becomes a battle. This
is a very important statement to understand.
So, don’t try and rush recovery; your body will heal in its own time.
Do not fall into the trap that can keep you ill, wanting to escape from
the way you feel today. Don’t let impatience hold you back. Even