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Crying, a gauge to our mental strength?
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Reaching 60yo l can reflect on my early life and it is clear that my thousands of buckets l could have filled with my tears is in contrast to the period of post 2009. Why?.
Diagnosed in 2009 with bipolar 2,depression, dysthymia and dwindling anxiety meant the correct medication was prescribed. From then on it was more a case of fine tuning dosages.
Last week l had the trauma of my youngest daughter leaving my life. She's 24yo and l have been tormented by this development BUT, I havent shead a tear. I feel it is a reflection of my newfound mental strength. Yes she has come and gone in my life but that fact doesnt mean it comes easy to cope with.
What else could it be?. After much analysis l think acceptance of what life really is has helped.
Life is not what we plan it to be nor wished. As kids we drew rainbows but not rocks. Life will throw stones, rocks, even boulders- without warning. Is our lack of being able to cope due to us expecting a smooth road in life? Or do we know life has hurdles but when they arrive its so devastating we have no learned skills to cope with them?
At school we had no lessons in "coping with trauma" or "breaking up with your partner, how to do it with compassion and care" or "depression signs" etc.. even financial planning isnt taught. All these life challenges are learned the hard way.
Some people can approach such challenges easier than others. So if you are sensitive, had a cruel upbringing, family history of mental illness and so on, you might let your tears become streams. Is it an indicator of your mental strength-lack of it?
I suggest it could be. There is no worse feeling imo. That feeling of devastation, worthlessness, failure and mental collapse- crying. However I've known some people equally the same but not crying, with filming over their eyes as if deeply sad without tears so I'm not saying it is the case every time.
If you have had a period of lots of crying, to work closely with your professional mental health expert with medication and therapy. Hopefully you'll improve and your stream of tears will dry up. Mine did so there is hope that your mental strength will return or develop even late in life.
Accepting life has boulders will prepare yourself for them. Sh*t happens and its out if your control but you can develop strategies to cope better and a mentality that will look at life for what it is and always had been, unpredicable, hurtful but can be wonderful, incredible and more stable
Tony WK
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Thanks Jugglin Strugglin
That was a most interesting collection of facts. I really enjoyed reading them.
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My wife and I are lovers of animals. She is a "pied piper" of our rural region.
When a vet on TV fails to save a pet her tears flow easily. Its one reason l love her so much. Her nature, that of warmth and kindness comes through so easily.
Is our ease and frequence of crying a good quality or is it a burden? Its both.
It can only be a burden when we cry in front of those people that interpret it as a weakness or some other negative and such reacction by them becomes known to us. For our crying is to us a sacred thing. Its our port at the land of repair. Other ships rarely visit. We dock at the slightest hint of trouble. But we also dock by choice because the pier is our home. Its where we get another coat of paint on our wooden hull to protect us from society's salty water. Others have a steel hull.
Since my crying has reduced dramatically with the right medication, it doesnt mean I've lost that emotion....just the tears dont fall. For me it means no headaches following and quicker at leaving that mood...back to everyday activities. Its definately a half way point and I'd recommend to anyone that its a great position to aim for. Ok, the right meds helped me but what else is essential to reach that point?
1. Thinking realistically
An animal is injured on a TV vet show. My wife is crying. I'm falling towards crying. I feel the emotion of it all. That poor foxy dog. Then l deliberately change my thinking to "he'll be ok". I tell my wife the same thing.
2. I concentrate on the actions of the vet rather than the pets suffering or its masters worry.
3. If all that fails, l rise and put the kettle on. A change of environment and forcing my mind to concentrate on other things.
Before you know it there is an ad break. These are the actions and thoughts that come natural to me (now). I havent lost the emotion.. I've channelled it, diverted it, by realising my eye focus on other things moves my mind away from the sadness of the event.
I believe for example, ambulance persons do the same. Rescuing a girl the same age as their daughter? They would move their focus from that fact to the task at hand and get on with focussing on the many tasks at hand.
I hope that helps. How about you try it and let me know your progress.
Tony WK
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Hi anri, glad to hear from you.
I agree, some quotes members here write fit like the missing link in a jigsaw.
It then all make sense and helps us on our journey.
Tony WK
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