I slept six hours last night before waking for a pee. I then slept another 1.5 hours. Unheard of.
I had a much better day yesterday. My stomach was bit off in the morning but otherwise it behaved all day and even when evening came, when it is usually bad, it was good. Despite having had a nap in the afternoon(like I did Wednesday), I was very tired by 11pm and went to bed. Now this feels like me the normal me, though I normally would not sleep that long at night.
My legs are hurting, my hips are sore, especially in bed, and my spine feels like someone took a hammer to it. Phew! Things really are back to normal.
YOU may think it odd but it feels good to be back to normal. I am used to this discomfort. It doesn't frighten me. I cope with it well. Drugs give some relief. It doesn't stop me living. It doesn't make me cry.
This last couple of months have truly been awful but I can see I needed to go thru it to dump that load I was carrying. I didn't know that I was still carrying it. What I now know is that I had dumped a fair bit of it in the 5 years of therapy but the very deepest wounds were untouched. So whatever higher power there is brought it to my attention.
John and I were talking last night on the phone as he works in London during the week. He says he knew something bad was coming. He noticed me 'switch off' when we were in Germany and when we got back he said I started to have night terrors again and yell in my sleep. He said I started to talk about my family and was also losing my temper at trivial things. He also noticed I was getting physically run down and not resting. When the stomach pains started he knew for sure I was experiencing flashbacks and was about to really go through it. I guess after 26 years, one learns to see the signs!
I don't regret this happening. I know it is a positive thing. I don't ever want to go through it again.
Yesterday, on my way out, I checked myself in the mirror, as I am wont to do, to make sure my hat was on the way I like it. I found my self saying' you are a good looking man'. Now the significant part of that sentence was I used the word man. I have never referred to myself as a man. I have never felt like a man. I have always felt like a boy. Today I am a man. I feel like a man. My own man. No one else's idea of a man. A real grown up. An adult. A person. Maybe even a whole person. Of that I am not yet sure. Maybe that will not be possible. Whatever, I feel different inside. Very different. I am not sure how to put this into words. I just feel different. In a positive way. I feel lighter certainly. I don't feel the weight of my past upon me. I don't feel the shame that was forced upon me. I don't feel the fear of my family I have always felt. I don't fear the opinion of others.
NO ONE will ever make me feel like I am not up to the mark again. I am good enough. More than good enough. I like who I am, what I have become. I amazed I have become me but I have. I am where I am and who I am and that is perfectly acceptable to me. If it isn't to you, then I guess you really do have a problem within you.
The sun is shining, it is bitterly cold. Just the sort of day to walk my dogs and be bathed in light.
Today is a good day.
(if you are of a certain age you might get the dreadful pun of the post title)
PS: I have an appointment with a trauma specialist today. I am still keeping it, even if I do feel better, because I don't turn away chances to learn something.
First Quarter Review:) Warning a LONG post!
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5 comments:
Bravo, Colin! Both for your journey and the wisdom to keep your appointment. It has been hard, but you have done wonderful work.
By the way, just for your amusement, Jim mentioned the other day that every time I see your photo on ravelry, I seem to mention what a wonderful smile you have. So, I assume I am not alone in this observation. It appears many of us have felt you are a good looking man. It is great that you are feeling so, also.
I am happy to hear that John was aware, both of the impending issues and the actual experience. There was a time when you said you had held it together because you had to take John to the station. I wondered, but did not say, how you thought that would prevent him from knowing you were suffering. He is a wise man, too, to allow you to deal with this issue as you felt right.
Best wishes to you both. You are one of the finest couples I have ever seen.
Also, good luck in the dog show this weekend!
Oh, and Colin, I love you, too.
Good news! Colin, you have been much in my thoughts and prayers as I've been reading your entries in this difficult time, though I'm afraid I have been verbally absent of late.
(I went to Ireland for a week and had to work extra hours to make up for my time away. I'm a part-timer, so I am free to go when I like, but I don't get paid vacation time. Oh, well, I'd rather have the flexibility.)
The puppies are just gorgeous, and like everybody else, if I could have one, I'd want little Brownie and his adorable goatee!
Your wisdom, and the wisdom of the friends who have left comments here, astounds me.
I wonder, does any of us ever get to be a "whole" person? I think we can get very, very close, but the wholeness doesn't take place in life. I think it happens after we survive physical death, when we are pure spirit and failing bodies don't drag us down anymore. I could be wrong. Won't know 'til I get there, hopefully not for a long time yet!
It won't be long before I start asking what your tricks are for coping with physical pain. I realized, trying to dance my arse off on this latest Irish Tour, that my arthritis is worse, and settled in a lot more places than it was when I went on the same tour in '04 .
To heck with Calgon. Ibuprofen, take me away!
(((((hugs))))) to you, Colin. I'm so glad you're starting to come out from under everything.
Paula
Bravo, good man!
You're fine just the way you are, no need trying to "measure up" to someone else's mark. Hell, you're a man yourself, YOU make the mark you wish to achieve.
Hugs,
Ray
yahoo!What wonderful news keep givng yourself those pats on the back, you certainly deserve it.
I am glad that you are continuing with the specialist, best to go on and handle the most possible - as long as it is helping you.
Also glad to see that John was aware, I was wondering, but it seemed impossible that he was not aware.
keep taking good care
Playing catch-up here Colin as BT decided to remove our phone connection and give us someone elses, so have been unable to get online. Well done to you, and thinking about it when you came back from Germany to that mess you did start to change and become very reclusive compared to before. You did start going to the shows again which has clearly been a good thing. Will get to read the rest of your posts now.
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