Monday, August 18, 2008

Coping mechanisms

For the last week or so I've been unusually happy. Something snapped in me on the way home from a shit day at work one evening, and I where I would normally go home and be reclusive or ideally drink it off while being reclusive, I laughed out loud instead. I laughed all the way home. I came home and danced. While standing in the kitchen eating, I danced alone. Then I danced with the dog, because he was nearby and an inoccent victim I could rope into my happiness without noticeable complaint.

Work saw a different side of me. I'll write more about what I currently do for money at another point in the week, but suffice it to say the work is shit and the pay isn't great. But I've got renewed enthusiasm and have showed more of my old self to my relatively new workmates. My old self - the one who is not afraid to be seen as a bit of a dickhead, who isn't afraid to jerk around, but also who gets in and gets the dirty work done.

In short, I had my groove back.

My first in-depth appointment with my psych was on Saturday. We talked about the ex from over two years ago, mainly. Her task for me: write a letter to the ex describing all the ways she hurt me. Not a letter to be sent, I guess, but one that lets it all come escaping out of me and forces me to put it into form. Since this suggestion I've been fighting for my good mood. I have flat points - moments where I cannot comprehend anything that is going around me, even the smallest things. It's like time slows for me into dreamlike unreality, and then I wake up from the dream bleary eyed and unable to remember exactly what it was about.

These are things I need to confront. They are going to be painful but ultimately for my own benefit. The pain is scary beyond belief. How do people going into life threatening operations cope? I cannot comprehend it. This shit is not physical, it's only my thoughts! Somehow I'm afraid to face what I know I have to in order to get on with living.

I feel between a rock and a hard place when it comes to coping. Where I would normally shut myself away and blare some weird music on my stereo, I find myself only with my laptop speakers and a tenth of my music collection. The rest - the kickarse stereo and the collection of CDs that I have accumulated over so many changes in my life - are in storage at my parents' house about ten hours drive away. I cannot go there to retrieve them, because my dealings with them are a large part of the reason I've sought therapy in the first place.

So what do I do about this letter? How do I cope with writing it? How do I bust down all the mental barriers I've put up over the two years to block the bitch out of my head? And what do I do to save those surrounding me from having to see my pain?

7 comments:

dive said...

It's all in there, Vic, and it's gotta come out.
Treat it like being constipated. You can't hold all that crap in forever, just let the whole damned lot splatter out on the page and have done with it.
You'll cope. You're The Groover!

Anonymous said...

Those of us surrounding you are well aware of your pain and confusion. We live here, we know when the smurf has the shits, we know when you're down.
So go through it, deal with it and slam doors.
Dance with the dog, poke Edgar the cranky yabbie with a stick, you do what you have to to cope.

dive said...

You have a cranky yabbie?
I don't know what one of those is but I know I want one!

Kel said...

dancing with dogs always help unless you have a kitten.....

Vic said...

Dive - Thanks. I'll cope eventually. At the moment I'm having trouble even dredging out the details of what happened between me and her!
By the way, Edgar the Yabbie is possibly the crankiest crustacean ever to grace a fish tank and be periodically with a stick. I'll get around to posting about him.

Kate - I'm starting to build other ways of coping, babe. I'll get there, but I'd rather not inflict my pain on anyone else if I can help it.

Anonymous said...

Write a story about it, Me Groover. It be th'way Me Self was able t'cope with th'self-same thing. Will anyone e'er see th'story? Prolly not, but Th' Cap'n was able t'deal with what She felt...

just a suggestion, Me Dear One.

Terroni said...

I was going to say, I don't the answers to any of those questions, except the first one, maybe...people facing surgery are helped some by all the midazolam we give them pre-op. It's like half a dozen cocktails. IV.

But, regarding the other more important questions about how you move forward...I think I will have to second Dive. Wise words from another groover.