Disclaimer

We are not trained mental health practitioners. This site is not a helpline. While we do try to respond to comments, we are not always online. If you are in distress or worried about someone you know, please call your local emergency line (911) or a crisis hotline (1-800-273-TALK).

Friday 2 June 2017

Community


This one’s for you, Passion Play family! And companions from small group. And friends from Women Together. I know it’s a bit long. Stick around (or skip around) for a poem at the end!


Our small family is gearing up for another Passion Play summer. Two years ago, I convinced a somewhat reluctant gem to help me pack up a 2-year-old lily with all her paraphernalia, and all of ours, into a ramshackle old tent trailer so we could spend 9 weekends camping and volunteering as actors in the annual Canadian Badlands Passion Play. It was the fulfilling of a childhood dream of mine. I am excited to say that now two years later, gem, lily and I are embarking on our second summer of Passion Play.

I know that the first time we re-unite with Passion Play family members, there will be hugs and good-natured teasing about the things time does, and maybe some happy tears. And when we part there will be hugs and pain and sorrow tears. And in between will be prayer and learning and exchanging stories. We’ll have potlucks and campfires and late-night philosophical conversations over bread and wine. I won’t have time to maintain regrets or obsess over whether I made dinner safely or what invisible dangers went into my pocket along with my keys. Hugs and words and the love and acceptance of a human community will go a little further in convincing me of the steadfastness of divine love.

The first few weekends are often bitterly cold. The last few can be unbearably hot. There is always a rain- and thunderstorm or two or three somewhere in between, that threaten to wash away friends’ homes from tent city, swirl up black bentonite mud to cling to sandaled toes and heavy linen hems of our costume robes. In all probability, the threat of one of these summer storms will cancel a performance at the last minute. There will be mosquitoes and ticks and sunburn and sunstroke and heat rash. There will be dirt and animals and mud for lily to sit in and cover herself with and I’ll pick her up and then I’ll have to re-adjust the headpiece of my costume with those same hands, and the folds of the veil will blow over my mouth, and I might be obsessed with the thought that I mustn’t lick my lips and I might feel compelled to run to the bathroom at first break in rehearsal and wash my lips and chin until they crack from the water and friction and dry air. And I’ll get a front row seat to watch this most breathtaking story take its first breaths, and I’ll get to be part of the rhythm of that breath.

I’ve already decided that I’ll take the optional audition. It will be nerve-wracking. I’ll probably be awkward. I’ll hate that I wonder too much what the directors think of me and my emotive choices. My stomach will be in a pathetic ball when I check the casting list. I will feel jealousy. I’ll feel dissatisfaction and disappointment, because I’m not the actor I wish I could be, because I can’t do everything perfectly or even “good enough”. Rehearsals will be long and tedious and technical. Lily will get cranky and defiant and uncooperative, and make a fuss in the middle of rehearsal, and I might have to run off stage, face burning, to try to calm her outburst. I might have lines like the ones I choked on last year: “Crucify! Crucify him!” and worry that I said it a little too convincingly or maybe too entirely became the character that meant those words and maybe would be damned. But I won’t have time to be consumed by the worry, because I’ll be consumed instead by the driving force of my intention: to serve this story, and this Story-Giver.

Francis Chan talks about the goal of Christian marriage being to drive each other to the kind of life that leaves no time for arguing. There is no energy left for anger or bitterness; it is all spent toward the single goal: the kingdom of God on earth; pouring out our lives and hearts to hear the words, for our spouse to hear the words: well done, good and faithful servant.

Marriage is of course just a part of what life in Christian community is all about. Christian siblings are all called to love each other with the kind of sacred love that drives action. And when we all join together with a single goal--the glory of God--the results could be awesome. And in between, the love shared, the care and concern shown for one another, the communion and the soul-out-pouring prayer could very well be part of the miracle God will use to heal all our diseases.

With deep gratitude to fellow passion-players, here is a poem I wrote for my Passion Play family 2 summers ago:

Jesus is at the Passion Play

Jesus is at the Passion Play
You mean the man in blue.
Who is the man in blue? you ask
As we wait in the wings for our cue
To search for him, and find Someone Else-
The Painter, the Poet, the Reason, the Pulse.
The man is just a picture.

Who is this guy with loud morning hugs?
This man wakened to early prayer?
These starlets who forget themselves
This one, who wipes feet with her hair?
They’re pictures of Jesus, fair.

