99 to 1

                It’s amazing how we can get 99 compliments and 1 criticism and that’s the one thing we remember.  It’s the one thing we think about and the one thing that upsets, drives, and motivates us.  We can do so much good, be good at our jobs, do good in the world, have good days, but one bad day, one bad comment, one off moment, and that is all we remember and all anyone else remembers as well.  In a world of stereotypes where mass generalizations rule, why is it the one-off moment, the one bad example, the one bad comment, the one bad day is what we remember in our own daily lives?

                It’s been a hard month, I’ll be honest.  I’ve been busy, that much is pretty much par for the course, but it has been especially draining this year.  April is child abuse awareness month, so I am always speaking, promoting, and in general having a lot going on.  Ironically, this year, I didn’t travel at all, so you would think the month would have been less hectic, but it was anything but.  With a move to everything being online, the need to constantly be pushing out content was always there.  I’ll be honest, I hate social media, I dislike technology, I am old fuddy duddy in the wrong generation.  I was perfectly happy in the 80s with no internet, no cell phone and honestly no computer (we had one, but I never used it….).

                In addition to everything moving online, the world is opening up again.  Well, if you are an extrovert, you will be thrilled about that.  If you are an introvert, you likely aren’t thrilled, but you aren’t going to say anything because your very nature compels you not to.  The fact of the matter is extroverts rule the world because their nature allows them to voice their wants and needs better than introverts.  Introverts by nature stay quiet, so the result is we live in an extroverted world.  Again, I’ll be perfectly honest, I was probably the happiest I have ever been during quarantine, it was amazing.  I got shit done, I stayed at home, and I spent time with my cat.  I LOVED it.  Were there difficulties, of course, but as an introvert I was genuinely happy.

                The world returning to normal brings with it the mask that all introverts must put on in order to fit in in an extroverted world.  The pretending you’re comfortable when you’re not, the trying to fit in, the trying to act like you aren’t exhausted and that you don’t just want to go home at practically every social function you have to attend.  I am not an extreme introvert, so I do enjoy being around people occasionally, but I definitely need my space and I enjoy a lot of “me time.” 

                That brings me to this last month.  I love April, I do, let me be clear about that.  I love what I do, and I love being an advocate, but every now and again it is tiring.  It is tiring because I care.  Because I care and I speak up, I share my mind and I try to make a difference.  Most of the time that is well received, but whenever you speak up you will always cause waves and there are those in the world that don’t like that, no matter what the subject matter is.  I love what I do, and I will always speak up, but speaking up and being loud takes a toll.  The toll for me is needing a lot of down time.  Needing to be alone, being allowed to decompress alone and quietly where no one can see me.  Sometimes that’s hard to do in an extroverted world and this month in particular it seemed harder than most.  That’s ok though, I’ll be fine, because I’m a survivor, and if there is one thing my abuse taught me, it’s that I am tougher than even I know sometimes and I can get through anything.

Definitions vs Reality

In the last few years, I have come to realize that how something is defined in my mind isn’t always how it is defined in reality, or how it is defined in other people’s minds. I have learned that my perception is sometimes different, not necessarily wrong, just different, which can occasionally lead to confusion. This has happened to me in two very specific instances in the last five years. One-time few years ago, and another time a few weeks ago. The irony of that is I am a Psychology major, and these are topics I talk about all the time, so how could I still have misunderstood? But alas, we are forever learning about others, and more importantly about ourselves. That is how growth happens, by continuing to challenge ourselves and to challenge our views of the world.

A few years ago, I realized that I have panic attacks, and that I had been having panic attacks my whole life, only I never knew what they were. In the movies when someone has a panic attack, they always have to leave the location they are in to go outside to sit down on a curb and breathe into a brown paper sack. That’s what I thought a panic attack was, literally. Literally breathing into a brown paper sack. Even if I had known I was having a panic attack, I can tell you I for damned sure wouldn’t have been caught dead breathing into a brown paper sack doing that, I would have been too embarrassed. More importantly, though because I never felt the need to sit down, leave the room or breathe into a sack, I assumed that I never had them. Boy was I wrong.

I was sitting in a meeting, discussing how to keep kids safe, when the topic, which was not about abuse, triggered a memory for me that all of a sudden started a panic attack. For me, it was a feeling I knew all too well. At that point in time, I hadn’t had one in probably 5-10 years, so it had been a while, and it took me by surprise, but I used to have them all the time, especially in my teens and early twenties. My heart would start racing (even though I was sitting down), I would feel antsy and mostly I would want to crawl out of my skin and get the hell out of there. Simultaneously however, I would feel a need to not let anyone know that anything was wrong, that the only way to protect myself was by acting normally and, by staying calm. The fact of the matter is, only someone that knows me really really well would be able to tell I’m not ok in those moments.

So, about a year after that meeting, I was listening to someone describe what a panic attack felt like for them and it was the first time that I had that “eureka”? moment, and I was like, seriously? That’s it? That’s a panic attack? Oh, I have those too! Then my second thought was how did I not know that? How did I not figure this out sooner? Sheesh.

