Archives for category: Relationships

I’ve been told by more than one professional of one sort or another that I would “probably calm down after menopause”.  Glossing over how that observation always seemed to trivialize my experience, diminish me as a free will adult, and offer little present-day hope, it was also something I’ve held onto for a long time… it will be all be better…eventually… like magic… without effort.  Just a simple biological, chemical change in my reproductive functionality and I will be well and whole and somehow saner and more balanced.  Let’s be real – that sounds too good to be true, and even if it is true, wouldn’t it be a ludicrous failure to manage my affairs in an adult way to simply sit around throwing random tantrums and waiting for menopause? My hormones and I have put my loved ones through hell, more than once.  I’ve even dared to say, out loud, that I am ‘not high maintenance’ and even ‘not especially moody’. Wow.

I am… high maintenance, and then some. In spite of myself.  I’m moody, too – especially moody, and rather often.  I have indulged in tantrums that go so far beyond what could be considered acceptable from an adult I’m lucky I still get invited to parties by proper grown ups.  I can do better than this – can’t I?  I’ve read my share of ‘self help’ books, and mostly they haven’t done much in the way of help, because… ready for it? They’re just books. In spite of the lack of action on their part, and mine, a few outstanding books have stood out… and I go back to them again and again, to learn more than the words on the pages. Brain injury, PTSD, the slow march toward menopause… I still choose my actions, don’t I? Well, I guess I don’t always – but it sounds like a good starting point. (Do I get a ‘starting point’ at 49? Extraordinary!)

So, thoughtful, mindful, well-chosen action, considerate of my loved ones and associates and fellow-man – and doing my best to ‘take care of me’, too… it seems a good approach. It’s easy on paper – that’s what makes the ‘self help’ industry thrive. The ideas are so simple, so effective – and like fad diets, they probably all work.  If I do them.  That reminds me, a healthy diet, a good fitness plan, managed and adequate rest, harmonious healthy relationships all add up to thriving, don’t they? Does it even take money? Is a book even necessary? (Not always; this weekend I enjoyed the opportunity to share how helpful regular baths in Epsom salts have been for stabilizing my mood and helping me sleep. A man in line with me at the store could not resist asking what I needed all the Epsom salts for, and it was clearly on the order of a lifeline to hear something as simple and inexpensive as Epsom salts have given me so much relief; it was clear from our exchange that both he and his wife are suffering through her change.)

I did my best this weekend to choose my words and actions well, to nurture my loved ones and not take their experiences personally, to take care of my own basic needs, and where I could to assist my loved ones in meeting theirs, too. It was a pretty great weekend.  I suspect it makes for a dull blog post, but I feel pretty good today.

Happy Monday! Being nicer today feels easy…

Living mindfully is still something that feels like a challenge. I’ve spent a lot of my lifetime in my own head trying a lot of strategies and deceits and games with myself to somehow make the things that hurt seem just a little less part of who I am, and it has cluttered up my emotional landscape and complicated my everyday life. I’m trying something different these days, and this blog is actually a piece of that. I’m trying to connect more with people directly, including myself, and less through technology. I’m also learning to savor my experiences in the moment, good and bad, in an effort to make them more profound and meaningful, and maybe free myself from the past. So… no blog post yesterday, because life had my attention in a very real and immediate way, and was certainly worth experiencing in fullness.

Years ago I gave up driving. I had moved to an area with good public transportation, and I was no longer enjoying the experience of driving, so I gave up my car when it died, and gave up driving, too. That was… 1999, I think. So, here it is, 14 years later, and yesterday I got my driver’s license. It was kind of a wow moment, especially because I scored really well and made very few mistakes.  I’m excited to have such a fundamental piece of decision making and freedom of movement back. I spent the afternoon window shopping with one of my partners, and we got an amazing pizza and took it home for dinner. We spent the evening hanging out as a family, and it was definitely the sort of evening that puts the fun in Family Fun Time! Great music, great conversation, more love than words exist to describe.

Right now I’m wrapped in weekend life; doing laundry and housework, catching up on correspondence, hanging out with my loved ones, and just generally enjoying my experience. It’s very nice. It’s … serene. And satisfying. I am, in this moment, right here, right now, very happy. Right now, that’s quite enough to make ‘everything’ seem alright.   This is a very good experience.

