Chillout song
I found this today… Simple and soothing.
The story of how this song came about can be found here.
Angel
It’s been a hard few weeks… I’m struggling to make sense of this world and my role within it. At the moment it seems a pointless and never ending downward spiral. I’ve been told that I haven’t hit the bottom yet; but if this isn’t it, I don’t want to know what the bottom is going to look like.
Tomorrow is the funeral for our work mate… I still can’t believe she is gone. A former work mate came into work yesterday and told me of her final hours… the pain, screaming and finally, the coma. Within the context of our consistent suicidal issues, I’m finding it difficult to reconcile her pain and passing. Surely if this was a just world, we would be the one being buried tomorrow. We have no hopes or dreams… no plans for the future…
In the midst of this self-pity and confusion, we turn to music for comfort… In particular, Sarah McLachlan’s Angel… It soothes and has special meaning for us…
Paul over a MindParts said in his latest posting… “Perhaps I am meant to heal. Perhaps I am meant to live.” I used to have an idea of what “healing” and “living” would look like, but now I’m not so sure… I’m not sure of anything anymore…
Reading this over, I realise that it’s about as pointless as the post we deleted earlier today. But there is a drive to post something here today, I don’t know why. I’ll turn comments off, as I see this as self absorbed and pathetic…
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Now playing: Sarah McLachlan – Angel
via FoxyTunes
ACC
We have to do another ACC assessment to continue getting assistance… As a result we’ve been playing “angry” music. This song in particular, fits nicely…
Small and scared
Yesterday the safety of the respite house came under question. We left to spend the day with the mother, mainly to test how well we are. It turns out we’re still not all that grounded or well…
When we returned we found that a new client had arrived at the respite house. This was fine, they are female and seemingly non-threatening. So we went down to our room to drop off some things, only to find that someone had been in and used our art supplies. The young ones were so upset about this boundary violation. Little Michelle came forward and looked around in tears. This may seem like an over-reaction considering nothing had been destroyed, but it was the young ones who had their things moved and used. M was prepared for our iPod to have been stolen, and it would have had less impact if that’s what had happened. The iPod is mainly for the teens and adults, we could have coped better than the invasion on the young ones things.
Then at night the new client went on a severe binging and purging cycle. It was awful for her, she’d felt so positive during the day. For us it was a huge trigger. We have food issues as well, not to the level of the new client, but her pain and acting out was enough to trigger us through the roof.
So our safe house doesn’t feel so safe anymore. We know it was the carers grandson who used our art things, we know the mother is trying and we know the new client is trying to work through their problems. But we feel so small and scared. We feel like we’ve taken a huge step backwards.
Stand by me
I was 24 when I last talked to the father. It was during my first year of being on-campus at university and I’d agreed to stay with him for a long weekend. He hadn’t been contributing to our care since the divorce when we were 16, but we still a sense of duty to him because… well, he is the father. To say that the weekend was a disaster, would be an understatement. He lived alone in a cold, small, two bedroom semi-detached house situated at the bottom of a hill. The house felt dirty, but I think that was our association of his dirtiness getting mixed up in the perception of the house. He had become a bitter, mean old man who took pleasure in putting others down and feeding his narcissistic desires. He was not pleasant to be near.
In a move similar to asking the mother to leave when she came to visit, I left the father’s house earlier than planned. I couldn’t cope with him. The day I left I knew that I would not be able to see him again as he was too toxic. I grieved on the drive home… grieved for the father I realised I would never have, and the one I was now leaving behind. While listening to the radio during the drive, a song came on that started the tears – Stand by me by Ben E. King. To me, the song is about being strong enough to face the darkness of your fears, as long as there is someone standing beside you. During that car trip, this was particularly meaningful… I knew I was about to tell the family about my decision to no longer have contact with the father. I also knew that I was probably going to have to confront the father as well.
