Guest guest Posted January 1, 2004 Report Share Posted January 1, 2004 Hi , And welcome. Most of us are here because we want to make a difference with others, so it's certainly not a problem that you only post rarely. I'm just glad that you're here looking at this. When looking at anxiety there is something that you are not willing to experience, something you would deny its existence; that's the place to look for " workable " sentences. I'll take a stab at some that might be there: * I don't have a choice. I'm trapped. * I love my kids. * My kids are precious to me. o Now I'm not suggesting that you're a bad mommy or that you don't care about your kids. But when you say that sometimes you can't remember how precious they are to you that sounds like you're trying to pretend that they are precious to you, when, in the moment, they aren't at all. They are a burden, a burden that has you feeling trapped and helpless and overwhelmed. There's nothing wrong with you feeling this way . I hear that you would like to deny those feelings their existence and push them out of your awareness. This causes stress. It comes from a stand that there is something wrong here. There's something wrong with me and I shouldn't feel the way I do. Is that really true? o Being the father of a baby was the hardest job I ever did. They need so much care, so much attention, so much stuff. I had some resentment that my life had become centered on her needs. What about me? What about my needs? I felt like a beast of burden. o One of the only things that tempered my resolve to get through it was remembering Maharishi Mahesh Yogi saying that when you have children you pay your karmic debt to your parents. That makes sense. My parents had gone through that for me, now here I was. * One place to look is for underlying meanings. If _____ is true, it means ______. o If I acknowledge resenting what I have to go through for my kids, it means that I am a bad person, a defective woman. o If I don't take my kids to the museum it means ________ * Panic comes from projecting yourself into an imagined future and then resisting (in your thinking) the future you have projected yourself into. Work on getting clearly what those projections are; distinguish them; get them down on paper, and then look at them with the four questions. * Another place to look is at " The Worst that Could Happen. " If you give in to the situation as it is, what's the worst that could happen? And if you had that, then what would be present? Just go ahead and let the thinking mind have it's life on paper. Instead of suppressing it and running from it, turn around and look it in the face. Invite it to do it's worst. " Hit me with your best shot. Let's see just how horrible you can be. " You'll survive, I promise. And I imagine you'll end up seeing through a paper dragon. What you're dealing with in panic attacks is a desire to contract in the face of an imagined outcome. You may or may not have control over the outcome, but you do have control over contracting or not. It is the contraction that hurts. The more you can look, without contracting, just allowing, the freer and more peaceful you will be. Links of possible interest: http://groups.msn.com/spearesWeb/thelazymansguidetoenlightenment.msnw http://groups.msn.com/spearesWeb/confrontingthetiger.msnw Here's an idea for you. There are people all over the place who remember what a struggle it is to raise small children; people who want to contribute and make a difference. How about creating a flyer and posting it around your neighborhood that says: Overwhelmed Mom Needs a Little Break Willing to trade off childcare with another mom. Would love to meet some women who know/remember how tough it can be and contribute to each other to help us all get through this. Grateful for any responses, Phone Number: doing the work with anxiety attacks... dear all, i have been riding out episodes of anxiety of varying strength for about two months, and in between mindfulness, meditation, yoga,deep breathing and anything else i can find that helps, i've thought about trying to do the work with it, but i'm not sure how to, because i'm not often able to catch the thoughts that trigger each attack, if they're there. victoria's work on psychosis was quite helpful. I am tired of the anxiety attacks. I want them to end. I'm afraid of feeling anxious. I feel like I've done enough work already. The panic attacks are making me miserable. Is this true? Hell yes. Can I absolutely know it's true? No, I can't even know what's triggering some of the panic attacks. I'm sure my resisting the feelings and sensations is at least part of what's making me miserable, though I can't always see that. How do I feel when I believe that the attacks are making me miserable? I feel trapped, out of control of my own experience of life. I'm anxious (ha!) and depressed. I feel resentful and sorry for myself. I want to stomp my feet and scream my frustration out, goddamn it! Who would I be if I couldn't think that thought? Hmmm. This is pretty damn hard to imagine. Maybe someone