Bored and Happy To Be

I have reached a new phase of my mental health journey.

A year ago, I was just beginning to experience new levels of anxiety, and what I can now see as Relationship OCD and Scrupulosity.

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Me, this time last year- when I started to descend quickly into an abyss of self-destruction- always tired and ignoring my needs

I was always getting triggered and my mind descending into chaos. Not being able to relax and be alone anymore. Eventually, from the moment I woke up I was attacked mercilessly with intrusive thoughts, and sometimes I was up in the night panicking at fake threats or possibilities.

Now, I am… well, bored. And I have never been more happy to be so.

I say bored because my mind spent an entire year – 2019 was a dark year – with obsessive thoughts that eventually gave way to compulsions, which fueled high anxiety from dawn until dusk.

Now,  my mind is unfamiliar and clear.

Through lots of work with my therapist (I found someone who specializes in what I needed; I recommend this if you can find one); joined an online course and community focusing on Relationship OCD (Check out Awaken Into Love here); worked for reconciliation in relationship that needed repairing; resolving some of my anger and disappointment towards God; tending to my dilapidated physical health; seeking out various literature and resources; and leaning hard on my loved ones… As a result, I have experienced levels of mental boredom and healthy emotional regulation that I don’t think I have before.

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Healthy in Spring 2020. Reveling in the glow emanating from a more healed, whole, and renewed mind and body. Thank you, Lord!

When I say I’m happy, it doesn’t mean I’ve found some crazy enlightenment in anything I’ve done, per se. I just am more WHOLE. I have grace towards myself when I fail, get anxious, give into a compulsion, or regress. Therefore, I am able to be more understanding towards others as well.

I am doing the work. I am able to decide which thoughts to entertain, let be, or reject as ridiculous.

I am able to feel awful, sad, or even depressed without it having to mean something huge. And, for me, I haven’t been this happy in a long time- happy because I am taking charge of my life by controlling what I can and letting go of what I can’t. My trust in God is growing as I see how he takes care of me when I let Him.

I have been able to set boundaries with people- I can decide how I am to be treated and what I won’t tolerate. This doesn’t mean I reject the other person, it can actually safeguard and improve a relationship/friendship.

I still deal with anxiety, but am managing it significantly better than even 2 months ago.

I will probably turn my focus for Anxious Anne outwards more, since I have more mental capacity to do so. I want to do more features, interviews, and articles relating to mental health, art, and faith.

Let’s see where this goes!

-Anxious Anne

Music featured:

I created a strings cover of a favorite song called “Take Heart” by Hillsong-

 

Decapitate Me, Please

If you haven’t yet read it, please read my interview and art showcase with my friend and artist Hannah Carson- Interview: “When Her Eyes Grew In” Art Series by Hannah Carson

I have lived in ignorance of the effects of the quarantine on my life…

We are reaching week number six of the mandated social distancing disorder. I am truly starting to feel it. Even though I am more fortunate than some, with more of a structure to my life, still. I feel like I am floating through life these days. I have this image of a grand, celestial calendar and I am just floating through the weeks and days, inertia carrying me forward.

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“Time-space Distancing 2020” by Bethany Porter

At first, as an introvert, I enjoyed the lack of social pressure to go do certain things. My social energy didn’t have to be spread as thin and I could just focus on a very small group of people.

However, about three weeks in, I started to ruminate on different thoughts- usually relating to people in my life whose life has been affected by the social distancing. Next, someone who had been a fixture in my near daily life for the last couple of years died suddenly.

The sudden death mixed with the uncertainty of the quarantine and it’s compounding effect on my and other people’s progress in life started to wear away at my confidence and my ease.

Certain compulsions have come back- some trite ones being eating more dessert and watch TV to emotionally cope, but some more detrimental. I am pretty sure some of us can relate.

There have been some positive effects, too. I have had more opportunities to learn some valuable skills that are pluses as an artist/musician in this digital age. I have had time to attend to some to do list items and finally purchase a shag rug to cover my cheap, thin carpeted floors. I have developed wonderful evening stretching and physical therapy routines. I have also spent some quality time with my roommates and we have bonded in ways we never could have without the quarantine.

