There I was sitting in what seemed like a college course on the verge of failing yet again. It was some sort of critical writing course and I was behind in some unspecified way. The teacher seemed to shift between two of the teachers I've admired most in my life so I wasn't just failing. I was failing them personally which counts for more in the honor system I adopted over the years. It replaced pleasing my parents as the measuring stick when pleasing them became impossible. As these admired teachers did on occasion, the class incorporated both the conventional and the contemporary. We were given a final assignment involving a paper on the Harry Potter books from a scholarly perspective and we were expected to incorporate elements of the movie about the last book. (Obviously, my brain decided to overlook the fact that the final book was divided in two for movie purposes.) In typical nightmarish fashion, the entire paper was due the next day despite the fact that it required scoring tickets to a midnight showing of the movie.
Normally, this is when dream me starts squealing like a pig, considering suicide as a top option and dreading my parents above all else. Oddly enough, my brain just went into overdrive this time. I found myself comparing the original "Star Wars" trilogy with the Harry Potter books and found the compare/contrast topic that I wanted to use. Along with the scholarly materials I wouldn't have had time to find, this would have been my college strategy for writing a paper. I have thought of the original "Star Wars" trilogy as "The Redemption of Anakin Skywalker" for years. Make that decades. The Harry Potter books could have been seen as "The Redemption of Severus Snape" in a fairly similar way. We have our compare and contrast topic.
There is a scene in the next to last book where Rowling does an expert job of both setting the hook to convince us that Snape has been nothing more than a traitor yet leaves herself plenty of room to write her way out of it. Harry catches up to the retreating Death Eaters who have just killed Dumbledore and Snape lags behind to deal with him personally. At that moment, Snape does a masterful job of defending himself yet avoids killing (for good reason) or capturing Harry. In fact, Snape seems to be delivering his final lesson in the subject of how it is all but impossible to fight someone who can anticipate your every move flawlessly.
You can compare that to the Luke/Vader duel in "The Empire Strikes Back." Vader is so superior with the lightsaber and general use of the Force that he might have killed Luke at any moment. Director Spielberg does a great job of making sure that, each time Vader withholds a blow, it seems to serve the ultimate purpose of the Dark Side. Even Vader's declaration of twisted fatherly love seems more likely to serve a Dark Side plot. Then Vader withholds the death blow even after delivering this final ultimatum and having it refused.
Similarly, the seemingly cruel Dumbledore/Snape strategy of withholding crucial information from Harry Potter makes perfect sense in the world where Voldemort can read the mind of all but the most talented, bravest and most experienced wizards. In the end of Half Blood Prince, Snape holds himself back from killing Harry because it's the one action that serves both masters (Dumbledore and Voldemort) equally. Harry must be able to do something completely unexpected against Voldemort without knowing exactly how it will help him reach ultimate victory.
The paper was nearly written in my head before the class and dream ended. Of course, this isn't a literary blog so I am coming to a point though not without the help of one Stephen Reeder Donaldson. Donaldson's best known character, Thomas Covenant, escapes the fate of being god-like Lord Foul's tool in destroying the universe by "do[ing] something unexpected." Like me but to an exponentially greater degree, Covenant finds himself caught in traps woven largely from the consequences of his own sins. I find myself paralyzed by the urge to give up and let the world come down on my head at the precise moments when decisive actions could get me out of all trouble. Covenant is goaded by the frustration of being mocked by the nearly god-like Foul whereas I face the memories of mockery from my merely mortal father. Covenant is motivated by his loves for the Land and, later, Linden Avery.
I've been trying to fight off the feeling that my father is right about me being hopeless at dealing with the "real world" for weeks now. This nightmare is part of the healing process. In the past, I would awaken thinking about how I deserved to die. This time, I woke angry that I keep facing these dreams and repeated a mantra in my head. I graduated. I know I graduated. I could go look at my degree certificate if I chose. I received that certificate by some sort of signature required mail delivery in very early 2002. After looking at it for a moment, I called some important University office and asked/begged/demanded that the person who answered the phone look up my records for me. I needed reassurance that the ordeal was in the past and that they couldn't take it back. I was given that reassurance but I was feeling like a failure within 24 hours for needing a decade in and out of school to finish.
More than a decade has passed since that miserable night. At 28, a decade seemed like a shameful eternity that would never allow me to take pride in my work. At 40 and looking at a lifetime of pain, a decade is something far less. I can only compare it to the school year as a child. Each school year seemed impossibly long while adults tried to console me that only so many months remained. Each of those years was a significant portion of my entire time on the Earth. Now, a year can only be compared to my current lifetime by using fractions and decimal points. After I graduated, one of the most admirable role models in my life confessed to me that he or she took a decade to graduate.
So, I wrote a Facebook post about my property tax situation that might have read an awful lot like giving up. It's actually part of my survival strategy. Let's take the worst case scenario and look it in the eye. I don't mean the eventual worst case that includes failing tests I haven't even seen yet. I examine the worst case scenario until I can say that I have a practical plan for dealing with it. While I am doing that, I don't look as closely at solutions to avoid the worst case. I used to surround myself with people who had extensive experience intervening in the problems of others and they knew that my first answer is always some form of no. I have to remember that those old veterans of previous struggles have moved on. Like me, they took too many wounds or even saw their efforts make someone else's problems worse. I'm retired from being an unsolicited helper.
