What I'm Doing While Life is Kicking My A**

What I'm Doing While Life is Kicking My A**

My ten year old’s body thinks it has a neuromuscular disorder. His nerves pretend to be confused so they don’t fire to his muscles properly. His calves have shriveled and his feet have curled to the point they needed surgical intervention.

That’s what we’ve been doing this summer; a surgery in which they broke his ankle into alignment, elongated his fascia and moved no less than three other ligaments or muscles from one side to the other, all in an effort to bring him more mobility.

Watching him writhe in pain wasn’t the worst of it (although I'll be honest, I'm still a raw nerve ending myself from that one).

Having him non-weight-bearing for six weeks isn’t either. The worst of it is the recovery’s constant reminder that we aren’t merely healing a foot, we’re managing a disorder we spend much of our time trying to forget.

But I was okay. I had it handled. I'm a seasoned therapist and coach. I have the tools I need to manage my brain and quiet my mind, to live in the now, to not be driven by outdated neural networks, which want to drag me into fear and anxiety.

That was until my eighteen-year-old tore his labrum, requiring shoulder surgery and keeping him from playing baseball in college where he is heading in two weeks. I was fearing how this kid was going to feed himself beyond peanut butter and jelly, but now I’m wondering how he’s going to get himself to class and rehab, manage his arm in a sling, and keep his spirits up while watching his roommate head off with the team each morning to live the dream without him.

As I struggled to my feet each day, announcing inaudibly to an empty room, "I'm up! I'm up!" I wondered where the line is between grief and victimhood. Years ago, when Jaden was diagnosed, I laid in bed for three weeks with a box of tissues and my Netflix remote.

But now, I know that the thoughts I practice firing, the feelings I practice embodying and the person I practice being has a direct correlation to how all of this turns out; to the reality I am creating for myself, on a moment by moment basis.

The problem is, I’m not a rah rah kinda gal. I don’t believe in positive thinking, because it’s inauthentic and I am an authenticity enthusiast. That means if I feel crappy, I’m not going to pretend I don’t, and if you pretend around me that your life is rosy when it isn’t, we likely won’t get beyond acquaintances.

The problem with that though, is if I allow myself to wallow in sadness, I’m practicing a reality I don’t want.

However, the therapist in me knows that there is no way over or around grief; the only way is through.

You can see how confused I was.

Here's the coping plan I came up with: If I’m experiencing grief, I let it in because pushing it away is only going to prolong the damn thing. I let myself read a book or lay around. At the end of the day when I tally my accomplishments (or lack there of), I write down that I loved myself.

But on the days the grief tries to morph into anxiety or fear or self-pity, I slap myself back to reality. The reality is, I am creating my reality, and if I want this crappy reality to stop, I need to think new thoughts. Here are some of my favs I practice:

“I’m so curious to see what lessons my kids will learn from the less than ideal hands they’ve been dealt,”

“I’m happy for the emotional strength they’re both showing, and the health we do have,” and

“This too shall pass.”

Lastly, I remember that it's not so much what happens in life as it is how we handle it. If you happen to be in the midst of choppy seas, I hope this brings a glimpse of the lighthouse in the distance.

Missy Ramey

Strategic Marketer with a focus on Licensing and Responsible AI Practices

3 年

This is an incredibly well-written sentence in a beautiful and authentic piece. Thinking of you. "But now, I know that the thoughts I practice firing, the feelings I practice embodying and the person I practice being has a direct correlation to how all of this turns out; to the reality I am creating for myself, on a moment by moment basis."

回复
Todd Gaffaney

I would love to learn from others as well as share back.

3 年

Thank you Abby! Your article was inspirational. If you are happy or sad - own it. You do it very well and share it with others too. That was what was most motivating for me. Thanks again, Dr. Todd.

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Abby Havermann的更多文章

  • Inauthenticity At It's Finest

    Inauthenticity At It's Finest

    My husband busted me. We were on vacation with friends, and the night before, I'd poked fun at him (or maybe I outright…

    1 条评论
  • The Disinformation Holding You Back

    The Disinformation Holding You Back

    I lifted weights at the gym for the first time in ten years, and an hour later, I had a brand-new body… said no one…

  • Existential Angst

    Existential Angst

    My two twenty-year-olds are frantically searching for direction the way one might look for car keys when late to the…

  • Want Freedom? Buckle Up.

    Want Freedom? Buckle Up.

    Yesterday, I talked to fifty female entrepreneurs about the benefits of regulating your internal state (rather than…

    10 条评论
  • Why Communicating May Not Be the Answer.

    Why Communicating May Not Be the Answer.

    As a psychotherapist, I often worked with people to express themselves so they were seen and heard at home and work…

  • Was it Little Red Riding Hood's Fault She was Eaten?

    Was it Little Red Riding Hood's Fault She was Eaten?

    I’m just going to come right out and say it. I think Little Red Riding Hood was culpable when the Big Bad Wolf ate her.

    2 条评论
  • The Grind of Change

    The Grind of Change

    We'd made a pact not to leave the 95-degree room for the next hour and fifteen minutes. Well, Brandi, the masochistic…

    18 条评论
  • Stop Thinking Positive

    Stop Thinking Positive

    Last week, I took a day off. I went to the gym and to the beach for a walking meditation.

  • When Everything and Nothing Changed at the Same Time

    When Everything and Nothing Changed at the Same Time

    Donning suits and flip-flops, we bounded through the resort with first-day vacation excitement. Jaden, my…

    14 条评论
  • Has this ever happened to you?

    Has this ever happened to you?

    I was mid-sentence with what I’m sure was an insight of sheer brilliance, when a ding rang out from the computer…

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了