My mind is buzzing as the end of the social order (well, who knows if it will be the end) is fast approaching. This will not only mark the end of a very difficult yet enlightening period, but also the beginning of an EVEN MORE uncertain period where anything can happen. The virus could come back. We may see our life very slowly returning to normal, or NEVER returning to normal. Actions long planned could dissolve, adapt, or be completely replaced.

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Excuse the language… but it’s apt to my brain lately!! “All will go to crap” is the general feeling.

I will say I am grateful for the things I’ve learned. But my mind is starting to build up with all sorts of thoughts and feelings – feeding the anxieties – and is weighing me down and causing my neck to hurt. I am ready for gravity to come back and these thoughts, plans, and intents to be able to move forward.

In the meantime, someone, decapitate me, please.

-Anxious Anne

 

Both the Best and Worst of News

Perfection. Perfection. Smlurflection.

The pursuit of this has been the bane of my existence- perfect hobbies, perfect friends, perfect boyfriend, perfect career, perfect grades, perfect behavior, perfect health, perfect relationship with God…

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I now know that what I thought was just simply a sense of self-righteousness (which is true!), grew into something more; an obsession. Anxiety and OCD that became my companions in these pursuits: faithful, pushing me towards what I deemed as excellence, making me feel in control, making promises that perfection was just around the corner… they began to grow like thick Boston Ivy, climbing on their own accord as I gave them space upon the walls of my psyche. Soon they penetrated through the windows and intertwined throughout every room and hall. The foliage seemed to whisper, accuse, and call to me as I walked the halls.

Try harder.

You failed there.

Give up.

Protect yourself.

It’s too hard.

They’ll reject you anyways.

You aren’t good enough, yet.

God won’t love you if you do that.

God is going to punish you.

Forget sleep, you need to figure this out.

It’s hopeless.

You’re hopeless.

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Art from VICE article: “The Many Obsessions That Can Haunt a Person With OCD” by Shayla Love (contains offensive or explicit material)

Truly, this worked for years. Everything to compromise this perception of my achievement and goodness was hidden away neatly, only making it onto pages of my tear-stained diaries, but often just remaining in my mind to slowly eat away at me.

It wasn’t until I realized this hiding, and started to meet true friends that both supported and challenged me – prying off my facades with tough love – that things started to unravel.

Some of the hardest news for someone suffering from OCD and Anxiety to hear is this: you are a sinner.

Sure, I have heard this my whole life as I sat devoutly Sunday after Sunday, notebook in hand. However, in retrospect, I believe I was jumping through hoop after hoop to escape this reality, to somehow level up through my own striving to earn God’s good graces, and by approval of others, to signify my righteousness, worth, and feel one step closer to perfection.

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The Awkward Yeti comics never fail haha

You are a sinner. Is this an accusation? What should I do with this? This is BAD NEWS. This means I will never reach perfection no matter how hard I grasp, and thrash, and obsess.

You are a sinner. Why must I carry this burden? What hope is there for me, then? Why try if this will always be branded on my forehead?

You are a sinner. No… this would mean that I can’t do anything for myself. That I can’t be my own hope, or other people can’t either. This would mean I am vulnerable, will be hurt or hurt others…

You are a sinner, but… but, what? If You are good, what possible goodness could come out of You creating me to fail? What good am I? I can achieve nothing? Life is meaningless if life means pain!

You are a sinner, but Christ died for the sins of men. Okay, why would the God of all the universe endure pain, suffering, and the temptations and pitfalls of humanness just to die for failures like us? Couldn’t he just clap his hands and set things in place? Why did he give us choice? Why did he take up our burdens?

You are a sinner, but Christ died for the sins of men. You are no longer a slave to that sin. Okay, then why do I still get to “easily entangled” in it- my pride, strife, and apathy? Am I, then, creating the shackles that bind me to the crushing weight of failure? You say I am free now. What can it mean to be both sinner and free? Do you hold the key to unlock those layers upon layers upon layers of shackles?