Two people (so far), have offered me practical solutions that I rejected like whoever the most dominant center in today's NBA might be. I have yet to thank them and note that their suggestions will be part of the eventual plan. Since I'd like to carry it out in the next 24/48 hours, it's time to move past rejecting solutions entirely and mentioning specific flaws. As usual, those specific flaws are all found within me. There is the damage from a lifetime of being told that I fail to apply myself to anything that matters. There are the specifics of my disability and my knowledge of what it is that stresses my team the most. I hate to ask people to help do things that will cause them stress.
Tempus Fugit. The attempt can be made. Extreme pain can be endured as so many of us know. I'm still recovering from a pain doc appointment with unexpected complications so there's no dodging the pain. I can't make myself numb before speaking to government officials so... Well, tempus effing fugit. (In case my translation skills are worse than I thought, I'm using it in the colloquial sense that time is passing and running out.)
Late addition: Some of you may have seen or heard me compare my father to Darth Vader over the years. The metaphor holds as he grabbed his metaphorical Imperial side and jumped into the shaft for me. My feelings are difficult to express. I feel thankful for the ultimate gesture of stepping out of my life for good. He made the right decision. It doesn't make up for a lifetime of poisoning my mind but he did do the right thing. He had backed me into a situation that I couldn't escape on my own and then went away taking the danger with him. It was the one time in my adult life when I looked at the worst case scenario and saw no way out. He both created and relieved my ultimate nightmare.
If you are new here, please bear with me. I suffer from chronic pain and other disabling symptoms so my posts are short by necessity. A lot of this is not meant to be taken chonologically. You would be best off reading the archives in order. If not, read the first 3-5 posts first.
Wednesday, July 29, 2015
Thursday, July 16, 2015
The Reset Button
It is my fervent hope that this excerpt will be published in similar form someday as part of a much larger work. Therefore, I might have to yank this post away for legal reasons someday. However, I cannot hold back everything I think of just in case it might snow in Hell or some savvy publisher might make my dreams come true.
This is another
one of those concepts that might seem funny until you need it. It’s a metaphor
for dealing with the cumulative effect of stress on the body and mind. Since
you’re bound to feel intense guilt for many irrational reasons, you’re going to
overreact from time to time. You might even have a classic “John Stapleford is
sorry for living” moment. Just think stereotypical teenage girl and you come
close.
You’re going to
feel all of the classic emotions that help us all get into trouble but I
started with guilt because it feels like a cleaner emotion to me. I’m supposed
to feel guilty, after all. That downward spiral was interrupted by my use of
the reset button in my head. I’m not going to explain how or why I tend to feel
that guilt is cleaner somehow because that could be a multi-page tangent. Yeah.
I could have deleted the whole thing but this is what they call a teachable
moment.
Instead, I’m going
to move on as if nothing happened. When dealing with close friends and family,
healthy people run up emotional debts all the time. When you have chronic pain
and face isolation among other things, you’re going to have the urge to fall on
your knees and beg forgiveness at least once a week. Oddly enough, I’ve
discovered that this irritates a lot of people along with the predictable knee
issues.
Those people who
stick with you over the years are going to expect outbursts and roll with it or
else they would not have made it this far. The best thing to do after an
outburst is to do what you must to end it. I’m not the creative sort but kids
learning to cope with disability while being taught to respect elders might
benefit from having a sign to raise with something like “Sorry…running off the
rails” written on it to hold up. Both children and adults can benefit from
having a timeout. For me, it’s a quiet and dimly lit room and a cold pack or
damp towel.
Upon returning
from your timeout, don’t mention the reason why you left. As I mentioned
before, people who know you and have stuck with you don’t need an explanation.
They might actually appreciate you not interrupting some pleasant activity with
another overly emotional apology. Other times, you need to depend on your life
coach to explain the chronic pain or other symptom to relative newcomers. If
you get yourself in real trouble with someone in law enforcement for example,
you might want to print something small like a business card stating that you
suffer from something that makes
overly emotional responses more likely. Especially in a law enforcement
setting, you should also include the number to your doctor’s office presuming
that your doctor has agreed to this and will back you up.
Obviously, you
should try to behave yourself in the first place. Every outburst is a potential
breaking point in your relationships. Those who refrain from following you off the
rails are the sort of treasures you should value over worldly goods and so on.
If someone follows you off the rails, you should offer them the same
consideration that they offer you. Press that reset button and move on.
Sometimes, this
will not work or it has been done too many times. Not every relationship is
going to make it and that’s a hard lesson whether you are healthy or not.
Sunday, July 12, 2015
The Most Important Resource for a Disabled Person: Friends
When I broke down far enough to admit that I was struggling, a number of people jumped to my aid. They couldn't offer aid in paying my tax bill or in paying off doctors but this isn't about what they can do. These people offered me their faith in me, their belief that my pain in all of its forms is real and their acceptance that disabled is a part of my identity. This isn't something that shall pass like a little nagging case of pneumonia. (Just throw in any serious and miserable acute illness that could kill under the wrong circumstances and you can see my point.) Unlike what my mother once believed, this isn't some illness that the right medicine or surgery will cure. I'm disabled and I will never get, as I like to say "Big B Better." There will be improvements and setbacks along the way but I will remain disabled.