This man in his dark disguise-
Dark-white saint, serving the Story
He faces my fear, so I can see
There is more grace, even to me
A Jesus picture--drawing me free.

Who are these people, earthy and drab
Their veils shot through with glory
Who run into the house of mourning
And weep to tell the story?
Who give their life to seek for Life
Who care so much as to hold us dear
Brothers, sister, strangers, pictures
Of Jesus, in body, here.

Come and see, Behold the Man
Picture Life, and what Jesus could do.
The one in blue pictures Jesus the Man;
But all the others, in black and brown
Are pictures of Jesus too.

We’re painting a picture of Jesus
You with the brown, him with the blue;
All of us image-laden pieces,
And I so desperately need you
To paint that picture anew….


Wednesday 26 April 2017

Fighting The Machine

Hello, friends! Thanks a million for stopping by again. I found these musings I wrote not quite a year ago. Reading over them, I see again how far I've come in the last few months, and I am grateful:

On a visit with my parents recently, it hit me with a mixture of astonishment and disappointment how much this disorder has changed me. I have become inflexible, easily thrown off by the unfamiliar; whereas change and newness used to thrill me. I miss my old self--my parents’ daughter. They say my lily reminds them of me: her exuberance for adventure, her joy in the out-of-doors, the way she loves to play in the mud! None of those parts of myself have survived the illness.

I’ve become stiff and proper, even stern--a perfect old matron. I, who Pan-like swore never to grow up. I, who feel underneath it all not a day over 16, but trapped, not so much in an older body but an old old mind--a mind knowing too much of fear, and not enough, snagged on its gears and circuits of anxiety and responsibility: circuits that never end or slow down.

Learning new pathways, ways to get off or short-circuit the typical thought patterns, is a slow and awkward re-wiring. The fear-gears on the other hand snapped so easily into place, as if pre-fitted to my brain. Or was it my brain that was pre-fitted to them? What tripped the wire for the waiting blazes of terror? What were the triggers, where are the buttons, and how can I prevent them from being pressed?

Circuits, gears, levers, buttons; machinery--it’s a cold, ugly metaphor for the human brain. But sometimes I do feel so cold. Frozen, paralyzed by the overwhelm of decision-making.

It doesn’t seem fair. Of course it isn’t, to be so prone to these vicious cycles of worry, this clogged-gear paralysis, but “it is what it is” as my psychologist says. The reality I must learn to live within. I pray for the grace to learn well. Yes, grace. God’s grace--more than sufficient to compensate for any “unfairness”. Ah! The grace of God’s unfairness! My only hope after all: that God would not treat this sinner fairly.

Thursday 20 April 2017

The Power of Story


Whatever I may think of my own talents as a writer, I am a storyteller and so are you. And the stories we tell have incredible power over us. I’m thinking specifically of the stories we tell ourselves about ourselves, inside our heads. The importance we ascribe to the various parts of these stories can change the direction of the rest of our life stories.

Selective Story-Telling:

As an example, consider the story I told about the day I drank the orange juice and made a terrible vow (link here). I did not include (and I neglected to include every time I told it to myself, which I did hundreds of times) that earlier that day I’d dined at a restaurant and avoided the pretty little complimentary appies with deli meats, because I was pregnant. At this high-class restaurant in a tourist resort, I had insisted on bottled water, for the sake of the baby. That morning, I had washed my fruit in a bleach solution, then thoroughly rinsed it, because that was ‘best practice’ for this part of the world. I had gone for a run on the beach with my best friend, and stifled my competitive spirit to let her go on without me at the 5-K mark, because I didn’t want to overdo it for the sake of the baby. Every night that visit, my friend and I had sung “Jesus Loves Me” to my baby, at my request, because I had read that she had recently developed tiny ear buds. I left out those parts of the story, every single time.

Over and over I told myself stories of my own incompetence, stupidity and negligence. I told myself stories in which I could never be forgiven. I told myself dark stories with terrible endings that ought to serve as lessons to much better mothers.

I told myself such stories until I no longer trusted myself. What reputation could possibly survive such a harshly selective story-teller? I stopped believing my memory and even my spatial perception.

