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11 years and counting

Timbo637

2024-10-31 6:49 AM

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Feels like hell week all over!!

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2024-10-30 9:38 AM

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Roller Coaster Withdrawal

Timbo637

2024-10-14 12:28 PM

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Smile....and don't shoot the messenger

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2024-09-27 3:17 PM

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11 years ago 0 177 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Thank you so much for all your replies, it means a lot. I'm sorry I wasn't able to respond sooner.

Davit, you're so right about me being the only one stopping myself. I don't know what a life without anxiety is like, and I'm actually scared of letting go of it. Who am I without my anxiety? I have had moments like you've mentioned a couple of times, when your determination suddenly takes over and the fear doesn't stop you anymore because you actually want to do it. You're able to acknowledge the worry but still do it anyway and you feel so strong. I haven't had that moment again yet, hopefully soon. Things are certainly better than they were a year ago.

I know the problems you've had with doctors recently Red, so thank you. I remember when I spent the week in the psychiatric hospital, each morning was a struggle as I knew I would have to overcome the same anxieties again, and each day was a new beginning. The structured days helped a lot though, so I think I'll try to incorporate that into my day too especially in the morning. A class would be great, I'm Australian and it's a very cold winter this year so an excuse to get out of the house would be good- even if it means freezing! A painting, clay sculpture or acting class would give me something productive to do, like you said. :)

Hi Samantha, I've been using the Challenge Worksheet for a while and have found it useful. The progressive muscle relaxation helps me sleep too. My psychologist is making me talk about difficult topics, I'm surprised that she realised the things I don't talk about from our half a dozen sessions so far. It's hard to confront them, rather than avoid them and that brings my anxiety levels up.

Hugs, I'm sure your religious person wouldn't have realised how much of a difference his advice made for you, and that makes him even more special. It's sad that he's gone, but it sounds like he meant a lot to so many people.
As soon as I saw the picture for my avatar, I knew it would suit this site. I might write the quote on my whiteboard, which is on the wall opposite my bed, so I will see it every morning and every night.
Aw, I'm sure I'd do the same in the U.S.! I'd climb into the front seat on the right side, forgetting it's totally opposite haha. Or maybe I'll do the study abroad program in my final year of medicine (in 7 years time!) and see you guys. :)

Thank you all again,
Kaitie.
11 years ago 0 4027 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
There are many champions of mental health who have survived. I thought of writing  to some of my local heroes, and discretely ask them about how they conquered their handicaps, in athletics,politics, economics, academia? I didn't have to reveal my condition.
 
I did that for a religious person once, and I'm sure I still have his letter, encouraging me through my dilemma at work.  What I didn't realize until now, is that I'm surrounded by hospital wings, schools, scholarships and charities named after him!  And I have his message carried in my soul until the end of my career, and daily, without remembering that letter.  He passed away some time ago.
 
Like your avatar says,    "I may not be there yet, but I'm closer than I was yesterday".
 
BTW, I'll bet if you took a walk along a beach, there'd be a second set of footprints you didn't realize were there all along.
 
And we're here.
 
Maybe some day, when I have the resources to visit the country where a favourite novel called "Great Expectations" has a setting, you'll be in the ER after I drive on the wrong side of the road and end up in a collision, and you'll stitch me up.
11 years ago 0 2606 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Hi kaitie995, 

Thanks for opening up and sharing your fears with us. You have received some really great words of advice from Davit and Red.The only other thing I would add is to work through the online program offered here on the site. There may be some particular sessions that could help you with overcoming the anxiety you have about going to university. It will also complement your visits with your psychologist. 

Wishing you all the best, 

Samantha, Health Educator
11 years ago 0 2508 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Kaitie,
Just think what a wonderful doctor you would be with all of your first hand experience with agoraphobia and anxiety. You already have a passion for medicine and with you will have a compassion and understanding that other doctors won't possess..I am sure patients coming to see you would benefit from your experience..
 