There is a bias in this nation against anyone who can't slap a Band-Aid on whatever the problem is and get right back to work. Thanks to my friends, I've been forced to accept that I have a certain intrinsic value from just being a fellow human being. Those friends forced me to accept that I can be pleasant to be around and that a number of people choose to be around me. Some people recognize my work as a disability advocate and a fiction writer as doing something worthwhile. I don't have to make something of myself because I'm there already. Yes, I have further to go but I'm in the trenches right now trying to make it happen.
I wonder if you can imagine the pushback in my own mind against these positive thoughts. Obviously, the rest of the world can't be wrong so there must be some way to recover from this fully. My doctors must be wrong or I must have misunderstood them hundreds of times. Melissa must have misunderstood them the same way and the laws of reality must be off kilter because not getting better has to be the result of me being lazy as always. It helps to make fun of these irrational feelings but they don't go away. I was taught my strengths and weaknesses while I was young so being sick is a moral failure somehow.
Then again, people I consider to be exceptionally strong have told me that I have surpassed them somehow. Thank you, guys. I doubt that I have surpassed you but I'm proud to be considered in your neighborhood. Those of you I believe should be eligible for sainthood regardless of your specific religious beliefs think I'm a good person? You don't just say that so you can move on to my flaws in the same sentence?
Some of my victories are difficult to dispute even for me. "I'm still alive!" When the wolves seem to gather at the door every day as the vultures circle overhead, it reminds me that it didn't have to end up this way. I will try to continue to take pride in surviving until the day when I don't. Until then, I hope to continue having such good friends. Thanks to our histories, I can believe that the clicking of a thumbs up button actually means something.
There is a bias in this nation against anyone who can't slap a Band-Aid on whatever the problem is and get right back to work. Thanks to my friends, I've been forced to accept that I have a certain intrinsic value from just being a fellow human being. Those friends forced me to accept that I can be pleasant to be around and that a number of people choose to be around me. Some people recognize my work as a disability advocate and a fiction writer as doing something worthwhile. I don't have to make something of myself because I'm there already. Yes, I have further to go but I'm in the trenches right now trying to make it happen.
I wonder if you can imagine the pushback in my own mind against these positive thoughts. Obviously, the rest of the world can't be wrong so there must be some way to recover from this fully. My doctors must be wrong or I must have misunderstood them hundreds of times. Melissa must have misunderstood them the same way and the laws of reality must be off kilter because not getting better has to be the result of me being lazy as always. It helps to make fun of these irrational feelings but they don't go away. I was taught my strengths and weaknesses while I was young so being sick is a moral failure somehow.
Then again, people I consider to be exceptionally strong have told me that I have surpassed them somehow. Thank you, guys. I doubt that I have surpassed you but I'm proud to be considered in your neighborhood. Those of you I believe should be eligible for sainthood regardless of your specific religious beliefs think I'm a good person? You don't just say that so you can move on to my flaws in the same sentence?
Some of my victories are difficult to dispute even for me. "I'm still alive!" When the wolves seem to gather at the door every day as the vultures circle overhead, it reminds me that it didn't have to end up this way. I will try to continue to take pride in surviving until the day when I don't. Until then, I hope to continue having such good friends. Thanks to our histories, I can believe that the clicking of a thumbs up button actually means something.
Tuesday, July 7, 2015
Despair and a Strange Hope
I am very sorry, guys. I've been trying to improve myself while in pain that words cannot describe. I fell back on drinking anything considered safe for humans to dull the pain but I kept needing more. While I threw all of my energy into coping, the rest of life crashed in on me. I have failed so many people and tasks in so many ways because the pain trapped me in a place where time seemed to stop. I wanted to make it through that night or day and not worry about the rest of it.
No matter how much I rail at the circumstances that put me into a sweet deal that I was never healthy enough to handle, I am the one who is failing and flailing. Melissa has been promoted at work and I trap her between a rock and a hard place regularly. I am in hideous pain, she can see it plain as day and she does what she can to help me numb myself. It isn't even the pain that will force the next crisis. I failed to hold on to money needed to pay for homeowners' association fees and property taxes. I'm not even sure that I paid the sewer bill this year no matter how much I thought I did.
For the longest time, I was able to concentrate well enough to keep the lights and other utilities on. When I started to fail at that, I did my best at idiot proofing the process having bills sent directly to my tablet where I could pay them, make a personal record of payment and then keep copies of their acknowledgements. The things I'm failing at now are intermittent costs. Doctors have to submit their bills to Medicare and then I get billed a portion of what's left. Simple enough for someone who is watching the mail perhaps but I do poorly enough just around the house.
Maybe as recently as a year ago, I would have told you that I could handle this just fine. Negotiating favorable terms in good faith is something I was able to do very well. That's before I got this sick. No matter what wonderful plans I make to pay back every cent, the pain will hit me and I will buckle. I will take a large bottle of whiskey, water it heavily and suck it down until I'm numb enough to relax and get the rest that the pain keeps from me. The longer I try to hold out at the start, the more I need to suck down to take the edge off so other methods might work. I don't even get to enjoy being intoxicated because I'm so tired that relief brings sleep.
At some point, someone will have to take a stand about me owing them money though I don't know exactly how that will work. I'm sure it will be fast and painful in the literal sense for me. The bigger problem is how hard whatever will happen will be on Melissa. She's going to stand by me and try to shield me. Every plan we have to cope under extreme circumstances has severe problems. Our escape route to New York has been cut off by circumstances beyond the control of our New York family. They have their own problems and the once inviting idea of getting rid of this house and finding some way to live up there was never very practical. Yes, Melissa's employer has stores up there but they are not linked closely enough to the Delaware stores for favors earned here to matter. Someone might start her at the bottom if we got lucky. The only reason why my regular symptoms don't crush me even without the tooth and other bone pain is the fact that I am on very heavy doses of powerful and dangerous medications. No other doctor would be able to start me off so far up the scale. My treatment here is threatened by the claws of the law.
