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Which Way To Sanity

October 3rd 2008 04:00
A dear friend of mine just released a CD. The song "Which way to sanity" is my favorite. It is a great song that he recorded years ago, yet it is just coming out now .I guess there is a time and a place for everything. We have been talking the past week and it is scary how our lives cross paths. We come in and out. Usually when things are bad, he calls. It is always good to hear from a great friend, especially when I can get to his sense of humor that brings out my sense of humor and we end up rolling on the floor laughing.

Like most of us, he has been through the emotional ringer. These days, I have been asking the same thing. Which way to sanity?
I am not going to get into my own tales of woe, but: WOE!
Loss is a horrible thing to have to endure. The whirlwind of emotions have taken over and I do not know which way is up, let alone which way to sanity. Life does that, ya know?

When people come in and out of my life, I never know what purpose they serve until later on. The perspective is always hindsight. There are people that come and go. I wish that some of those people did not have to go. To say that I miss them does not even come close to what I am feeling. I cannot help but feel like there is not any ground underneath me.

I recently broke up with a woman with whom I had a three-year relationship. During the three years, I began to learn a lot about myself. Things about me that I needed to work on. As time went on, it was difficult to notice any improvement, although she would point out the improvements that I had made.

Back in 1999, I got divorced. Even though the pain was not that bad initially, I did not want to take any chances of any feelings getting the best of me so I did what I do best and drank it all down. I made sure that those emotions would stay deep down and continued to do what I had to do. It lasted over six years, and it took a great deal of work to maintain. I felt as though I was working on a chain gang and if it was not for my brother flying me out to San Diego to stay with him a few weeks, I do not think I would have survived. This week I had the same feeling, to call Rob and tell him my tales of woe, and to ask him if it is o.k. if I come out for a few days. He once told me that I always have a home in California. The minute I thought of calling him I felt that knife slice my heart when I came back to reality and remembered he died in July. No ground. No safety net. I thought of all those nights working with my brother-in-law, when we would close the store and sit and talk. I thought about talking to him but he also died in July. No ground underneath.


Christy and I had a rocky relationship at times. But now that she is gone, I keep myself from falling to pieces by thinking of what was lacking in the relationship. The details are not important. The important part is my inability to let it be. I wanted to be with her all the time. She once told me that I am in so much pain, that she was the only one that could relieve that pain. I sometimes wonder if that is true, or if I really love her. In addition, that love was built on a connection that grew so strong that I did not know how to handle it. I was scared that it would not last. It was not going the way I wanted. It fell out of my hands and slipped away. I held on too tightly and smothered it, instead of just holding it lightly, letting it go where it needed. I thought I would never cry over a woman. However, I did. It would come out and last a short while, but it was from deep down inside, a different set of emotions then the grief I am feeling for my brother and brother-in-law so in a sense, I am able to sort out the grief and the emotions of a broken heart. I would walk for well over an hour the past 10 days every night. Late at night so I would not be distracted. After a few days, I started to feel as though it was going away, that I gotten through the hardest part. All that was left was to begin the healing process. I started to dream about her the next two nights. This morning, I awoke with a feeling I have never experienced. A heavy, foggy feeling inside. I started to cry, this time out of control. It hurt so badly. I miss her so badly. I miss the connection. It has been so hard the past few months to figure out what I have been feeling. Then again, it really does not matter because putting a label on them does not make it any easier to deal with. It appears as though nothing makes sense anymore. I just hope that by going through the deaths, and the broken heart will eventually guide me to sanity. Out all the rehabs, hospital stays, suicide attempts, drinking and drugging on and off for well over 30 years, the near death surgery, the feelings and emotions I am experiencing now, are just as bad, but in a different way. It cannot possibly get any worse than this.

BTW, check out a few of the songs on Solins CD.
Strawberry wine is a song that I co-wrote with him. I play drums and piano on it. Keep bugging him to put it back in the rotation: Follow the link solin1.com Thanx for the support