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You are a sinner, but Christ died for the sins of men. You are no longer a slave to that sin. My yolk is easy and my burden light. Well, if you say you hold to key to set me free, I guess that would be an easier burden, even though I still live with pain throughout my life. If I am first a sinner and in need of your unlocking the shackles off that sin daily, then I will give you that task. I relinquish that control because it’s too weighty and it’s crushing me. I suppose this is what us humans chose from the beginning – choosing to strive for god-like perfection although we are simply creatures. If you want to take it, then I won’t stop you.

Okay, I am a sinner.

I am a sinner.

I am a sinner, but…

I am a sinner, but Christ died for those sins and I am no longer a slave to them.

This still isn’t good news, it means I must learn to cope with my sinfulness aside from the voices of accusation that OCD and Anxiety has provided – a sort of comfort – for years. This will take time to unravel, cut, and uproot the raging Ivy.

But, I guess this is good news… the voices of accusation hold no weight if I remember that I am, indeed, a sinner, but God sought to end the disparity that comes with that identity, and eventually obliterate it. Truly a weight has lifted. But what do I do with all of this empty space in my brain?

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From https://www.netcredit.com/blog/visualization-techniques-calm-anxious-mind/
After the anxiety clears, I’m like what do I do now? haha

There is no whip cracking to move me along, only kind and merciful direction from God and his Word. Anxiety tries to show up to help me along with decisions, but now I don’t need it anymore…

How do I function without perfection as my goal? How do I function without only relying on myself? This would mean I am truly helpless alone, and would need to rely on others and God to move me through life. I suppose this isn’t a bad thing, but it would require me to relinquish that control, and self-righteous attitude, and be vulnerable before others and trusting of God. This is scary and this is new; but, having the burden of my pride and self-protection has been overwhelming and has broken my mind. I am ready to give it up.

Truly, this is the BEST and WORST of news.

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“My yoke is easy & my burden is light” Original oil painting by Katie Humphress- original location click here

Lord, help me, a sinner.

-Bethany

Featured song recommended by upcoming interviewee, Hannah Carson! Stay tuned for the interview being published here NEXT WEEK!

Don’t Tell Me to Follow My Gut

There is this American things, well, maybe it’s not just American, but we are all about taking risks, following your dreams, and listening to your “gut”. There are many problems with this for the average Jane or Joe, but these issues compound when clinical anxiety, depression, PTSD, or the like is present.

The first issue is that following your “gut” avoids calculating risk, effects of the action in the long term, or seeing it’s effect with a wider lens. It is making a decision based on what ultimately suits you or follows the emotional beckoning of the moment.

I think the only times following your “gut” is reasonable is when you are in a situation where you realize danger and need to be only your guard or need to run away. That is just it, though, the gut usually is directly tied to our brain’s “fight or flight” mechanism – usually manifesting as panic or anxiety or adrenaline. Why would you trust this in situations other than being chased or needing to protect or rescue someone? The gut is only trying to preserve itself without care for any one else or even the objective truth.

This is why the worst thing you can tell someone who is struggling with detrimental anxiety/depression/PTSD/Paranoia to just follow what they are feeling when they have to make decisions. What they are likely feeling is “RUNN!!!” even if that would actually be feeding into the anxiety, evading something that needs addressed, or leaving a good thing that’s hard. When someone is in that unbalanced place in their mind, their gut – or you can think of it as their current wiring – is usually avoiding triggers, pain, or uncertainty at all costs. However, they will not improve in that way.

I wrote the song below about 2 years ago, when I first started sharing my own music in public places- the anxiety was real:

What I have been learning in my therapy, research, and online classes and communities I have taken part in the last couple of months is that although it is good to know the things that are causing you anxiety (triggering experiences, memories, words, etc.); it’s often not beneficial to “follow your gut” when they are encountered. The gut reaction here is fear, running, and hiding… however, one cannot heal or rewire their brain this way. Anxiety, PTSD, and OCD has caused me great levels of distrust – of my own thoughts mainly, and of other people. It tells me that my thoughts are the enemy and all those who have ever hurt me are the enemy. This is my gut response.

I have been working on what I have often heard called “leaning in” to the discomfort. If something triggers me, instead of questioning the cause of the anxiety to death, I just allow myself to sit with it and let it pass. If I need to make a decision and anxiety is right there thinking it’s going to help me make the decisions like it always has, I remind myself that either I don’t need to make or shouldn’t make any choices now; or, that I should not make a choice based upon fear.