who woke up wondering what sort of internal weather she might get that day? Someone curious to see how mercurial and fleeting her emotional states are? TA: my fear of panic attacks is making me miserable. :my thinking is miserable, I'm just fine. : I'm making my fear miserable by pushing it away. Hmmm, I'm going to take a stab at what I think is under them. Parenting is too hard. I want out. They're killing me. one or the other is on me from the moment I wake up until the moment I sleep. I have no other life. And I can't quit. I'm trapped. I don't want to turn them over to someone else to raise. Most of the rest of the world makes a mess of child rearing. Okay, I'm overwhelmed, yet I don't want to stop parenting them. I'm trapped and overwhelmed. Is it true? Sure feels like it. Absolutely know it's true? Nah, much of the time I'm just fine. I can feel really good about what I'm doing. And I do get breaks. And I truly could walk away. People do. How do I feel when I believe the story that I'm trapped and overwhelmed? Panicked, depressed, crappy. I shut down emotionally, I try to escape on line, or into the newspaper. I lay around and let harry nurse on me because it's easier than getting up and playing with them. My gut churns, there's a fluttering, zinging feeling in my heart center, I consider killing myself, but what's the point of that, I'll just get right back on this damn wheel of samsara. I can't feel how precious my children are to me. I can't remember how incredibly lucky I am to be home with them. I forget to go outside and garden. I forget to take care of my body. I don't take them out to museums or the zoo. Who would I be if I couldn't think the thought, " I'm trapped and overwhelmed? " I'd be happy, I'd wake up excited to have a whole day with the kids to explore the world. I'd be silly and playful. I'd be how I am when I'm feeling good. TA: My thinking is trapped and overwhelms me. Well, I'm not feeling like I'm really getting at the core of this. Any suggestions would be much appreciated (and I hope you don't mind that I show up so rarely and am asking for feedback without having offered any to others) Thanks in advance, susan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 1, 2004 Report Share Posted January 1, 2004 dear frank, thank you ever so much. you nailed it for me. i'm going to sit down with your post and do several more worksheets on what comes out of your suggestions for digging deeper into my anxiety. i know that the first one is going to be, " My kids are precious to me. " b/c you're abolutely right, i don't feel that in the least right now, and i'm so ashamed of that i haven't even admitted it to myself. i'm so glad to pull that sad little thought out and embrace it and tell it that it's okay not to feel love for your kids when you're overstressed. then i'll get to work on it with a worksheet! i also want to thank you for your excellent observation about anxiety underlying causes, and about projecting onself into the future and creating panic. that makes great sense and yet it never occured to me so clearly. and thank you for saying that parenting was so hard for you. i need to hear that time and again, because i tell myself too often that i've got it easy, staying at home with the kids and having a super- involved husband who only works 3-day weeks, that i should be handling it better than i do. (i guess that'll be the second worksheet i do!) with much gratitude, susan > Hi , > > > > And welcome. Most of us are here because we want to make a difference with > others, so it's certainly not a problem that you only post rarely. I'm just > glad that you're here looking at this. > > > > When looking at anxiety there is something that you are not willing to > experience, something you would deny its existence; that's the place to look > for " workable " sentences. I'll take a stab at some that might be there: > > * I don't have a choice. I'm trapped. > > * I love my kids. > > * My kids are precious to me. > > o Now I'm not suggesting that you're a bad mommy or that you don't > care about your kids. But when you say that sometimes you can't remember how > precious they are to you that sounds like you're trying to pretend that they > are precious to you, when, in the moment, they aren't at all. They are a > burden, a burden that has you feeling trapped and helpless and overwhelmed. > There's nothing wrong with you feeling this way . I hear that you would > like to deny those feelings their existence and push them out of your > awareness. This causes stress. It comes from a stand that there is something > wrong here. There's something wrong with me and I shouldn't feel the way I > do. Is that really true? > > o Being the father of a baby was the hardest job I ever did. They need > so much care, so much attention, so much stuff. I had some resentment that > my life had become centered on her needs. What about me? What about my > needs? I felt like a beast of burden. > > o One of the only things that tempered my resolve to get through it > was remembering Maharishi Mahesh Yogi