A New Narrator

It took a while, but I have changed the way I tell myself stories. My new stories are about the same person and the same events, but I have fired my old narrator! My new inner-narrator is much kinder; she tells me stories about a “good enough” mom who is competent in most situations, and knows how and when to ask for help. Her memory, intellect and intuition are reliable, and have never yet led her too far wrong. She makes mistakes, and falls, and is strong enough to get back up again. She lives by grace and serves as an example for others who fall and fear the endings of their own dark stories.

My new narrator compares motherhood to astrophysics or rocket science, and has me saying it with pride: “I’m a mom! It’s no big deal. I’m really good at it.”

This new narrator tells and re-tells the moments of joy and peace and victory, the times when lily and I enjoy each other, the snuggles and kisses and “I love you’s” and games on the floor and laughing runs in the fields. This narrator remembers best the times lily’s accomplishments blow my mind and I allow myself to admit that I had a part in that. And the times lily's defiance and disobedience blow my mind but I keep my temper and deal with the situation in a constructive, thoughtful way.

My narrator insists that, despite all kinds of failings and moments of seemingly total disaster, I am a good enough mom, and that is great.

So what stories are you telling yourself? What are you leaving out? Is it time to start learning to be a kinder narrator?


Wednesday 12 April 2017

Limp--a poem, by J


I've been working up the courage to try out a poem on my readers. So, here we go!

Limp

When you are in my kitchen,
Love,
Use the black and white dishrag;
The thin one, the one that’s
Greying to threadbare places
That I have squeezed and rung and twisted
‘Til it wept gushings of warm suds
And all my panic ran down
The grating scruff of your cheeks.
Use it because I have rung pieces of myself
Into the very fabric.
Use it because the grime
Runs quick through those bare places
And with it the guilt
And the fear.
It must run quick because
I am eager to please, and
You are in a hurry, and
Efficiency is essential.
I am glad my favorite dishcloth
Has not outlived its usefulness.

Monday 27 March 2017

Just Mediocre

First off, I wanted to thank you, dear readers. I was so encouraged by the response to my previous post. Thank you so much to those of you who read, commented and shared it with others. I am pumped!

I’ve been planning a blog series on recovery for a while now, so I plan to revisit some of the tips I shared in that post. It would help me a ton if you would leave comments here on what you would like to read about, questions, or which tips interest or challenge you the most. Remember, Christie and I screen every comment before publishing it, so you can ask to remain anonymous.

I also wanted to clarify that not all of these tips will be right for you. Everyone needs their own mental health “regimen” to fit their lifestyle, just as physical exercise needs to be tailored to every individual. And just as someone who has never exercised before needs to start slow, the same goes for these tips. I would suggest picking just one or two to work on at a time. And again, always remember to BE KIND to yourself. If you are hard on yourself, keeping track of how you ‘measure up’ with habits like exercise and getting enough sunlight, you are defeating the purpose. So please, please be kind to yourself.

OCD and anxiety disorders often go along with a perfectionist personality (not that all perfectionists have OCD, or that if you are not a perfectionist you will not develop OCD, but there is a trend), and people with OCD can become obsessed with doing their therapy “perfectly.” It is a tricky paradox to navigate, but I think the key is to emphasize showing yourself grace and kindness.

You’ll notice a theme here and throughout this blog: grace. If you don’t show grace to others, you won’t have deep, satisfying relationships. And if you don’t show yourself grace, you won’t be able to maintain any level of mental health.

One of the most important things I learned during recovery I learned from a fellow patient in a group therapy setting. She was a first-time mom like me, and like me she struggled with perfectionist tendencies. She spoke up in group about how she was learning that being a “good enough” mom is actually being a great mom. Why? Because shooting for great or “perfect” is inaccessible and unsustainable. You become hard on yourself and miserable. Your children will see your standard for yourself, assume it is your standard for them as well, and be hard on themselves and miserable. Just as we need to model healthy eating and exercise habits for our children, we need to model healthy mental habits as well. Not to mention if you as a mother are unhappy and stressed, you will not be able to be present and available to your children. It’s the whole “put your mask on first” basic principle of self-care. Trying to do a perfect job in one area of life ends up costing too much in other, often more important, areas. It’s better to aim for and be happy with “good enough.”

So come on, Moms! It’s time to celebrate mediocrity! Time to be just “good enough,” and realize that that is just great.




