Hope dies last

Entries categorized as ‘Family’

Confession: Part Two

October 23, 2009 · 10 Comments

A little over three months ago, I confessed that I had not been on an airplane in two years.

As usual, you were all lovely and understanding and flooded my comment box with tips and stories and advice. I was ready to get on a plane and make the trip for my best friend’s engagement party.

Except, when the big day arrived,  I did not get on that plane.

I managed to get to the airport. I managed to wait in line. I managed to check in–while sobbing uncontrollably. But I never managed to even begin walking to the departure gate.  The Xanax didn’t work. Somehow, my panic was no match for the chemicals.My fear had paralyzed me.

The next 24 hours rank right up there with the most traumatic experiences of my life. In all my adult life, I have not  felt like such a failure as I did that day. In all my adult life, I have not felt less understood as I did on that day. Slowly, as the news trickled down to all the relevant people, my panic grew fiercer. The reactions were diverse. An overwhelming silence from the friends that were already on the island waiting to pick me up at the airport. Rage from my brother who believes in ‘tough love’. Anxiousness and guilt from my mother. My sister and The Best Friend were proud. “You fucking made it to the airport! You checked in! You took your first step!”

Over the course of the next month, which coincided with the first three weeks of my relationship with him, I self-medicated myself with Xanax every single day. I was chain smoking. I couldn’t eat. I couldn’t sleep without a pill.

I told no-one.

(I don’t recommend this strategy)

Sure, there were conversations had–here and there–about what happened. And all of them made me feel worse. He was a good distraction from all these things. My mind was filled with him; purposefully. If I allowed myself to not think of him I would have to deal with the plethora of guilt, disappointment and fear that I felt inside. What kind of person misses their best friend’s engagement? What kind of person can’t get on a plane? What kind of person can allow irrational fear to consume her in this way? But the one question that replayed itself over and over in my mind was the most frightening of all.

“Was this going to be my life for ever?”

I say I was at peace when I met him. And I was. But, beneath the peace was all of this. I was dealing with all of this while trying to begin a relationship. That it failed, therefore, is not surprising. That I broke down–completely–when it ended was inevitable.

I am not ashamed of my panic attack disorder or the depression. (The two seem to go hand in hand.)  But, I do hate it. It gets in my way. It ruins relationships–friendships and romances, it causes tension in my family and it stops me from living exactly the kind of life that I want to live. But, it is here. Over the last year, I have tried to avoid it while also trying to defeat it. After the troubling summer I had, I realized that I can’t avoid it. I can’t control it. I can’t defeat it without the proper tools. I learned that this is one battle that I have to face on my own. That those around me will never, really, understand it.  I learned that others will never really accept it.

These realizations were–and continue to be– isolating.

But, I know that I”m not alone. According to the UK’s National Health Service, at least 10% of the world’s population suffer from some sort of anxiety disorder. There are a lot of us out there. And so I wanted to put out part of my story. Its fragmented and all over the place, I know. But, its fragmented and all over the place in my head.

Perhaps, in time, I will be able to make sense of it; express it more eloquently. But for now, the admission that I am a phobic is all the sense I can make.

Categories: Daily · Ego · Family · Friendship · On Relationships · The Blues · The Past · The Scary
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Best daddy issue ever

September 14, 2009 · 7 Comments

My therapist believes that I am on the brink of a breakthrough.

This is all at once an exciting and terrifying change of pace; ever since she’s known me I seem to have been going from breakdown to breakdown.Actually, ever since you’ve all known me I seem be going from breakdown to breakdown.  Right?

These mini-breakdowns have all been preceded by some form of rejection or abandonment by a man.  I have always known–intellectually, at least–that I have daddy issues. Father died abruptly at a critical juncture in my development. Of course, I have daddy issues. I have watched enough movies, read enough books and related to Meredith Grey far too well to not know this. I did not need a therapist to point it out to me. But it seems that I did need a therapist to dig a little deeper and allow me to understand this on an emotional level.

I did need a therapist to show me that my daddy issues are not there simply because he died. “Isn’t it strange” she asked me, “That in 16 months of therapy all I know about your father is that he died? You spent 11 years with him, Hope. How was your relationship with him when he was alive?”

