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Protect Your Mental Health

The following is an article about the damaging affects of being around complainers:

http://www.inc.com/minda-zetlin/listening-to-complainers-is-bad-for-your-brain.html

Please note that a complainer is not the same as someone who is going through a hard time and needs support.  It’s easy to tell the difference because the complainer is never looking for solutions, only company in their misery.  They put the worst possible spin on a situation rather than consider the context, other interpretations, or their own distortions.  They see the world through a dirty lens and wonder why anyone else could possibly be happy in such an unfair and cruel world.  When the interaction ends, their audience feels emotionally prickly and wish for a  corner where they can curl into a ball.

Meanwhile, the person in genuine pain goes deeper than small inconveniences in life.  Their problems are real and they are struggling to find ways to avoid being pulled down by the weight of their burdens.  People in these situations need good friends who can walk side by side with them, without taking the struggle on or becoming mired in the pain too.  The support person may feel tired and raw at the end, but there is a sense that the time together has been well spent, even if all that could be done is be present.

What I like most about this article is that it emphasizes that we must be protective of our mental health.  If we surround ourselves with negative people, unhealthy envirnoments, and even toxic thoughts, we can’t help but take on those qualities in some way, shape, or form.  Therefore, take care to find nourishing, uplifting, or intellectually challenging stimulation and friends so you even in hard times, you feel sustained.

Free Opportunity About The Affordable Care Act

Thanks to the Barb Suder, parish nurse at Holy Shepherd Lutheran Church, I can share an opportunity to learn about changes in health care.  See below for details:

Overview of THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT and how it effects YOU

When: Saturday September 15, 2012

10:00 – Noon in the Fellowship Hall

Where: Holy Shepherd Lutheran Church

920 Kipling St, Lakewood, Co 80215

Who: Mr. Bob Semro, Analyst with the Bell Policy Center

Mr. Semro specializes in the Health Care Act. He will present the non-partisan facts about how this new law will affect us & different groups such as Seniors, Medicare, Low Income Families and people who are already covered by insurance etc.  Find out truth vs. myth and get all your questions answered.

Saturday September 15, 2012

10:00 – Noon

Holy Shepherd Lutheran Church

920 Kipling St. Lakewood, Colorado 80215

Free Child Care available

Obamacare Explained

I have recently heard some comments made reflecting ongoing confusion about what Obamacare means to the average person.  This not only effects medical care but also mental health services.  No longer can you be denied for having previous struggles that has been billed to the insurance under this plan!  Knowing that I have a hard time comprehending the change with so much rhetoric in the air, I found the following article to be a helpful summary of what impacts we will see.

http://www.reddit.com/tb/vbkfm

A Brave Disclosure Involving Years of Sexual Abuse

The following is a woman’s brave account of surviving five years of abuse at the hands of a pedophile.  Rather than focus on the abuse itself, she does a beautiful job of highlighting the devastation caused by such an act, especially how it transmits to other relationships, her day to day functioning, and even the way she feels as she walks down the street.  This is a heart-wrenching, but inspiring testimony of one who was able to gain her voice and cease the silence she had to live with for so long.  There is also a section where people ask her questions about her experience, and her answers reflect the thoughts of many people I have worked with.

Should you choose to read this, please be aware of your reactions and needs.  For some this may simply help with understanding.  For others, it may be triggering and require support.  Whatever your response, know it is important and worthy of being honored:

http://www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/xfc49/iama_person_who_was_molested_for_5_years_straight/

Snare of Suffering #7: Avoidance

Rejoice in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope. (Romans 5:3-4)

If you are in the middle of a struggle as you read these words, don’t be surprised if you have a sudden urge to throw your computer across the room.  When pain is the strongest, these words seem callous, even ridiculous.  “I have enough @*$%# character!”   In no way is this article an attempt to minimize your pain.  Instead, it is a reminder that we are wonderfully, scruffily, beautifully complex human beings who have the capacity to use misfortune as an opportunity.

First, let’s clarify that there are times when avoidance works.  Certainly, avoiding biting people or playing dodge ball in traffic are valuable, wise decisions that will serve us well in life.  There are also people who are so toxic that they steal away good will and self-esteem.   In these situations, avoid!  Stay clear, stay safe, and ultimately stay sane.

Other times, life brings struggles that are not by choice but are simply part of existence.   “It is impossible to live without experiencing some kind of suffering. We have to endure physical suffering like sickness, injury, tiredness, old age and eventually death and we have to endure psychological suffering like loneliness, frustrations, fear, embarrassment, disappointment, anger, etc.” (http://www.buddhanet.net/ans16.htm)  In these times, it’s about endurance. Like the Joseph Campbell’s hero, these trials create the skills and experience that are required for the next leg of the journey.

Our task then is to choose what that endurance will look like and turn it into proverbial lemonade:

Facing reality prevents confusion.  There is an exciting moment in therapy when a denied part of experience is brought to light and a person has sudden understanding of certain behaviors, thoughts, patterns, or triggers that had previously seemed upsetting and even bizarre.   The relief is palatable.  “I’m not crazy- there’s been a reason all along!”