Originally, I had this dream where Melissa and I could move to New York living close to our New York family and help them out. They have their own problems that I wanted to help them solve or, at least, hold out longer. They are the ultimate survivors up there long since putting me to shame so I don't intend to start a calamity watch (That's just meant to be a slightly less overly dramatic way of talking about a figurative death watch.) for no reason and jinx somebody. They should never have to be exposed to my failures in life right now.
If you glanced at any room in my house, you would think I'm some sort of hoarder but that's not the case. I am threatened on all sides by piles of things that need to be thrown away but I have no problem seeing the trash as such. My problem comes from the walk out to the dumpster. With walking from my chair to the kitchen being too much effort most days, there is almost never a time when I could walk bags of trash out to the dumpster. This has led to me neglecting my poor kitties in ways I'm too squeamish to discuss at the moment.
Somehow, I've wedged myself into a situation where I'm too sick to handle my current situation yet also too sick to do anything about it. I'm between a rock and a hard place yet no one has to worry about me killing myself. In a metaphorical sense, I would take too many people with me. (One is too many but it's more than one person.) I try my best to leave a positive footprint on the world so yanking that away would be wrong. Of course, I'm losing the argument about not using a permanent solution for a temporary problem. I will keep getting worse and nothing can be done about that. At best, I will be a worsening burden on the lives of others.
I've come to the end of this little essay for sure because I'm twitching too hard to type well. Things seem even more hopeless than usual. The next step will involve reclining and feeling the startling hard gut twitches of an anxiety attack. It would be easier to handle with a glass of something flammable but it's not in the cards. Don't feel sorry for me. Resent me because it's all my fault yet I complain anyway.
Oops. I forgot the strange hope. Some of it was practical but I was able to think of ways doctors and the Association could bring the pain. All that it left is this feeling that I've been through worse. I'm not sure if my experience will help at all anyway.
No matter how much I rail at the circumstances that put me into a sweet deal that I was never healthy enough to handle, I am the one who is failing and flailing. Melissa has been promoted at work and I trap her between a rock and a hard place regularly. I am in hideous pain, she can see it plain as day and she does what she can to help me numb myself. It isn't even the pain that will force the next crisis. I failed to hold on to money needed to pay for homeowners' association fees and property taxes. I'm not even sure that I paid the sewer bill this year no matter how much I thought I did.
For the longest time, I was able to concentrate well enough to keep the lights and other utilities on. When I started to fail at that, I did my best at idiot proofing the process having bills sent directly to my tablet where I could pay them, make a personal record of payment and then keep copies of their acknowledgements. The things I'm failing at now are intermittent costs. Doctors have to submit their bills to Medicare and then I get billed a portion of what's left. Simple enough for someone who is watching the mail perhaps but I do poorly enough just around the house.
Maybe as recently as a year ago, I would have told you that I could handle this just fine. Negotiating favorable terms in good faith is something I was able to do very well. That's before I got this sick. No matter what wonderful plans I make to pay back every cent, the pain will hit me and I will buckle. I will take a large bottle of whiskey, water it heavily and suck it down until I'm numb enough to relax and get the rest that the pain keeps from me. The longer I try to hold out at the start, the more I need to suck down to take the edge off so other methods might work. I don't even get to enjoy being intoxicated because I'm so tired that relief brings sleep.
At some point, someone will have to take a stand about me owing them money though I don't know exactly how that will work. I'm sure it will be fast and painful in the literal sense for me. The bigger problem is how hard whatever will happen will be on Melissa. She's going to stand by me and try to shield me. Every plan we have to cope under extreme circumstances has severe problems. Our escape route to New York has been cut off by circumstances beyond the control of our New York family. They have their own problems and the once inviting idea of getting rid of this house and finding some way to live up there was never very practical. Yes, Melissa's employer has stores up there but they are not linked closely enough to the Delaware stores for favors earned here to matter. Someone might start her at the bottom if we got lucky. The only reason why my regular symptoms don't crush me even without the tooth and other bone pain is the fact that I am on very heavy doses of powerful and dangerous medications. No other doctor would be able to start me off so far up the scale. My treatment here is threatened by the claws of the law.
Originally, I had this dream where Melissa and I could move to New York living close to our New York family and help them out. They have their own problems that I wanted to help them solve or, at least, hold out longer. They are the ultimate survivors up there long since putting me to shame so I don't intend to start a calamity watch (That's just meant to be a slightly less overly dramatic way of talking about a figurative death watch.) for no reason and jinx somebody. They should never have to be exposed to my failures in life right now.
If you glanced at any room in my house, you would think I'm some sort of hoarder but that's not the case. I am threatened on all sides by piles of things that need to be thrown away but I have no problem seeing the trash as such. My problem comes from the walk out to the dumpster. With walking from my chair to the kitchen being too much effort most days, there is almost never a time when I could walk bags of trash out to the dumpster. This has led to me neglecting my poor kitties in ways I'm too squeamish to discuss at the moment.