At the time I was living alone – I didn’t even have Winnie (our cat). So, I knew that there would be no one standing beside me, instead it would be up to the dissociative system to come together in a meaningful way to protect us all. This was at a time when I had no working knowledge of my dissociation, but I remember the internal conversations which evolved as I was taking the long trip home… There was fear, screaming, celebrations and physical pain caused by tension… But then, in a shift that I’ve now come to identify as M taking over, there was a sudden calmness and knowledge of what needed to be done. This calmness allowed Sophie to listen to the song and begin our grieving. I don’t think we fully explored the grief, but the song allowed us to cry for things we wouldn’t have and to get to a place of accepting what was happening.
When we got home, we made the necessary phone calls to the family. I don’t remember much about that time, but I do remember slamming the phone down on the father with the parting words that he and I had “never been able to talk”. I have seen him since that time – grandfather’s funeral etc. We’ve tried to be civil to him, purely out of fear and not wanting to cause more trouble within the family. But I know that under that veneer of civility, Frank is waiting to tell the father just what damage he has done. I also know that such a discussion would be pointless, as he is incapable of seeing his own faults and it would only serve to frustrate us further.
There have been other versions of the song done, but it’s Ben E. King’s version that affects us the most…
Personal space and abstract thinking
I noticed a very odd thing yesterday while playing FarmTown on FaceBook… My issues with having a large personal space, seem to translate to my online avatars. In FarmTown, you can go to market to sell your produce and see if someone wants to hire you to harvest their crops or plow their fields. If you’re waiting to be employed, your avatar can be “standing” with a number of other avatars for a period of time. There is a certain amount of psychology that goes into the strategies behind being hired – the “spammer”, where you repeatedly ask to be hired; the “dancer”, where you move around or get your avatar to dance on the spot; or the “loner”, where you get your avatar in a spot alone so they’re easily noticed. I’ve always adopted the “loner” strategy, and have always attributed this to my game strategy. I now realise there might be something more to it. I can sometimes cope with another avatar being near or overlapping mine for a short period of time, but never long – even my ugly little avatar must have a large personal space. For those of you who think I’m being cruel about the relative ugliness of the avatar, you obviously haven’t seen FarmTown graphics – they’re UGLY!
I wonder if this is an indication that I’ve been playing the game too long and are therefore personalising it too much, or whether I have extreme boundary issues. When Carol (previous therapist) asked me about arranging the room in a way that I felt comfortable, we did an exercise about personal space. In order for us to feel even mildly comfortable, we had to be in one corner of the room and she had to be in the opposite corner. We would’ve preferred for her to be outside the room, but that wasn’t feasible. During therapy with Carol, we’d often end up on the floor tucked around behind a cabinet that she had – this was mainly when the young ones were present. They often felt a need to hide and create physical barriers between us and Carol. During sessions with Liz when the young ones are present, there is still a pull to sit on the floor in the corner, but we’re too scared to do it in case it makes us look too odd.
We felt that need to sit in the corner today during our session with Liz, Aimee and SO were strongly present and felt like hiding. It was a rough session in many ways – the main topics of conversation were denial and self-injury. It brought up a very odd concept of how to cope with the denial. We’d tried to construct a basic timeline of events to try and create some order out of the memories, but had found it too difficult to write them down. We got about four events written, but then the derealisation started. As this way of coping and “getting the memories out” hadn’t worked, Liz suggested something which is too bizarre for my very literal brain – think the memories or whatever is bothering me onto a piece of paper, fold it up and give it to Liz to keep. This will mean that we don’t have to worry about those pieces of information again as they are being kept safe and separate from us. To us this didn’t make sense… How do you “think” something onto a piece of paper without writing it down? How does giving Liz that piece of paper signify anything? It was all too abstract and alternative for our very concrete, narrow way of thinking.
A therapist once told us that our education was lacking because we hadn’t studied any of the Arts. That’s true, we don’t understand the beauty in art, music or philosophy. In many ways we deliberately avoid studying them, because if the intellectuals amongst us get hold of the ideas they have this tendency to strip away the magic and enjoyment. So we take photos because they’re fun… we listen to Beethoven, Foo Fighters, Brooke Fraser or any music because it moves us at the time… But when it comes to having to think through an abstract idea, we need the intellectual ones to come on board with some assistance. This is fine, unless they get faced with something which they can’t dissect or reason through logically, then it sort of gets lost in their cynicism…