Keep the faith
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Obsession

July 29th 2008 17:15
obsession

Obsession can rule your life. It is probably among the top five behaviors, along with resentment, anger, fear, and pride that can be devastating. These emotions can be the primary cause of obsessive thoughts. Trying to chase a thought out that keeps playing over in your mind can be exhaustive. There are many ways to deal with obsession, but the only way these work is by constant vigilance.
There are those that claim that keeping busy, even with the most mundane tasks can help get your mind off the obsession. My experience has been both negative and positive with keeping busy. Work is a four letter word for me. I truly wish I was obsessed with some sort of “career”. I can’t relate to those that are workaholics. They are fortunate that they have found something to be passionate about, but it can also be a way of not dealing with painful feelings. The obsessions that I get are always very unhealthy and dangerous to my recovery. I was doing landscaping during a difficult time in my life, and one day my job was to weed a huge garden. Not only was it extremely hot that day, but it was the kind of mindless work that is great for letting those thoughts get way out of control. I felt as though I was in a prison of my own deep dark thoughts with no way out. I even experienced a few mild panic attacks and the only way I could deal with it was to take a break and go get a drink of water. I thought that taking a break would help clear my thoughts, but I realized that those thoughts followed me wherever I went. It’s the old saying that “No matter where you go, there you are“. There is no escape and everything you try seems to fail. Alcohol, cocaine, and weed were once old friends that I could count on to pull me through, but there came a point where even they let me down, in fact they made it worse by magnifying the thoughts 10 fold.
That’s where I came to the crossroads. I didn’t want to live, and I didn’t want to die. The choice of moving in the direction of living in the solution, or to continue down the road that leads to endless suffering, and eventually death.
Finding something that you like to do is very important. It helps by reminding you that you can become who you were always meant to be. Some folks find this by trying things that they never tried before. This is very empowering and can be the spark that you need to rise up and change your life and live it the way you want to.
Obsession can lead to another dangerous emotion such as jealousy. This is perhaps one feeling that is the most dangerous to us, and to others. It tortures us with the thoughts that are uncontrollable and difficult to identify until it passes. It sometimes seems as though we go through a blackout. These thoughts come to life by our imagination running wild. Some of the scenarios may not be true, and that is bad enough, but when they are true, it can lead to a rage. Certain relationships with the opposite sex can trigger these feelings almost instantly. Certain people can be toxic to us, and we need to identify who those people are and try and avoid them before it is too late. Otherwise, we end up falling for them and get hurt. Talk about falling into a huge pit of despair, heartache, rejection, sorrow, grief, anger, confusion, resentment, and self pity, a very potent cocktail ( Hee-Hee, I said cock!) That never has good results. These people may not be aware that what they say makes us crazy. On the other hand, revealing these feelings to them may cause them to play on it, especially if they are emotionally confused as well. Two sick people don’t make a well person.
Obsession can also take other forms. Gambling, sex, shopping, pornography, booze and drugs, just to name a few. It can seep into every part of our lives and make it unmanageable.
Like all feelings and thoughts that can hurt us, we need to be aware of the pitfalls. We need to be able to take control of our thoughts and not “fall asleep” and let our brain go on cruise control. Do whatever works for you. Just don’t give in to the feelings, thoughts, and behaviors. The results are never positive and we are the ones that always suffer.

Keep the faith
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You are what you is

July 7th 2008 16:45


It always baffled me how some people can go through the everyday mundane BS and get a sense of satisfaction from it. They are able to get up in the morning and do what they have to do. It is almost as though it drives them, the same thing over and over. It drives me too. It drives me F - - - - ing crazy. It wears me down. I know a guy that is retired and is all freaked out because he doesn't know what to do with himself during the day. He was in a line of work he really enjoyed and now he is lost. I offered to show him how to retire and do nothing (For a one time fee of course with monthly installments)
I have a friend that tells me that those with depression and or mental illness often get caught up in their diagnosis, which causes them to think that there is no solution and they are stuck forever. However, there are many who believe they can live normal lives, and shake off the label they have been tagged by the mental health professionals.
It is the classic case of black and white thinking. That the symptoms of the illness will one day go away. Having battled alcoholism and addiction, I came to a realization that recovery is one day at a time, a phrase that is often heard in AA. To come to see that being aware is the way to keep us on the beam. There are going to be those days where it feels as though we are being consumed by depression, as well as days where we feel like we are on top of the world. The part that really twists me up is the constant changes in my thoughts. One minute I am happy, then 30 seconds later I am sad or angry. It still is difficult to deal with this rapid change of moods even though I know they need to run their course, but during those “storms”, it is easy for me to lose sight of that. That just might be the point where we get lost, the overwhelming feeling that hijacks our thought process and our mind switches to cruise control and we are heading for a fall. Looking back on my life, I can now see how this has ruined relationships with people in my life, some that are permanently damaged.
Obsessive thoughts can drives us wild, constantly running through our brains on a continuous loop. Some folks keep themselves busy to drive the thoughts away. This might work for them, but my experience has proven that this isn‘t always so. When I get into obsessive thinking, they come and go and the first reaction is to try and make them go away. This might explain why “normal” people get caught up in their work. I sometimes wonder if their over indulgence in work is a way of dodging those uncomfortable feelings that are caused by the thoughts of things they never dealt with. Fears, shame, guilt, and even anger could very well be the culprits. But that is just speculation. Maybe they are just wired that way. Just for kicks and grins, I looked up the word normal in the dictionary: Normal- Conforming to the standard or the common type; usual; not abnormal; regular; natural.
Society has a measuring stick that it uses to sort between the common types versus abnormal. I have always taken what society says with a grain of salt. Human beings are different, and we as a society often lose sight of that.
It is hard to play the hand that we are dealt. There are so many things about me I wish were different. But there are some things that can be changed, and then there are those that cannot be changed. I guess I just need to accept those things in me that I will never change. That isn’t a cop out or negative thinking, that’s just the way it is. In the words of the late great Frank Zappa:

Do you know what you are?
You are what you is
You is what you am
(A cow don't make ham...)
You ain't what you're not
So see what you got
You are what you is
An' that's all it 'tis

Keep the faith
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Anger turned inside out

July 4th 2008 13:15
anger resentment rage


Anger can be a devastating emotion, especially to those that are in recovery from alcohol and or drugs. The fuel feeds the fire that can lead to actions that we may later regret. When it comes on, we feel the need to act out to relieve the conflict inside us. Most of the time we just lash out expecting to feel better, almost like a knee-jerk reaction to things that twist us up. The most dangerous part of anger is resentment. Resentments are like anger over and over again, reliving the anger, playing it over in our heads like a broken record, nothing seems to make it stop. That is where the anger can turn to rage. Talk about devastation. Some of us can actually go into blackouts from the rage. It seems to come out of nowhere because the next thing we know, we are acting out on those deep dark thoughts that roll around in our head. I am sure we have all heard that depression is anger turned inward, that may or may not be true. Most of the time, anger is brought on by fear. A fear of facing something that we don’t want to face, or a fear of not knowing where we are going in our lives, economic insecurity, growing up, they are all driven by fear. Not being in control and not knowing what is going to happen next can terrorize us. It is very easy to say to someone that is going through a great deal of anger, “let it go, why are you holding on to this? Don’t let it get the best of you”. And then something happens to us and we realize that we should follow our own advice. Whenever I hear somebody talking about their anger, I listen very close to what they are saying and I always find that I can relate to them in so many ways. You‘re experiences are your own. I never tell someone to get over his or her resentments for numerous reasons. First, it does not really help anyone, I know it never helped me, and second, I do not want to get my teeth knocked out!
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Be conscious of the subconscious

July 1st 2008 03:01

Feelings come and they go. So do thoughts and emotions. This is something that we all fight with, those days when our thoughts are moving a mile a minute. There isn’t a remedy to stop these thoughts. They are constantly moving and flowing like water. The problem lies in trying to stop the thought process. Our minds are always moving, even when we sleep. There have been all kinds of research on what the brain is processing when we are sleeping. One conclusion that some psychologists have come to is the brain can’t understand what is going on when we are sleeping, so it just processes abstract information. That explains why our dreams are sometimes like a Stephen King movie.
The subconscious is a funny thing. It can only remember events as they first happened. In other words, when we think of something that occurred 20 years ago, it can still be as painful as if it just happened. The subconscious has no past, present, or future. Giving into all the events going on in our subconscious mind can easily feed the fire of anger, resentment, and fear that always leads into a depression. It is very easy to fall into that trap. We sometimes hear the phrase “Getting some closure” on something that was traumatic in our lives. That phrase can be misinterpreted. It can give the delusion that we will someday wake up and rise from our bed and never, ever be weighed down by those horrible memories again. What really happens over the course of time ( in my own personal experience) is an acceptance of what happened by coming to realize that the thoughts are always going to be there, but they don’t stay as long and they don’t have the weight they once had. There are things that pop up in my mind during the course of a day that I thought I had already dealt with, and it can make me laugh to think how I can still be steaming mad about something somebody said to me 25 years ago. That is the subconscious mind. It still thinks it is 25 years ago.

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Bipolar Affective Disorder

June 14th 2008 01:28


Manic depression captures my soul.
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The Medication Maze (LINK)

June 3rd 2008 05:53
Medications can be a touchy subject.There is always the risk of side effects that seem to make you wonder if you really feel bad enough to go through the painful period of starting a new med,getting used to it,then realizing it isn't right for you,so you have to come off of it.Then you are prescribed another medication and you have to go through all that again.That's at least 8 weeks of pure volcanic hell.After a while you get to feel as though you got hit upside the head with a sledge hammer.I like to use the anology of a boxer getting knocked to his knees,then as he gains his balance and attempts to fight again,he is hit again.It is just like being on a therapeutic dose and having another attack of the depression so what happens? The medication level gets raised and you get knocked to your knees again.


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