Somehow, I've wedged myself into a situation where I'm too sick to handle my current situation yet also too sick to do anything about it. I'm between a rock and a hard place yet no one has to worry about me killing myself. In a metaphorical sense, I would take too many people with me. (One is too many but it's more than one person.) I try my best to leave a positive footprint on the world so yanking that away would be wrong. Of course, I'm losing the argument about not using a permanent solution for a temporary problem. I will keep getting worse and nothing can be done about that. At best, I will be a worsening burden on the lives of others.
I've come to the end of this little essay for sure because I'm twitching too hard to type well. Things seem even more hopeless than usual. The next step will involve reclining and feeling the startling hard gut twitches of an anxiety attack. It would be easier to handle with a glass of something flammable but it's not in the cards. Don't feel sorry for me. Resent me because it's all my fault yet I complain anyway.
Oops. I forgot the strange hope. Some of it was practical but I was able to think of ways doctors and the Association could bring the pain. All that it left is this feeling that I've been through worse. I'm not sure if my experience will help at all anyway.
Saturday, June 13, 2015
From Grief to Growth Pt. III
Aging sure is a weird thing! I was thinking about a particular event that I remember as if it happened yesterday and realized that it happened much closer to 30 years ago than 20. When did I become the person things happened to 30 years ago? In any case, it was a minor thing only memorable because I walked past two of my very best friends that year without saying a word because I was in a snit. I happened to be 14 at the time so it was a good snit. In any case, some poor innocent (the other good friend) was sent as a messenger who caught up with me late that day.
The poor messenger asked me (in his own words) if something had been wrong that day because I hadn't spoken to a certain someone. I probably sounded a bit sarcastic but it was out of legitimate surprise when I expressed my surprise that she had noticed. He put about a paragraph of emphasis into three words, "Yeah. She noticed."
Since the entire snit had been over feeling invisible, my bit of self righteous anger collapsed in on itself. I assured my poor messenger friend that I'd been upset about something but not anymore. Before you think that this is me being self congratulatory, I assure you that I was quite upset that I had inflicted whatever tiny amount of damage that I'd done. My intention was to avoid being my usual self and I found it easy to see myself as a boot licking puppy in those days. Yes, I was - and I am - a few years younger but that did not make me a subordinate just for being nice to someone.
I bring this up because it happened to me again within the last couple of days but in a much lower pressure situation. I saw a picture of someone I'd known online for something like a decade and I complimented her as had many others. That's when the figurative voice in the back of my head told me that I wrote something that made me appear to be some drooling teenage pervert so I added a weak joke on the end. Feeling slightly better, I decided to post the comment instead of deleting it all as I had considered. A back and forth insued and I felt like a complete fool but it ended with her replying that she would have simply believed that the other person would accept a simple compliment but that it might not have been my experience. Ding ding ding! And the winner gets this back handed apology. Is it a left handed apology that I mean? One is actually something nasty disguised as an apology but I mean the one where the apology is real but all covered in a disguise of humor.
Let's skip back to a time so long ago that it was only about a year before I met Melissa as Melissa. I was in a big argument with my girlfriend at the time and she was one who liked to defend herself by appearing all cold and impossible to affect. In fact, I made frequent remarks that I kept in the privacy of my own head that I would rather be with someone like Melissa. (That last part was self congratulatory, of course.) I lobbed insult after insult over the apparently unaffected castle walls to no apparent effect. This all took place online in the Internet's younger days so I was unsurprised when she lost her connection. I took the opportunity to disappear as well before she could return and continue to kick my butt.
Now I'm confused. I think this argument might have taken place after the breakup and after Melissa and I had gotten together. That would make it actually 20 years ago. The ex and I tried to be friends a few times but we kept on running into the same problem. I would hurt her feelings, she would pretend like I was nothing more than a two year old and so I would try harder. Unfortunately, as she confessed to me during one of those times of friendship, I was hurting her feelings and she was just hiding it to try and deny me satisfaction.
The moral of this story is that 2+2=4 no matter how much it looks like 17. If you are being nice to someone, chances are that they do not resent it and think of you as an annoying puppy who won't go away. If you say something hurtful, the target of the insult will probably be hurt. You are probably telling yourself that you're of above average intelligence so you don't need to hear this but I'm of above average intelligence and I could have used the advice within the last couple of days.
I know the impulse that makes you think that you should lash out and I know it well. There have been many years of my life when I've felt invisible to everything but trouble. Trouble can find anyone at any time. I need to work on not being the trouble. The woman who inspired these last few entries is three years older than I am with more kids than I can imagine having. It is far more important from an objective perspective that she spends her attention on those children and her current life than on someone who thought that she was a hero 30 years ago. The ex and I were never serious and we weren't particularly well matched. Then again, we were each other's best option for a brief time more than 20 years ago and I have some fond memories. I'm quite sorry that our very last conversation involved her hitting me with a legitimate complaint that I didn't understand because I confused it with something else. Much later, I had a real metaphorical head slapping moment when I realized that I should have apologized because I had done what she said I'd done though inadvertantly. As for the person I might have insulted in the last couple of days, I think that was the first time I actually saw a picture of her. The picture was pretty and that's a simple objective fact.
Finally, I need to stop thinking of all the bad things I've done in my life now that I'm almost 41. I'm entering my fifth decade of accumulating mistakes and misdeeds. While I do need to learn from them, I must remember the Chiarian motto and "Be gentle with myself."
Today was supposed to be about active listening so I suppose that's next. I think I need to study up or something.