We gain skills.   As the opening quote highlights, it is through struggles that we learn patience, explore new perspectives, and learn from others who have traveled a similar path.   Years ago, I worked with a woman in her seventies.  As we sat together, I could not help but notice that she seemed developmentally “young”.  Through her view of the world, ways of problem solving, and the underlying thinking patterns, she was the emotional age of a teenager.  I soon learned that she had been an alcoholic since her mid-teens.   It was the first of many examples I encountered where avoidance caused emotional stagnation.  In the case of this woman, she had lost over fifty years of emotional growth due to alcohol!

Vitality is preserved because pain is expressed rather than stored in the mind and body, where it would otherwise become a burdensome energy leach.

We learn what we are capable of managing and where growth is needed.  If willing to ask for help, we learn, and through practice, gain mastery.

Peace can be found amidst the storm.   I had an amazing compliment the other day.  I was talking about a struggle that has been over a year in the making.  My friend remarked, “I can’t believe that you are not seeking revenge or full of anger.  Instead, you seem so calm!”   I smiled, knowing that she was appreciating the benefits that came from discipline I created for myself (as reflected in this article series) and the life lessons I attained.

We deal with what is rather than what we imagine it will be.  Often, our fear of what could be is worse than the issue itself.  The tendency to catastrophize the outcomes means that we are living in extremes and forget all the points along the way that will provide new resource, options, and guides to help.  Deal with what is real, not the worst case scenario the brain wants to have played out over and over until we are paralyzed with fear.

New connections develop.  If willing to share, we often meet people along the journey who have had their own pains.  Through sharing these struggles, connection is possible on profound levels, a true gift of honesty and vulnerability.  The bonding that happens in these moments creates lasting impressions, whether the closeness is just through the crisis but remembered years later, or a rare gift that turns into enduring friendship.

A mentor once told me, “I wouldn’t wish this (struggle) on anyone, but I wouldn’t change it for the world.”  Although we often do not get to choose our path, we have incredible potential to become deeper, wiser, and more capable because of it.  I wish you the clarity to find what your suffering is inviting you to learn, the ability to see and appreciate guides along the way, and the discipline to find a new kind of peace that will enrich your life in many ways.

Medrol

It’s All About Perception

In the last article about the snare of suffering, I talked about how comparing a personal struggle to another’s can be helpful at times, but more often than not can serve as a way to minimize pain or create judgement. I was intrigued by this blog where  other points were brought up about this subject.  In the article, people were asked to rank their symptoms of anxiety and depression along with their perceptions of what is normal in the population at large.  Based on the outcome of this survey, it suggests that people potentially deny getting support if they believe such action would make them look weak in relation to others.  They also become confused about how much suffering has to be endured before it justifies seeking therapeutic help.

http://neuroskeptic.blogspot.co.uk/2012/05/more-depressed-than-average.html

Comparing creates boxes we have to try to function within, even if they are not helpful.  Life experience, character, modeling, beliefs, support, and stressors will make each situation unique.  If we can focus on what makes sense given the circumstances, coupled with a desire to remove hurdles that make life hard, the opinions or life challenges of others are moot points.  This is about self-care and the right of each person to decide what is best for him/her.

Article on Anti-Depressants

The following is a recent editorial on the tendency our culture has to both see anti-depressants as a quick fix and to resist them because they are not “real” help.  http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2012/06/hey-lets-not-get-carried-away-anti-depressants-really-do-help-people/257976/

Dr. Peter Kramer, a clinical professor of psychiatry at BrownUniversity, is adamant that depression is not just a “disorder”.  It is now defined as a disease with serious biological implications.  Research that looked at brain scans and physiological reactivity conclude that Depression’s affects on the body are more serious than diabetes and asthma combined.  This can be seen in the way Depression affects chemistry, resulting in negative impacts on different areas of the brain.  For example, the Amygdala, part of the brain’s limbic system which activates your fight or flight response, becomes less able to switch off.  Meanwhile the adrenal gland becomes enlarged.  The combination of these two affected areas results in prolonged heightened states.  The body becomes stressed – the bones lose calcium, blood platelets become sticky (increasing risk of heart attacks and strokes), and the immune system is suppressed.     Another victim is the hippocampus- it gets smaller with each day of Depression.  This affects memory and the brain’s ability to repair itself.  With these aspects alone, we learn that over time, Depression leads to stress and anxiety, and then limits those parts of the brain that would normally serve to repair the damage.  YIKES!

Now the good news!  What you just read is most pronounced when Depression is left untreated.  Medication can significantly address the chemical alterations, limiting the damage.  And there is another benefit.  Not only are the organs more protected, medications significantly impact the number of attempted and successfully completed suicides.   When counseling is activated as well, research shows there is even greater success.  So for those of you suffering from Depression, realize that there is a reason to act and there are wonderful tools available that can help!

**If you would like to hear more of Dr. Kramer, you can read his book, Against Depression.

 

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