Today, I have pretty much been anxious since the moment I woke up. I wonder if my anxiety medication dose is STILL too low, or if it was because I stayed up until 1am working on finances and rushed out of the door to work… every negative thought, feeling, or memory is congregating at the door of my mind, waiting to do what it is used to doing. My gut is screaming to let all the fearful thoughts in because “we gotta fix this somehow”. But, I won’t do that. Instead, I will acknowledge my old friends, wave at them through the gate, but say that I am busy right now and can’t entertain them. Instead, I think I’ll take a walk on this fine late winter, warm afternoon, read a good book, visit my parents, and listen to some live music.

-Bethany

Featured song below, a favorite of mine, aptly describes much of what I wrote about. “The Draw” Live String Version by Bastille:

I mainly speak of anxiety, depression, PTSD, or OCD here. If you have another condition that relates to something of an addiction, at least in the beginning stages, triggering people, places, or things should be avoided until you gain more control and heal.

Out From the Rabbit Hole

I found this unfinished draft from a couple months ago and it was very interesting to view it from a more healthy standpoint:

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“I have watched my life take a turn for the worst. I will not try to make things sound better than they have been. Currently, I cannot see any silver-lining, and it’s as if I am incapable of doing so. I have had to rely on everyone else in my life to provide me with hope, remind me what I love, and help me see past the tip of my nose.”

“So, I say “Hello!” from the rabbit hole. I am not sure who I say hello to, or what purpose it serves, but I will throw out my words into the abyss that lay before me, seeing what it returns.”

“I started anti-depressant medication a bit over a week ago, it’s to treat multiple ailments- anxiety, panic, depression, PTSD and a newly discovered friend OCD (turns out it can pertain to various things). I read up about the medication, Sertraline, and how most people – including my father- experienced their own personal hell for the first few weeks. So, this is where I currently float: a personal hell. Up is down, down is up, and with no end in sight I flail endlessly in this land of horror.”

An actually moment from the Rabbit Hole, I looked so tired and done. (I was taking a theology class, btw)

“I have discovered intrusive thoughts followed by OCD thought cycles as my main nemesis. I wake up most mornings being interrupted immediately by a “what if?” or “should” thought that usually taps into a deep fear of mine. It may be a genuine doubt or concern, but immediately my mind surmises that something must be done about it, or else face indefinite pain and misery. The thing is, most people experience feelings or thoughts of doubt, or about possibilities but can see them as non-harmful thoughts that pass by their mind’s eye. My mind sees them as a threat, as a virus, and plans and concocts what it must do to get rid of the pain it triggered, and do it fast.”

“This makes me fall into an obsessive thinking, mind trap, blowing up the concern- real or not- into something so big, it is as insurmountable as Mount Everest. Yet, my mind treks up the cold tundra alone, getting higher, and higher in altitude, losing air, making thoughts even more wild… This mountain, alas, is created by my mind, and I am simply doing mental aerobics, treading air, and to no end or avail. Once I realize it’s fruitless, and there is no solution in sight, I am already deep into the thought cycle.”

“I have two choices at this point: do some sort of compulsive activity to convince myself I’m okay (this can be with people, too) which will perpetuate the cyclic thinking; or, I can step back and realize I am in need, sit with the uncomfortable thought and let it pass rather than acting on a compulsion (in my case it was often excessive googling of my problems).”

I now sit here, mentally more healthy, and having taken back more control of my life. I have been taking an online course for the type of OCD I struggle with (Relationship OCD, or rOCD), and have been more actively seeking out resources and healthy ways to cope and heal.

Part of me taking more control of my life- and my struggles mainly relationship centric- is learning to stand up for myself in relationships and not tolerate things that have been hurtful or damaging to me. This looks like setting boundaries and healthy expectations for people who want to be close to me and practicing a little self-respect.