Monday 13 March 2017

J's Top 7 Tips For Staying Mentally Healthy


Usain Bolt reportedly fuels the world’s fastest body on a diet of mainly chicken nuggets and other fast food. Some people smoke and drink and never exercise a day in their life and live to be a hundred, while others who train hard and eat sensibly end up with high blood pressure--or worse--in their thirties. Some people seem to maintain good mental health with no apparent effort. Others of us really have to work for it.

I am one of those who has to “work out” hard to maintain mental health. So here is my regimen for staying in good mental shape:

  1. Physical exercise. Our minds are thoroughly intertwined into our bodies, so good mental health needs good physical health. I have started many workouts feeling depressed, but have finished very few while still in a bad mood. It’s pretty much a fool-proof mood-lifter. Regular exercise has been shown to improve self-esteem, decrease stress, and regulate blood sugar levels. Exercise is also an important part of good sleep hygiene (see number 2, below!)
  2. Sleep! It is one of the best medicines for the brain; in fact, the brain actually heals itself during sleep. Sleep also promotes and cements learning, which is particularly critical during periods of intense therapy while you re-learn and re-direct thinking patterns.
  3. Cut yourself yards and yards of slack. Chronic illnesses always come with their set of restrictions on energy, motivation and strength. Our culture disproportionately values busyness and productivity. Your worth is not determined by how much you can get done in a day! Know your limits, know your priorities, and choose accordingly how to invest your energy. Then be unapologetic--to others and to yourself--about those choices. When your lack of energy chooses for you, be unapologetic about unscheduled breaks.
  4. Get sunlight or light therapy. A lot of people insist on the importance of getting outside for fresh air. I have no doubt it is critical for some people, and have found the outdoors to lift my spirits sometimes as well. However, I actually get a lot more pleasure and stress relief from curling up inside with a cup of tea and a book, than from a walk outside. Outdoor pursuits are also complicated by my disorder--a lot of my fears are around going outside. Now, I do NOT advocate staying indoors and never challenging those fears. On the contrary, challenging my fears has been my door to recovery. But I can’t string myself taut on a line of fear all the time and remain mentally healthy! There are days when I just need to stay in my comfort zone and regain strength for the next round of fear-challenging. But I do find that it is important to get sunlight. I live far enough up my hemisphere however that for much of the year, even if I did spend every daylight hour outside, it still would not be sufficient sunlight for my brain chemistry. So I have a light therapy lamp. I use it mainly in the winter months, but it is helpful all year long.
  5. Breathe. There is so much power in just breathing. Several times throughout the day I try to stop and focus only on breathing. It is tremendously calming. It’s my reset button.
  6. Re-focus. There is so much involved in this idea, and no way I can sum it up in a single post, but essentially if a particular thought is dragging you down or causing severe emotional pain, it is time to let it go. Thoughts just aren’t worth suffering for. Seriously, it is just a thought. Thoughts that “aren’t working” need to be challenged--often repeatedly--and redirected. You may need help with identifying and challenging problematic thought patterns. This is why therapy is so critical. Now that I know where my mind tends to go and which problematic patterns I am most prone to, I am ready with an arsenal of re-directing thoughts to counter the destructive ones.
  7. Treat yourself like a friend. When your self-talk turns dark, think about what you would say to a friend who was telling themselves things like that. Now practice looking in the mirror and being a friend to yourself. There is no reason on earth (or in heaven!) that you shouldn’t treat yourself as well as you treat your friends.

Friday 3 March 2017

Transition's in the Air--J

It’s been awhile since I’ve had time to work on a post. I’ve been writing, but in spurts. Life has moved from one thing to another at mom-on-caffeine speed since we moved in November. Travels, holidays, family get-togethers, not to mention Christmas and a fourth birthday for one very special lily-child!

I will see my psychiatrist soon, and was just beginning to concoct an answer to her predictable question, how are you doing. Then I realized: no concoction necessary; the straight-up truth:  I am doing fantastic. I am generally happy and relaxed. I am less irritable. I have motivation and energy--feelings so new to me that I wouldn’t have recognized them if they hadn’t reintroduced themselves so gradually. Why, I do believe I am better than ever before in my entire adolescent through to adult life. I’ve even seen changes in my thinking happen without a ton of ERP: a thrilling realization, because up until now, I have had to fight with teeth gritted for every ounce of brain-shift. I am doing fantastic.