The poor messenger asked me (in his own words) if something had been wrong that day because I hadn't spoken to a certain someone. I probably sounded a bit sarcastic but it was out of legitimate surprise when I expressed my surprise that she had noticed. He put about a paragraph of emphasis into three words, "Yeah. She noticed."
Since the entire snit had been over feeling invisible, my bit of self righteous anger collapsed in on itself. I assured my poor messenger friend that I'd been upset about something but not anymore. Before you think that this is me being self congratulatory, I assure you that I was quite upset that I had inflicted whatever tiny amount of damage that I'd done. My intention was to avoid being my usual self and I found it easy to see myself as a boot licking puppy in those days. Yes, I was - and I am - a few years younger but that did not make me a subordinate just for being nice to someone.
I bring this up because it happened to me again within the last couple of days but in a much lower pressure situation. I saw a picture of someone I'd known online for something like a decade and I complimented her as had many others. That's when the figurative voice in the back of my head told me that I wrote something that made me appear to be some drooling teenage pervert so I added a weak joke on the end. Feeling slightly better, I decided to post the comment instead of deleting it all as I had considered. A back and forth insued and I felt like a complete fool but it ended with her replying that she would have simply believed that the other person would accept a simple compliment but that it might not have been my experience. Ding ding ding! And the winner gets this back handed apology. Is it a left handed apology that I mean? One is actually something nasty disguised as an apology but I mean the one where the apology is real but all covered in a disguise of humor.
Let's skip back to a time so long ago that it was only about a year before I met Melissa as Melissa. I was in a big argument with my girlfriend at the time and she was one who liked to defend herself by appearing all cold and impossible to affect. In fact, I made frequent remarks that I kept in the privacy of my own head that I would rather be with someone like Melissa. (That last part was self congratulatory, of course.) I lobbed insult after insult over the apparently unaffected castle walls to no apparent effect. This all took place online in the Internet's younger days so I was unsurprised when she lost her connection. I took the opportunity to disappear as well before she could return and continue to kick my butt.
Now I'm confused. I think this argument might have taken place after the breakup and after Melissa and I had gotten together. That would make it actually 20 years ago. The ex and I tried to be friends a few times but we kept on running into the same problem. I would hurt her feelings, she would pretend like I was nothing more than a two year old and so I would try harder. Unfortunately, as she confessed to me during one of those times of friendship, I was hurting her feelings and she was just hiding it to try and deny me satisfaction.
The moral of this story is that 2+2=4 no matter how much it looks like 17. If you are being nice to someone, chances are that they do not resent it and think of you as an annoying puppy who won't go away. If you say something hurtful, the target of the insult will probably be hurt. You are probably telling yourself that you're of above average intelligence so you don't need to hear this but I'm of above average intelligence and I could have used the advice within the last couple of days.
I know the impulse that makes you think that you should lash out and I know it well. There have been many years of my life when I've felt invisible to everything but trouble. Trouble can find anyone at any time. I need to work on not being the trouble. The woman who inspired these last few entries is three years older than I am with more kids than I can imagine having. It is far more important from an objective perspective that she spends her attention on those children and her current life than on someone who thought that she was a hero 30 years ago. The ex and I were never serious and we weren't particularly well matched. Then again, we were each other's best option for a brief time more than 20 years ago and I have some fond memories. I'm quite sorry that our very last conversation involved her hitting me with a legitimate complaint that I didn't understand because I confused it with something else. Much later, I had a real metaphorical head slapping moment when I realized that I should have apologized because I had done what she said I'd done though inadvertantly. As for the person I might have insulted in the last couple of days, I think that was the first time I actually saw a picture of her. The picture was pretty and that's a simple objective fact.
Finally, I need to stop thinking of all the bad things I've done in my life now that I'm almost 41. I'm entering my fifth decade of accumulating mistakes and misdeeds. While I do need to learn from them, I must remember the Chiarian motto and "Be gentle with myself."
Today was supposed to be about active listening so I suppose that's next. I think I need to study up or something.
Monday, June 8, 2015
From Grief to Growth Pt. 2
First of all, I'd like to mention that another friend of mine who is very much still part of my life had her first child recently. I'm not sure how old the information was when my Facebook account started working again miraculously but I wouldn't give you a child's personal information anyway. Congratulations, old friend and to her hubby as well! Congratulations and thank you for staying in my life.
Now, I'd like to continue honoring the help I received from that old friend about 20 years ago. So far, I've covered what we might call conversational posture. With a few simple even when not easy skills, you can help improve someone's self esteem drastically. Continuing along those lines, there is so much you can do to help someone using the power of touch. One of my current favorite writers, Jim Butcher, gets deeply into the power of touch with his professional wizard, Harry Dresden. At one point, a very unhappy Dresden notes that no one had touched him in months except to deliver the occasional beating. Therefore, a pleasant touch from someone is impossibly pleasing despite the lack of any sexual context.
When I was 14, I became aware of the fact that no one touched me other than family members. In fact, there was a zone extending approximately six inches from my skin where no one was willing to go. I started looking forward to things like crowded hallways where I might get jostled just for the human contact. This friend of mine actually touched my shoulder or arm during a conversation and I'm sure I flinched away the first time.