Well about two weeks ago I had the same thing happen to me, only this time it wasn’t about panic attacks, it was about triggers. I’ve known what triggers were for a long time, I’ve even written about them, but by and large, I honestly didn’t really think that I had any, not really. When people talk about triggers, they typically talk about tangible things,: a place, a location, a sight, smell, sound, word that reminds them of the triggering event that took place. And those are all triggers, it’s just that I don’t have any triggers like that. What I came to realize two weeks ago is that triggers can be emotional, too. I had always understood that triggers, literally triggered an emotional response, but what I didn’t realize is that the trigger itself can in fact be an emotion.

When I go down the deep dark hole, to that place of despair, the place I go when things get bad, it's because I feel something. I feel some emotion that scares me, some emotion I don’t want to feel, and ultimately it makes me feel other things. Sometimes it triggers a panic attack, feelings I don’t like feeling. Sometimes it makes me go to the pit of despair, and sometimes it’s the fight or flight mechanism. Whatever the emotional response is, it is triggered by an initial emotion, and that emotion is my trigger. It’s fascinating that as much as I know about the subject of abuse, and as much as I have analyzed myself (believe me I have spent hours and hours and hours), I hadn’t connected the dots and figured this out until now. It just goes to show you that there is always more to learn, no matter how much we know, and there is always growth that can occur.

Sixth Sense

I have a sixth sense. I believe everyone does to be honest. My sixth sense is my ability to read people and to read situations. I think everyone has this ability, I just think it gets more finely developed in people that have been through traumatic experiences. The experiences can vary, vastly vary, but I think people can tap into this ability and once they do, learn to trust it. Most people never have to tap into it and even if they do, an even greater portion probably never fully trust it. I rely heavily on my sixth sense and I trust it implicitly. Am I always right, no, but I am very, very rarely wrong, and this has become my shield. A very, very important shield that is my number one form of protection.

Bravery

Bravery, courage, lack of fear. All of these words are all synonymous. One can be replaced with the other and yet what do they mean? How do you know if you are brave and how can you be brave when you are filled with fear? Does being brave by definition have to be something that scares you or makes you uncomfortable? Are you any less brave if you don’t feel these things? And how does fear play into all of this?

Contradictions

Friends always have your best interest at heart. That being said, sometimes their best intentions can seem like they are contradicting one another. I am forever being told that I don’t put myself out there, that I don’t give people chances, and that I don’t open up enough. Yet when I do put myself out there, when I do open up, and when I do decide I want something, if it doesn’t fit the deemed appropriate timeline I am then told to move on, that I deserve something better, and that I wait around for too long in situations that aren’t good for me.

Triggers

As a survivor, we can begin to learn what our triggers are. It takes time, but after lots of experience we figure out what they are. We learn to steer clear of them and we can we learn to steer into them, much like we are taught when skidding on ice in our cars. The key is knowing what they are. But like black ice, you can’t always see some triggers coming. Triggers are hard, regardless of the circumstances, but when they take you by surprise, or when you don’t know that something is a trigger, the trigger and the surprise of it can be overwhelming.

Rollie Pollies

Rollie Pollies

Whenever I feel threatened, scared, alone, insecure, or frankly not sure what I’m feeling my first reaction is to retreat. To curl up into a ball and protect myself. I am reminded of the bug’s I loved as a kid. Rollie Pollies, I thought they were so cool. You picked one up, and immediately they went from horizontal, bug-like, to a perfectly round circle. This amazing armor like shell that protected them from the world around them. It was only after some unspecified amount of time if you were patient enough that they would uncurl and then crawl around on your hand.

Kudzu

Kudzu

It is often said that offense is the best defense and while I agree with that some of the time, sometimes I think defense is the best defense. One of my best defenses has always been hiding in plain sight. If no one can see me, if no one has any idea that anything is wrong, if no one has any idea that I have a secret then they won’t go searching for it… right?

Continuing Strong in a New Time

Continuing Strong in a New Time

The world has changed, there is no doubt. For how long is anyone’s guess. I think most people agree that things will eventually get back to normal but the question on everyone’s mind is when? When will we return to work, when will we return to being able to see our friends, workout at gyms, go to restaurants, bars, and in general go out in public?

Fears, Triggers, & Trauma, Oh My!

Fears, Triggers, & Trauma, Oh My!

Much like Dorothy in the Wizard of Oz, I, like many people all over the world have had my life turned upside down in the last week. In many ways it feels like my house was blown away in a tornado and I am now living in a fantasy world completely unlike the one I actually know.

Valentine's Day Blog 1

Valentine's Day Blog 1

Valentines Day is always an interesting day because we are either supposed to be happy or sad depending on whether we are in a relationship or not.  As someone who has never been in a relationship on Valentine’s day, it generally doesn’t bother me, but I’d be lying if I said I was completely immune to it.