saying that when you have children you > pay your karmic debt to your parents. That makes sense. My parents had gone > through that for me, now here I was. > > * One place to look is for underlying meanings. If _____ is true, it > means ______. > > o If I acknowledge resenting what I have to go through for my kids, it > means that I am a bad person, a defective woman. > > o If I don't take my kids to the museum it means ________ > > * Panic comes from projecting yourself into an imagined future and > then resisting (in your thinking) the future you have projected yourself > into. Work on getting clearly what those projections are; distinguish them; > get them down on paper, and then look at them with the four questions. > > * Another place to look is at " The Worst that Could Happen. " If you > give in to the situation as it is, what's the worst that could happen? And > if you had that, then what would be present? Just go ahead and let the > thinking mind have it's life on paper. Instead of suppressing it and running > from it, turn around and look it in the face. Invite it to do it's worst. > " Hit me with your best shot. Let's see just how horrible you can be. " You'll > survive, I promise. And I imagine you'll end up seeing through a paper > dragon. > > > > What you're dealing with in panic attacks is a desire to contract in the > face of an imagined outcome. You may or may not have control over the > outcome, but you do have control over contracting or not. It is the > contraction that hurts. The more you can look, without contracting, just > allowing, the freer and more peaceful you will be. > > Links of possible interest: > http://groups.msn.com/spearesWeb/thelazymansguidetoenlightenment. msnw > http://groups.msn.com/spearesWeb/confrontingthetiger.msnw > > > > Here's an idea for you. There are people all over the place who remember > what a struggle it is to raise small children; people who want to contribute > and make a difference. How about creating a flyer and posting it around your > neighborhood that says: > > Overwhelmed Mom Needs a Little Break > > Willing to trade off childcare with another mom. Would love to meet some > women who know/remember how tough it can be and contribute to each other to > help us all get through this. > > Grateful for any responses, > > > > Phone Number: > > > > doing the work with anxiety attacks... > > > > dear all, > > i have been riding out episodes of anxiety of varying strength for about two > > months, and in between mindfulness, meditation, yoga,deep breathing and > anything else i can find that helps, i've thought about trying to do the > work with > it, but i'm not sure how to, because i'm not often able to catch the > thoughts > that trigger each attack, if they're there. > > victoria's work on psychosis was quite helpful. > > > > I am tired of the anxiety attacks. I want them to end. I'm afraid of feeling > > anxious. I feel like I've done enough work already. > > > > The panic attacks are making me miserable. > > Is this true? Hell yes. > > Can I absolutely know it's true? No, I can't even know what's triggering > some of the panic attacks. I'm sure my resisting the feelings and sensations > is > at least part of what's making me miserable, though I can't always see that. > > How do I feel when I believe that the attacks are making me miserable? I > feel > trapped, out of control of my own experience of life. I'm anxious (ha!) and > depressed. I feel resentful and sorry for myself. I want to stomp my feet > and > scream my frustration out, goddamn it! > > Who would I be if I couldn't think that thought? Hmmm. This is pretty damn > hard to imagine. Maybe someone who woke up wondering what sort of internal > weather she might get that day? Someone curious to see how mercurial and > fleeting > her emotional states are? > > > > TA: my fear of panic attacks is making me miserable. > > :my thinking is miserable, I'm just fine. > > : I'm making my fear miserable by pushing it away. > > > > Hmmm, > > > > I'm going to take a stab at what I think is under them. > > > > Parenting is too hard. I want out. They're killing me. one or the other is > on > me from the moment I wake up until the moment I sleep. I have no other life. > > And I can't quit. I'm trapped. I don't want to turn them over to someone > else > to raise. Most of the rest of the world makes a mess of child rearing. > > Okay, I'm overwhelmed, yet I don't want to stop parenting them. > > > > I'm trapped and overwhelmed. > > > > Is it true? Sure feels like it. > > Absolutely know it's true? Nah, much of the time I'm just fine. I can feel > really good about what I'm doing. And I do get breaks. And I truly could > walk > away. People do. > > > > How do I feel when I believe the story that I'm trapped and overwhelmed? > Panicked, depressed, crappy. I shut down emotionally, I try to escape on > line, or > into the newspaper. I lay around and let harry nurse on me because it's > easier > than getting up and playing with them. My gut churns, there's a fluttering, > zinging feeling in my heart center, I