Unfortunately, this is one of those arguably manipulative things. I joke that I can use my powers for good or evil but there's an element of truth to it. When horses are "broken," the process starts with a light touch and ends with the horse wearing bit, bridle and saddle. I have seen the results of this sort of gentle approach applied to humans and the victim's life gets shattered. Don't use touch as the means to an end. Just don't. I've never had it done to me or even had anyone try. I'm very lucky that the awkward 14 year old me met someone so nice and safe to be around.
I don't really want to get into technique where touching is concerned because so much is involved. Everyone is different so there are few hard and fast rules. Since I think it would be obvious, I am sure that someone will think otherwise. Don't try touching a shy person anywhere you'd be in trouble for touching a minor in front of some high moral authority. Don't grab hold of anyone. Even if the shy and/or awkward person finds you attractive and turns out to be your spouse years down the road, start very slowly. Pats on the back or arm are good when you're dealing with someone who is unused to being touched.
If you find success so that both of you are comfortaable, repeat and repeat often. If your new friend is someone like I was, you are overcoming years of physical isolation and worse.
Touching is a very tense subject for me to this day. I crave contact with other human beings but simple touches can be painful to an extent that is vastly out of proportion with the intent of the touch. A pat on the shoulder can be horribly painful these days so I shy away from touching. Melissa is one of the very few people who know how touching me can hurt me yet understands that I still need it. Even she can get nervous about it all when my symptoms are firing away. Some doctors understand extremely well. I still remember one giving me a shot with a needle that appeared too long to be used by someone in the same room with me. I took in a sharp breath, muttered some variant on ow and then realized it hadn't actually hurt. Out of respect for the doctor, I admitted that it had been a premature ow because I thought it would hurt.
Melissa's late Aunt Lois suffered from severe pain from both cancer and heart troubles and we're not sure which killed her. I used to look forward New York trips just for her hugs. She understood me and I don't recall her hurting me even once. We were fighting the same battle and I miss her for many things but the hugs alone would have been enough.
Touch is a powerful tool and it must be used carefully. Keep your new friend's reactions in mind and don't push them too hard or too fast. The simplest touches can end up meaning the most. I can remember my old friend helping me with the top clasp on the neck of my band uniform. My fingers were too pudgy and I was nervous because everyone was watching me struggle. (Few people were watching but it always feels like everyone when you are struggling.) She just walked up to me, hooked the dratted thing and I was filled with intensely warm feelings of friendship. I misunderstood how I felt but the 40 year old me understands that you can feel a roaring blaze of friendship especially when touch is involved.
Never underestimate friendship. The word alone has great power that we've diluted sadly in our society with terms like "just friends." Many of us live in tight quarters with millions of people if we live in cities. It is possible to show enough politeness to each of those people to brighten their days but few will rise to the level of friend.
Now, I'd like to continue honoring the help I received from that old friend about 20 years ago. So far, I've covered what we might call conversational posture. With a few simple even when not easy skills, you can help improve someone's self esteem drastically. Continuing along those lines, there is so much you can do to help someone using the power of touch. One of my current favorite writers, Jim Butcher, gets deeply into the power of touch with his professional wizard, Harry Dresden. At one point, a very unhappy Dresden notes that no one had touched him in months except to deliver the occasional beating. Therefore, a pleasant touch from someone is impossibly pleasing despite the lack of any sexual context.
When I was 14, I became aware of the fact that no one touched me other than family members. In fact, there was a zone extending approximately six inches from my skin where no one was willing to go. I started looking forward to things like crowded hallways where I might get jostled just for the human contact. This friend of mine actually touched my shoulder or arm during a conversation and I'm sure I flinched away the first time.
Unfortunately, this is one of those arguably manipulative things. I joke that I can use my powers for good or evil but there's an element of truth to it. When horses are "broken," the process starts with a light touch and ends with the horse wearing bit, bridle and saddle. I have seen the results of this sort of gentle approach applied to humans and the victim's life gets shattered. Don't use touch as the means to an end. Just don't. I've never had it done to me or even had anyone try. I'm very lucky that the awkward 14 year old me met someone so nice and safe to be around.
I don't really want to get into technique where touching is concerned because so much is involved. Everyone is different so there are few hard and fast rules. Since I think it would be obvious, I am sure that someone will think otherwise. Don't try touching a shy person anywhere you'd be in trouble for touching a minor in front of some high moral authority. Don't grab hold of anyone. Even if the shy and/or awkward person finds you attractive and turns out to be your spouse years down the road, start very slowly. Pats on the back or arm are good when you're dealing with someone who is unused to being touched.
If you find success so that both of you are comfortaable, repeat and repeat often. If your new friend is someone like I was, you are overcoming years of physical isolation and worse.
Touching is a very tense subject for me to this day. I crave contact with other human beings but simple touches can be painful to an extent that is vastly out of proportion with the intent of the touch. A pat on the shoulder can be horribly painful these days so I shy away from touching. Melissa is one of the very few people who know how touching me can hurt me yet understands that I still need it. Even she can get nervous about it all when my symptoms are firing away. Some doctors understand extremely well. I still remember one giving me a shot with a needle that appeared too long to be used by someone in the same room with me. I took in a sharp breath, muttered some variant on ow and then realized it hadn't actually hurt. Out of respect for the doctor, I admitted that it had been a premature ow because I thought it would hurt.
Melissa's late Aunt Lois suffered from severe pain from both cancer and heart troubles and we're not sure which killed her. I used to look forward New York trips just for her hugs. She understood me and I don't recall her hurting me even once. We were fighting the same battle and I miss her for many things but the hugs alone would have been enough.