Even in the digital age, we are each having our own experience.

I know I’m having my own experience, because so much of it is entirely unshared, and in some cases perhaps even un-shareable. By the end of 2012 I was well on my way to a full collapse of my understanding of myself, emotionally, intellectually, philosophically, even historically.  Choices that once seemed obvious, had become questionable beyond the point of my own ability to consider the questions with clarity, my anxiety had become unmanageable, an event in the news hit my consciousness and destroyed a big piece of my everyday understanding of my sexuality, my hormones march ever onward toward menopause, and new information about my own experience came to light, leaving me confused and introspective as I entered the new year. What a new year it has been, so far… If the value of time and events is measured in their intensity, impact, and significance, then 2013 may well prove to be one of the most important years of my life…my life. My experience. I rather doubt that most people around me have any real awareness of my internal turmoil, even my partners. They are also having their own experiences.

I find it complicated when I work on my priorities, my goals, or try to identify my needs and wants in a clear and simple way because, although I am having my own experience, I am at least somewhat aware that my experience has elements shared with others. Our perspectives may differ, probably do differ, but those common elements become the foundation stones of shared understanding, conversation, emotional bonding, and a feeling of being connected. I like feeling connected, but it doesn’t always come easily to me. Lately, I often have difficulties feeling connected, even in very close relationships. The easy course of action is to attribute the difficulty to the challenge of the moment, whatever that may be, but when I’m honest with myself it is bigger than that, and needs my attention.

49 seems like an appropriate age for an identity crisis, I guess… but how does one connect with someone who isn’t sure who they are? I find myself wondering – acknowledging? – that it must be very hard on people who love me, and I manage a moment of sympathy and concern, before my mental nail-biting returns to figuring out the puzzle that is me. I struggle with figuring out what needs to be shared, what would be ‘over sharing’.  My friends, partners, or lovers are not my therapist, or parents, or authority figures, and respecting their boundaries, and our relationships, really requires that I not handle my issues in a way that nudges them into one of those roles… but I am also aware that the mental health industry might actually collapse if people really share their experience more openly with people who matter to them, there would be that much less demand for those services.  Connectivity and emotional support actually matter that much to day in and day out quality of life. (If it seems I’m being over-obvious, I’ll take a moment to admit that I didn’t understand that until relatively recently in my life.)  I want to cultivate a strong connection with people I care about; I don’t always know how.  It’ll sound strange to say, perhaps I’m phrasing it badly, but I’m not sure I know how to ‘make a strong connection with myself’ right now – that can’t make it easier to connect with others.

So…I am having my own experience, and you are having yours. Maybe trying to share mine isn’t the best route to take to feel connected right now… I think today I will explore trying to let go of how badly I need to be heard, and just listen. I may learn something about feeling connected.

I am having a very nice morning. I was musing about just how nice, and the feelings that gives me, and watching the sun rise, as I waited for my bus to work. The colors were amazing; crimson and scarlet and magenta and orange, pale streaks of mauve and a hint of lavender off to the edges, and in the foreground the contrasting darkness of the trees, bared branches of winter, reaching across those bold colors. I was struck by it and eagerly pulled out my camera (phone) to capture the amazing vista…but my camera will not photograph a sunrise. A little frustrating, but not a big deal. I keep hearing the phrase in my thoughts, though,  as I wait for the bus… “My camera will not photograph a sunrise.” I have the vague sense that as sentences go, it wants to tell me more, but I don’t find more there to know.