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This also means breaking the cycles within which I am so fearful of the thoughts of others, and so susceptible to their opinions, that I consistently give all my own power away – thus I lose what makes me, me. I have not realized until this past year how I give the power for my decision making easily into the hands of other people. Usually voluntarily because I am so scared of losing their respect or love. If I agree with them and go along with everything, I won’t mess up this relationship, and I will remain in their affections… maybe they will love and appreciate me more.

With this defense mechanism that keeps people from truly knowing me and being vulnerable, I started to be driven to anxious extremes where my mind and then body was crying out to me and trying to signal that something needed attention, but I wasn’t listening. I was too scared of losing love and acceptance from others… even though I know for me, a lot of this can be traced back to trauma (as it was something subconsciously done), but it is at it’s core selfish. Love only occurs between any two people when each allows the other to see their true self.

I realize that I do this thing I’ll call mirroring. I mirror to the other person what I think they want to see, or even start to look like them in some ways, even if it’s not me at all. This causes a rift in my mind, and I begin to lose touch with my own needs, and my mind is only centered around the other person’s. My brain rationalizes it as being “selfless”, but really if I am hiding hurt, pain, or even irritation from someone it is not only disingenuous, but it is cruel because only resentment grows for them under a veneer of false “love”.

I have also realized in these past few months parts of my relationships with those around me are in need of repair, and as I see them repairing, I reach more soundness of mind as a result. Probably one of the biggest healing relationships for me has been with my mom. We have reconciled a lot of the unhealthy and broken parts of our relationship in the last year and have reached new levels of trust and friendship as we navigate our relationship – adult daughter and mother. Her support and validation of my feelings and choices, without a speck of judgement, has been one of the most healing things I have experienced. I notice things begin to align in my mind that have been out of place or broken for years… I don’t feel at the mercy of her expectations, but I just feel supported and loved.

Me and my lovely mom

I have a few more relationships on the list – with which I need to forgive, or ask forgiveness, or actively work out that reconciliation – and I am curious the rifts that will close when these occur. I am also looking forward to meeting “me”, the truer “me” that hides behind the will of other people. The “me” that God formed in my mother’s womb, and created to do amazing things for him that only I can do.

I realize, however, that I am not me without the people around me who love me… I can only become the truer “me” when I open up to love others, and be loved truly – disrupting my constructed paradigms.

My roomies always have a listening ear ❤

Note: I want to say that I hear a lot of speculation about “mental health”. I will say that unless you have experienced issues here, it is hard to understand. I don’t place it in importance above or below physical health issues… I see the body as a whole: mental, physical, spiritual. Mental health issues specifically refer to disorders occurring in the brain – which is an organ (so it could be contended that mental health is actually also under the physical health umbrella).

I think what trips people up is that treatment of mental health issues is largely subjective. Some people just need to talk things out to fix an issue occurring in their brain (such as if they are experiencing high levels of stress, which causes an imbalance in certain hormones and chemical functions). Psychology is a confounding practice, in my opinion, because the psychologist is essentially using techniques by way of questions, visualization, exercises, to “operate” on the abstract thing that is the mind – but changes are occurring in the physical organ in the brain if the treatment works. One thing I have noticed is that treatment is often only effective with a therapist if the patient is all in, and truly opens up and is vulnerable with the therapist. So really, it’s borrowing the wisdom and friendship (although it remains in the room) of another human.

Other patients will need to take medications that alters their brains chemical state in an effort to bring it back to a functional state. Some return to a “normal” after a few short months, and some are on medication for the remainder of their lives. Some people have such an imbalance or damage that they need to receive experimental treatments.

All aspects of our health can and usually do affect the other: chronic illness usually contributes to fatigue, then to depression/anxiety, then to disconnection with self and others (let’s call that spiritual health). Enter in on any one of these aspects and it’s the same: you are depressed/stressed, this leads to fatigue and lack of care for body, which can lead to chronic pains or sickness, and then disconnection. Or, you are disconnected with someone, this causes you to be depressed, thus your physical health goes down the drain.

If you are struggling to forgive or reconcile in relationships, a resource that was very helpful and insight was the book Unpunishable: Ending Our Love Affair With Punishment by Danny Silk. I don’t endorse the teaching of Bethel Ministries, but this book is sound and I recommend it!

-Bethany