I am in the process of editing some old posts I never published. It has been enlightening and encouraging. I found one post I wrote about this time last year, reflecting on relapse, and it reminded me of how I felt after our recent move in November. Come to think again, the move was a more significant transition than the ones I’ve described below, and my ‘relapse’ around the move was shorter and not nearly as serious as the one I experienced at the time of this post. I hope it might be helpful just to know that relapses do happen, and they do get easier and less world-shaking.

* * * * * * * * *

I’ve been struggling. I thought it might help for me to write down the reasons I’ve identified for this relapse. Could any of these explain something for you? Whatever your struggle and whatever the factors that brought it on, be assured, be validated: your body and your brain have their reasons!

The first reason, probably the most obvious, is that my meds have decreased. I’ve been on the highest dose of Prozac recommended since partway through my pregnancy, about three and a half years ago now. My psychiatrist thought it would be a good idea to get back to my pre-pregnancy dose. I’m there now! But weaning down this medication comes with a nasty side-effect: brain shivers. They’re hard to describe. Like being dizzy, but different again. You move your head, and even though your vision stays clear, you feel like you left your head behind you. It’s similar to the stomach sensation when you ride one of those dropping fair rides--like you left your stomach (in this case your brain) up in the air. Maybe somebody else would find that fun? But I’ve always been a wimp when it comes to fair rides. Anyway, I had a few days of that, and extra fatigue, and I was a bit teary, but I think the worst of it is over. Still, I’m sure the medication decrease on its own could account for this bit of a relapse I’m experiencing now. It is weird to discover how dependent I am on these meds. I feel so normal when I’m on them that they begin to seem redundant. It would be easy, if I didn’t understand a bit about how the meds work, to think, Well, I’m better now, I don’t need these pills anymore. But if I don’t take them, then I know.

In addition to the change in meds, there have been a lot of changes in our lives. All relatively insignificant changes on their own, but put them together and couple them with a brain suffering from OCD, and they make for an uphill slog. First, I started the new job I wrote about here. The time came to toilet train Lily. Our fish died.  A change of seasons is upon us, which always means more illness. Jem has been ill almost continuously for the last two months, and I always feel like I am fighting off something. Lily-girl has had three or four bouts of illness (all blurred together) that involved fever and sleepless nights.

I noticed something else dreaded about season changes: I start worrying about new ways to contact germs. With the arrival of winter, I worry about “smearing” germs through the sleeves of my coat when I put it on. I worry about touching my hair when I put on my hat. But just as soon as I get a handle on the challenges winter presents to my OCD brain, spring comes along and now I have new ways to worry: about not having those gloves that provided a convenient barrier between my hands and the germy world. That I can’t just take all the out-of-the-house germs off with my coat when I get home. I worry that the germs are no longer frozen, and that cats are back outside pooping in gardens. Does anyone else worry about these things? No. Should I worry? NO. Can I help it? Not really. Not for a while anyway, until I have practiced going out without my coat and not washing my arms when I come back inside.

Then there’s toilet training. Don’t even get me started--never mind, I’m started. I have honestly been dreading this stage ever since she was born. It takes all my courage to take my pristine lily-baby into those filthy public restrooms. Plus, her skinny legs don’t fit on most toilet seats--they slip in between the gap and she ends up sitting on the rim of the toilet instead of the seat. AaUAurRgh! The first time that happened, I obsessed about it for days, not sure whether it would be safer to let the germs stay dry on her legs, or to risk reactivating them in the bathtub. I sound insane even to myself right now. I think I’ll just keep her in diapers until she’s fourteen.

And then my new little fish buddy died. I’d sort of been expecting it, and didn’t think I would find it so traumatic. But when I saw him nose-down in the gravel, my stomach sank to my toes, and when I jiggled the bowl and saw his body’s involuntary sway, I felt dizzy, disoriented, like I was the one upside-down. I screamed like a girl. (I am a girl. I mean, I screamed like a little girl.)

Aside from grief and guilt (I figured I probably hadn’t changed his water often enough--so, another exercise in giving myself grace), I was very anxious about what he might have died from, and whether those germs could affect us. When Jem dumped him down the toilet, I was worried about splashing, and about what Jem touched before he washed his hands… It was really hard to get my mind off of ”fish germs” that night.

So there you have it. Changes in meds really do affect me big time. And so do little life changes that probably shouldn’t be a big deal. Now that I’ve thought through all the factors, I’m not worried about his little set-back. I know that it might take me a little longer to get settled after change, but I will, and I will have gained some resilience by pushing through.