Post
by Guest » Mon Feb 01, 2010 3:16 am
Hi,
I agree with Tammy:). You are going to get better:). I also wanted to recommend another book by Dr. Henry Cloud a Christian psychologist called, "Changes that Heal". It's really good at pointing out all of the elements of healing such as time, grace, and truth. It was neat that when I bought the book, I had just started to get better, but I couldn't put my finger on the one thing that got me better. It all just seemed to come together, and this program was definitely one of the components. The book pointed out that there is often "harvest time" in emotional healing where you can't always put your finger on one thing, but all of your hard work comes together and you reap the harvest:). However, when you are sewing and planting, it's hard to believe that there will be the harvest time. So, just think of yourself as being a farmer who is planting seeds right now. When you are speaking the positive affirmations and self-talk, you are planting the seeds, and seeds to do not turn into mature plants overnight as Tammy was saying:). But without planting the seeds you are never going to get your harvest...in other words, what you are doing is important even though you can't see the results yet:).
Also, I wanted to add a little about "The Gift of Fear". I know it is hard to imagine fear being a gift, and the title alone would upset most people with anxiety:). That being said, God has given us an autonomic nervous system our fight or flight system to protect ourselves from real danger. It knows what to do and when to do it. It is very powerful. As a child who was abused, your autonomic nervous system was on for many, many formative years to keep you alive. In other words, it is used to being on and going full throttle. Now, that you are out of the abuse, it is still on when you don't need it to be. In fact, until you learn different coping skills such as comforting self-talk, etc., it will stay on when you don't need it. Exercise also helps to rid your body of excess adrenaline, and it is very possible that you have a condition known as adrenal fatigue. It's not a scary condition, it just means that your adrenal system was full throttle for so long that you have lots of stress hormones built up in your system, and your adrenal gland is probably larger than it should be. There is a great chapter on adrenal fatigue in a book called "The Anxiety Cure" by a Christian Psychologist. I don't agree with everything in the book, but that chapter on adrenal fatigue hit the nail on the head for me. I did need a period of rest, exercise, etc. to let my adrenal system heal.
Also, when you try to take conscious control over it, such as thinking of all of the scenarios where someone could attack you, you are keeping it on when it doesn't need to be on. You have to learn that it will let you know when there is real danger and do its job. Of course, that takes time. So, that is the "Gift of Fear" that the author is talking about ...he's not talking about being afraid and thinking of all of the possible dangerous scenarios all day long. He's talking about letting your intuition tell you that something is up when there is a real danger and trusting it to alarm you like a smoke detector when there is an actual fire. It is a gift that kept you alive when you needed it as a child, but now, it is time to turn it off and trust that it will do its job when the time arises without it having to be on 24/7. Again, it is going to take work, time, hope, and patience, but I promise you that it will happen:). If someone hadn't seen me for five years, and saw me now and all that I was doing now compared to then...they would freak out:). I did have to give myself time, truth, and grace:). I am also raising a son with severe autism, so I am someone who will always be under stress, but I still have times of great peace which would have never been possible just five years ago. Go through the program, but don't put too much pressure on yourself. I know you want to feel better, and it will happen when you least expect it:).
Oh, one time I wrote on here to think of your body as a race car that has been going 90 to nothing and slams on the breaks. The car has stopped, but the engine is steaming hot and the car is still rattling. It's going to take time for it to cool off after going at full speed for so long even though you stopped it by slamming on the breaks. So, the things that you are doing in this program are like you have slammed on the breaks, but your body is still rushing with adrenaline as if it were still hot like the race car, but that doesn't mean you haven't stopped and that what you have done isn't working:).
Finally, another good book for healing is "Released From Shame". From reading this book, I realized that a lot of us with anxiety really shame ourselves for having this condition. We do want to get better and healing should be our focus, but loving ourselves into feeling better is the way to go instead of using shame. When we release ourselves from shame over our anxiety and quit using shame to beat ourselves into getting better so that we will finally be "good enough", that is really when the healing begins. One thing that really helped me in the book that you may be able to relate to as a survivor of child abuse is that we should never shame ourselves for the symptoms we have because of the abuse which would include anxiety and abandonment. I really struggled with feelings of abandonment which caused me to have massive dependency on my husband. I shamed myself for that and so did many others around me. Sometimes, the shame would serve as a motivator, but it didn't cause long term progress and often hindered my healing. When I learned to let go of the shame, and be motivated by love for myself to pursue a path of healing is when I made the most progress. I'm not perfect, and I have my moments because of all of the trauma, but I am tons better:)!
Hope something I said helps in some way:)! Hang in there, you most certainly do have a lot of hope and you will get better:)!
Take care,
luvpiggy