I was floored. Yes. At some point in my life, I did have a father.  Spontaneous, soft tears burst forth and I used a phrase I have never used in therapy before.

“I don’t want to talk about this.”

Resistance. This is the stuff that therapists’ wet dreams are made of.

But in her wily shrink ways she had been preparing me for this moment for 16 months. All those sessions led to this one session. For 16 months I danced around the topic. She let me. Today, she probed further. And I finally broke down and allowed her to do her job.

Today I know something that I didn’t know yesterday.

Every time a man leaves me, or rejects me or doesn’t want me I allow myself to finally grieve for the father I never mourned. Not because I didn’t want to or because I didn’t feel to, but because I just didn’t know how to.

Yes. I am definitely on the brink of something here and I really, really hope it’s a breakthrough.

Categories: Daily · Family · On Love · On The Couch · The Past · The Scary
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28 Things I Learned From My Mother

May 10, 2009 · 7 Comments

1. To smile is to be beautiful.

2. Cleaning pots, pans and utensils as you’re cooking will leave less work for you to do after you’ve eaten.

3. To never leave the house without lipstick on or lip gloss. You never know who you will meet.

4. How to make tzatziki.

5. That flowers are beautiful; especially the ones you grow and pick from your own garden.

6. A new recipe is a great excuse to bring people together.

7.  A woman can do anything a man can do. And if she can’t? Just hire someone to do it for you.

8. Do not overstay your welcome when someone opens their home to you.

9. How to be a gracious host. 

10. To always carry your own set of towels when travelling.

11. The words to ‘Que Sera, Que Sera‘ 

12. That no matter your age hold on to your child-like enthusiasm. It will make life that much easier.

13. How to hand-wash my clothes.

14. Strength.

15. To not only tolerate those who are different from you but try to find a way to understand them.

16. Pride for myself, my family and my heritage.

17. It is OK to ask for help.

18. How to panic.

19. Love.

20. That pretending to eat babies’ feet will make them laugh.

21. To always have paprika and oregano in my kitchen.

22. How to pick a watermelon.

23. How to weave a wreath from wild flowers.

24. To be there for your friends through the good and the bad times.

25. During the bad times? Tea, biscuits and an ear can make all the difference.

26. The difference between being alone and feeling lonely.

27. How to stand up for myself.

28. That I can always, always come home.

What have you learned from your mother?

Categories: Family · List type stuff · On Being A Woman · On Love

Catch

May 2, 2009 · 8 Comments

Me: You know I was thinking that I’m a really good catch for a guy. I have a flat. I work. I have the potential to make good money. And I will be able to be a mother and raise his children without having to give up my job completely. Who wouldn’t want that?

Brother: I don’t think you’ve understood what men want AT ALL.

Categories: Daily · Family · The Funny

Easy/Hard

April 23, 2009 · 17 Comments

Easy: Finding evidence that always confirms that there is something wrong with me

Hard: Taking that evidence and interpreting it differently to conclude that I am just normal

 

Easy: To think  ”I don’t blog for the comments, I blog for myself”

Hard: Accepting that comments aren’t the alpha and omega of my existence

 

Easy: Letting my life pass me by 

Hard: Grabbing it by the (as my mother says) balls and living it

 

Easy:   Writing

Hard: Writing well

 

Easy:  Talking to my friends

Hard: Talking to my friends about feeling left behind as they get engaged, live with their boyfriends and make plans for their combined futures

 

Easy: First dates

Hard: Finding someone who I would actually want to have a first date with

 

Easy: Coming up with the idea for this post

Hard: Coming up with the actual content for this post

 

Easy: To say “I forgive you”

Hard: To mean it

 

Easy: To have good intentions

Hard: To put them in practice

 

Easy: To love

Hard: To be loved in return

 

What are you finding easy/hard?

Categories: Daily · Ego · Family · Friendship · List type stuff · On Being A Woman · On Being Single · On Dating · On Hope · On Relationships · On The Couch · That Job I Do · The Blues · The Good · The Past · The Scary