Touch is a powerful tool and it must be used carefully. Keep your new friend's reactions in mind and don't push them too hard or too fast. The simplest touches can end up meaning the most. I can remember my old friend helping me with the top clasp on the neck of my band uniform. My fingers were too pudgy and I was nervous because everyone was watching me struggle. (Few people were watching but it always feels like everyone when you are struggling.) She just walked up to me, hooked the dratted thing and I was filled with intensely warm feelings of friendship. I misunderstood how I felt but the 40 year old me understands that you can feel a roaring blaze of friendship especially when touch is involved.
Never underestimate friendship. The word alone has great power that we've diluted sadly in our society with terms like "just friends." Many of us live in tight quarters with millions of people if we live in cities. It is possible to show enough politeness to each of those people to brighten their days but few will rise to the level of friend.
Friday, June 5, 2015
From Grief to Growth
The first thing I need to do for this post is to specify that no one has died recently in my various circles and networks. I am mourning the loss of an old friend who simply broke off contact with no explanation or notice whatsoever. First, I denied it to myself and then I tried to bargain but that's difficult when someone won't contact me and so on. I was actually angry at this old friend for a while and you can fit the number of times I've been truly angry with her on one hand. Finally, I wallowed for a bit and I've decided to move on as inspired by the post of someone who lost her husband to cancer. She lost her husband who had been in her life physically in recent times and not some online connection that might be far less important to someone who isn't me.
Cheryl Goldberg lost her husband to cancer and she has decided to move on with her life as best she can by helping people. For better or worse, she's a brilliant speaker and writer with a huge following while I am who I am. I've lost someone who was once very important to me but had been of far less importance for around 20 years to be honest. I've decided to honor her memory by sharing what she did that taught me how to feel like a valuable human being whether she meant to teach me or not. In memory of my anonymous friend, I am going to try to flesh out one or two things that gave her such influence over me. She did all this just by being herself so any accusations of manipulativeness will result in a metaphorical punch in the nose. Manipulation is something done as a means to an end. These things that lead to knowing people better for who they are. That is the end for me.
So, what's the first thing that you can do for someone to help them learn their own value? When you are speaking to them, invest that time in them completely even if it is just a few seconds. Make eye contact when you speak. This is a skill that may be more difficult to learn for some than for others. If you cannot manage eye contact, try focusing on some part of their face. If possible, turn your body square to your new friend and face them straight on while speaking. If you can find that spot on their face you feel comfortable looking into, hold your eyes there as best you can. If you keep trying to make direct eye contact and are forced to look away, you may appear distracted.
The entire process is important. Taking the time to shift your posture so that it is oriented on them establishes the fact that you are paying attention. Making and holding what you might want to think of as eye posture if you cannot manage eye contact makes the person feel as if they are the only other person in the room.
This is intense stuff especially for someone unused to enjoying the full attention of others. As the subject of such attention, I remember feeling fixed to the spot yet eager to escape only to crave more attention later. You can depend on this to make your escape so to speak. At the point when this becomes too uncomfortable for one of you, feel free to make honest excuses to get on with your day. A person in need of your help will remember that you stopped and took time out of your busy day to speak with them. The key is being honest. If you need to go and it isn't because you are busy, don't offer any fake details. Just tell the person that you need to go and take the time to say goodbye, see you later or whatever seems appropriate to the situation.
With that, I bid you good day until I'm up to writing here again.
Cheryl Goldberg lost her husband to cancer and she has decided to move on with her life as best she can by helping people. For better or worse, she's a brilliant speaker and writer with a huge following while I am who I am. I've lost someone who was once very important to me but had been of far less importance for around 20 years to be honest. I've decided to honor her memory by sharing what she did that taught me how to feel like a valuable human being whether she meant to teach me or not. In memory of my anonymous friend, I am going to try to flesh out one or two things that gave her such influence over me. She did all this just by being herself so any accusations of manipulativeness will result in a metaphorical punch in the nose. Manipulation is something done as a means to an end. These things that lead to knowing people better for who they are. That is the end for me.
So, what's the first thing that you can do for someone to help them learn their own value? When you are speaking to them, invest that time in them completely even if it is just a few seconds. Make eye contact when you speak. This is a skill that may be more difficult to learn for some than for others. If you cannot manage eye contact, try focusing on some part of their face. If possible, turn your body square to your new friend and face them straight on while speaking. If you can find that spot on their face you feel comfortable looking into, hold your eyes there as best you can. If you keep trying to make direct eye contact and are forced to look away, you may appear distracted.
The entire process is important. Taking the time to shift your posture so that it is oriented on them establishes the fact that you are paying attention. Making and holding what you might want to think of as eye posture if you cannot manage eye contact makes the person feel as if they are the only other person in the room.
This is intense stuff especially for someone unused to enjoying the full attention of others. As the subject of such attention, I remember feeling fixed to the spot yet eager to escape only to crave more attention later. You can depend on this to make your escape so to speak. At the point when this becomes too uncomfortable for one of you, feel free to make honest excuses to get on with your day. A person in need of your help will remember that you stopped and took time out of your busy day to speak with them. The key is being honest. If you need to go and it isn't because you are busy, don't offer any fake details. Just tell the person that you need to go and take the time to say goodbye, see you later or whatever seems appropriate to the situation.
With that, I bid you good day until I'm up to writing here again.
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