I never thought I would be able to feel comfortable leaving the house either. Taking it in small steps really helped me like just getting up and getting in the shower and getting dressed slowly and not getting to excited about it..Just focusing on getting ready. Than the next day maybe leaving the house..Than calling about some classes..and so on and so forth until one day I was able to go to class..I started with a quilting class just for fun and to get used to being out. Have you thought about taking a class this summer in some form of visual arts just for fun and exposure..Maybe a workshop or enrichment class of some kind would do..Just a thought and maybe something to work towards that would help you with your cbt lessons. This just might work as a positive distraction while you are working on your exposure too..
 
Red..
 
 
 
11 years ago 0 6252 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Kaitie

Would you take the word of a very experienced old man when he says you will not spend the rest of your life like this. I know I can't say that here, but I read your posts and I see intelligence far beyond your years. The only thing that will stop you is you and only because you haven't had it go click yet. It will and it will all make sense. A day will come when you will look back and not believe it ever happened. Oh you will still remember but it will seem so unbelievable. When that moment came for me it was amazing, all the pieces fell into place and even though panic was still there it had no power. It took time to correct the core beliefs and bury the negatives but I did it. Life isn't the same as it was, it can't be after what I went through, and you will go through. It is better. The skills are there and always will be, I need not ever fear panic again. It is like riding a bike. Once you learn you can never unlearn. Doesn't mean you can't fall off one but there is no reason to fear doing that. There is no set line between panic and no panic, it creeps up on you till one day you realize it is gone and you are doing things you thought you never would. And then it hits you and you freak. This is where you have to drag out the tools again but only for a bit because it is easier and easier each time.

This is where I say to everyone, patience, let it happen, you can't force it. It is going to hurt along the way but all that hurt is experience and every bit helps. 

Don't stop dreaming, it gives you a reason to hope. 

If I can turn around over fifty years of wrong thoughts you can turn around the few you have. CBT works for those who work it.

As for being a Doctor, a lot of us are not doing what we were trained for. Took me over fifty years to find what I am good at, don't wait that long, you have too much intelligence to not share it.

Davit.   End of lecture.
11 years ago 0 177 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
All through high school, I had my life planned. I could see my future, a vision of myself working in a busy hospital, wearing blue scrubs and a white coat. Everything about the thought of being a doctor sent a jolt of excitement through my body. It was what I wanted more than anything.

Now when I think of my future, it's blank. There's nothing there for me. Even though I've been accepted into the Biomedical Science course at my local university, I'm considering not going at all next year when my gap year is over. I don't think I can ever be a doctor- I was holding on to false hope. What kind of doctor faints at the sight of blood anyway? And if I freaked out every time someone vomited, I'd be a mess (no pun intended).

I used to think that if I wanted it badly enough, I could get past all that. Several times people have told me that being a doctor may not be the best career choice for me, but they could see how much I wanted it. Maybe it was an unrealistic dream.

To make it worse, that isn't the only unrealistic dream I have. Another is to become an actor and have a role in a TV show or movie. I would love to move to the Gold Coast (a couple of hours away from my home town), the beach would be amazing and the atmosphere has a totally different feel there like the sea air makes everyone feel calmer.

At the moment, it all seems too far away. I can hardly leave the house, let alone go to uni. I'd love to have the freedom of my P plates so I can drive unsupervised, but without getting to my 100 hours of driving on my Learners I can't do that either.

Thinking about all this makes me sad. The majority of my friends have moved to Brisbane and are living independently. I'm happy for them all, but I can't help feeling left out. When I decided to defer my uni studies for the year while I focused on overcoming my anxiety, I felt like such a failure. It hurt so much that I put everything that reminded me of uni and high school in my top cupboard. Every single one of my high school report cards says how much of a conscientious student I am, and my visual arts teacher said I should continue my studies in that field because I have a natural talent.

It's a huge reminder of how far I've fallen. I can't imagine my life without the anxiety, and now I'm halfway through my gap year with only a little improvement. What if I'm not ready for uni when February comes?

My psychologist said at my last session that she refuses to let me not go to uni. It was a passing comment, but it terrified me. Going to university scares me because I'm agoraphobic, but at the end of the day what is even scarier is spending the rest of my life like that, which is unfortunately what I see for myself.

Kaitie.

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