consider killing myself, but what's > the > point of that, I'll just get right back on this damn wheel of samsara. I > can't > feel how precious my children are to me. I can't remember how incredibly > lucky I am to be home with them. I forget to go outside and garden. I forget > to > take care of my body. I don't take them out to museums or the zoo. > > Who would I be if I couldn't think the thought, " I'm trapped and > overwhelmed? " > > I'd be happy, I'd wake up excited to have a whole day with the kids to > explore the world. I'd be silly and playful. I'd be how I am when I'm > feeling > good. > > > > TA: > > My thinking is trapped and overwhelms me. > > > > Well, I'm not feeling like I'm really getting at the core of this. > > > > Any suggestions would be much appreciated (and I hope you don't mind that I > show up so rarely and am asking for feedback without having offered any to > others) > > Thanks in advance, > > susan > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 1, 2004 Report Share Posted January 1, 2004 Hi , I'm so glad that my words occurred as a contribution to you. That's the main thing I want, you know; to feel like I add value through who I am and what I bring. In listening to me as that kind of person you have contributed to me. Thank you. More inside. doing the work with anxiety attacks... > > > > dear all, > > i have been riding out episodes of anxiety of varying strength for about two > > months, and in between mindfulness, meditation, yoga,deep breathing and > anything else i can find that helps, i've thought about trying to do the > work with > it, but i'm not sure how to, because i'm not often able to catch the > thoughts > that trigger each attack, if they're there. > > victoria's work on psychosis was quite helpful. > > > > I am tired of the anxiety attacks. I want them to end. I'm afraid of feeling > > anxious. I feel like I've done enough work already. > > > > The panic attacks are making me miserable. > > Is this true? Hell yes. > > Can I absolutely know it's true? No, I can't even know what's triggering > some of the panic attacks. I'm sure my resisting the feelings and sensations > is > at least part of what's making me miserable, though I can't always see that. > > How do I feel when I believe that the attacks are making me miserable? I > feel > trapped, out of control of my own experience of life. I'm anxious (ha!) and > depressed. I feel resentful and sorry for myself. I want to stomp my feet > and > scream my frustration out, goddamn it! > > Who would I be if I couldn't think that thought? Hmmm. This is pretty damn > hard to imagine. Maybe someone who woke up wondering what sort of internal > weather she might get that day? Someone curious to see how mercurial and > fleeting > her emotional states are? > > > > TA: my fear of panic attacks is making me miserable. > > :my thinking is miserable, I'm just fine. > > : I'm making my fear miserable by pushing it away. > > > > Hmmm, > > > > I'm going to take a stab at what I think is under them. > > > > Parenting is too hard. I want out. They're killing me. one or the other is > on > me from the moment I wake up until the moment I sleep. I have no other life. > > And I can't quit. I'm trapped. I don't want to turn them over to someone > else > to raise. Most of the rest of the world makes a mess of child rearing. > > Okay, I'm overwhelmed, yet I don't want to stop parenting them. > > > > I'm trapped and overwhelmed. > > > > Is it true? Sure feels like it. > > Absolutely know it's true? Nah, much of the time I'm just fine. I can feel > really good about what I'm doing. And I do get breaks. And I truly could > walk > away. People do. > > > > How do I feel when I believe the story that I'm trapped and overwhelmed? > Panicked, depressed, crappy. I shut down emotionally, I try to escape on > line, or > into the newspaper. I lay around and let harry nurse on me because it's > easier > than getting up and playing with them. My gut churns, there's a fluttering, > zinging feeling in my heart center, I consider killing myself, but what's > the > point of that, I'll just get right back on this damn wheel of samsara. I > can't > feel how precious my children are to me. I can't remember how incredibly > lucky I am to be home with them. I forget to go outside and garden. I forget > to > take care of my body. I don't take them out to museums or the zoo. > > Who would I be if I couldn't think the thought, " I'm trapped and > overwhelmed? " > > I'd be happy, I'd wake up excited to have a whole day with the kids to > explore the world. I'd be silly and playful. I'd be how I am when I'm > feeling > good. > > > > TA: > > My thinking is trapped and overwhelms me. > > > > Well, I'm not feeling like I'm really getting at the core of this. > > > > Any suggestions would be much appreciated (and I hope you don't mind that I > show up so rarely and am asking for feedback without having offered any to > others) > > Thanks in advance, > > susan > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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