My brain injury is a frontal lobe injury. It effects memory and executive function, and likely has for the entirety of my adult life. I contemplate that a lot lately, and how that may have changed my experience of life, and how well/poorly I handle relationships and social interactions or make decisions. I have a lot to learn… having found out about my brain injury doesn’t change past behaviors or experiences, but it has serious potential to change my understanding of how my behaviors and experiences have evolved, what has driven my choices and decision-making, and why some things frustrate me so much (and I hope, also what I can do to improve on how I cope with those things).  I spent the solitary portion of my morning reading about memory over coffee.  I moved on to reading about executive functions while I rode in to work, and during my morning break, a short article about the frontal lobe. I read a lot. (Words work for me, mostly, although I have to read things more than once, take notes, cross reference bits I’m not sure about, and talk things through to gain an in depth understanding of a subject.) This morning I am a little awed at how easily the ‘issues’ I’ve had, challenges, bad behavior, and weirdness line up so cleanly with the information in my reading regarding frontal lobe damage and potential consequences to executive function and memory. I keep staring at the words and wondering why, if I can see these connections so easily here and now, no one looked at the list of shit I’ve been working through for so long and made the connection in the other direction? (You know… “Damn, considering X, Y, and Z, I have to wonder if you are suffering from some sort of damage that effects executive function?” I mean, seriously Medical Science, it actually seems that obvious in hindsight.)

It’s a lot to think about. I vacillate between feeling beat down to the point I can’t go on, overwhelmed to the point of giving up, and feeling like I do today; hopeful, and armed with new knowledge about how and why I am who I am, and where I can go from here with more appropriate tools.  I am hoping that gaining a deeper, more profound understanding of how my injury effects cognition, decision-making, and memory, that I can develop a better set of coping skills – more effective, more reliable, and less ‘guess work’. How do I change how I cope with my brain injury so that I am able to treat people consistently well? How do I make good decisions, and take care of me? How do I reduce the level of agitation and turmoil in my every day experience knowing now that much of it is born of simple frustration, fatigue, or challenges that are a by product of my injury? As is so often my experience, I have more questions than answers.

I need to paint – there are things I need to say that I don’t have words for; a sunrise, a memory I can’t quite remember, a portrait of a fracture I can’t see… I need to feel heard.

Expectations are strange things. If I expect Mondays to suck, they generally do, and over time more so. If I spend a few minutes on Sunday evening contemplating what a great day Monday may be, my Monday seems to start in a very different way, filled with the soft quiet of unfulfilled potential rather than with the dread of ‘if this, then what else follows?’ It is a nice difference (and I owe a dear loved one a ‘thank you’ for the suggestion). It also got me thinking about expectations and how a pleasant surprise can turn a day around.

Would you like to get in on the ground floor of some fun with me? It’s along the lines of upsetting expectations, and altering our reality for the better, and it’s easy and doesn’t cost anything but a moment of will and your time, and all the choices are yours! Here is how it works – be just a little nicer on Mondays. That’s it. So many of us expect really awful Mondays. We go back to work after a weekend that always feels too short, or we wake up with the knowledge that we are among those who could be working but are not, or any one of a near infinite number of life scenarios – many of which include the expectation that ‘Mondays suck’. So, to join in on this fun, we’ll be re-wiring Mondays! Treat your fellow man just a little nicer today than you might ordinarily, and see where it takes us all. It doesn’t have to be ‘let me buy your lunch’ big, either, and you don’t have to tell a lie or compromise your values – just handle each interaction in the most pleasant way you know how. Exercise what you understand about kindness, mercy, compassion, friendliness, hospitality, graciousness, good manners, helpfulness, patience.. hey, pick one and just do that! I don’t see a goal labeled ‘perfection’ on this anywhere, the word I keep using is ‘fun’.  Why ‘fun’? Because that is how I hope to appreciate the day today, any time my efforts result in an unexpected smile from another person, or a moment when it is obvious that their Monday is just a little better than they expected. If enough of us do it, what happens to what we all expect of Mondays? If it gets to be a widespread practice, how awesome would that be? How amazing to build a reputation as a culture for treating people well? We could do that, one day of the week at a time.  It’s a choice.

Ideally, of course, we couldn’t have this conversation at all. The very idea that it would come up as a suggestion is a little… well… it doesn’t say great things about who we have become as ‘civilized’ beings, does it? That there is room to suggest our world could be a better place with so little effort is rather…sad. Still, the good news there is that it actually will take very little individual effort to make our world a better place, to improve our culture, to improve our quality of life experience, even to make Mondays great days to look forward to. Small steps, and simple ideas, are not a bad starting point for change.

Today I am taking on Monday very differently.  I wonder what it will be like? I mean, after all… we are each having our own experience…