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My story: I still have dreams
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Hi everyone,
I am writing this post following a request from a fellow member to know more about me. I do not wish to hi-jack another post so have started this one.
I am fifty years old and the father of five. Divorced twice and in a few other relationships over the years. My friends sometimes joke that I am looking for my next ex.
I am an honest man and try very hard to be a good person, a good partner (when in a relationship) and a good dad. My life is not extraordinary and I am starting to realise how far too many people have far too much trauma in their lives. Is this our evolved society?
I grew up in a housing commission house with my mum and younger sister. Dad left mum when my sister was born and I was a barely a year old. He was never in my life. His bother (we are good wogs!) did his bit to fill the void and to this day he is the closest thing to a dad I have ever know and I love him dearly. My dad died a few years ago but I did not grieve for him. I did not know him. His brother told me of his death and was crying when he told me. I was upset that my uncle was upset but not that my dad had died! Mum was never very mentally stable but did her best. We were poor and mum never did drugs or booze or gambled. I love my mum but as a parent I struggle with her parenting style and we are not close these days.
I was the "man" of the house since I was about fourteen and I guess I just continued that caring role until I ended up taking on the ultimate responsibility - caring for the community. I joined the Police.
My career path started at Darlinghurst, then Redfern, later I was a radio dispatcher and 000 telephonist. I worked at Fairfield when we had the highest murder rate in Australia (late 1980's) and Green Valley, Campbelltown, Campsie, Ashfield and Granville. I was mostly operational and in uniform and working alone. (More common than you might think.) I have been physically threatened with death many times. I have arrested dozens of people at gunpoint, sometimes at the point where I was applying trigger pressure before the offender surrendered. I have talked three people out of suicide.Twice people have died in my arms. I have been assaulted more times than I can even remember. I have seen babies and children suffer in ways many cannot imagine. I have taken statements from victims of sexual assault that have suffered in ways most could not imagine.
After over thirty serious work injuries and a good dose of PTSD, I was pensioned off from my career and a job I was lucky enough to have loved for the time I was in it.
In my personal life my third daughter died of SIDS at the age of eight weeks. It led to the breakdown of my second marriage. As a direct result I do not even see my subsequent daughter as my ex wife cannot stand to have her away from her and has forbidden her from seeing me. It is a form of child abuse and it certainly messes with my head, but at the end of the day my daughter is being denied a loving father because her mother cannot cope with her own issues.
I have always liked the company of ladies but it took me until I was forty two to find "the one". She was and is the love of my life but has her own anxiety issues and after three years of a sort-of-normal relationship I spent a further four clinging to what was a dying relationship in which I think she loved me but could not control her anxiety over other issues. She dumped me last year. I do not think I even knew what true love of woman was until she came along and now I feel I have nothing to give another woman because she still has my heart, even though we are no longer together. My addiction? I guess so.
Anyway, that is my life in a nutshell. I fight every day to battle my depression and I won't give up. I have four other children that love me and need me. I have a new grand daughter who is so beautiful that I still cannot suppress a smile every time I open my mobile phone - she is my screen saver! I may drink a bottle of spirits tonight, or not. I may go to the gym tomorrow, or not. I may have a minute or two of euphoria interspersed with the general depression, or I may not.
I still have dreams. I like to write and have been published. One day I will write that best seller. One day I will live on a hundred acres out of Sydney and feed chickens and muck around in my man shed. There is always someone worse off and I will do my best. Part of my inspiration is this site, and many of you will never know how much strength I draw from your posts, but I thank you one and all. I wish you success, such that it is, in your own lives.
Thanks for reading.
John.
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Hi John
I think I received your reply from yesterday.
It is hard to change our pattern of thinking negatively and our behaviour. And especially when I have been "brain washed" or "controlled and manipulated" by my mum or over 40 years. It is so damn hard to change.
I understand what you're saying about being upset and then getting a Krispy Kreme donut. I would the exact same. I know exactly what your psych is saying about "inner child". I think i am in that inner child state quite a bit when with my psych.
I am not too good today, being very emotional after losing friends that don't want to know me anymore because of my issues.
I am so alone now with no close friends to confide in.
I don't know what to do anymore. I have written a new post on friends.
Take care John, hope you're doing okay.
Jo
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Hi Mares
I just want to say that I am thinking of you while you are struggling at the moment. I am worried about you Mares. Pls take care and keep chatting to us on here.
Mares - I feel terrible because sometimes I just don't know what to say - but I am thinking of you.
Jo xxx
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I am struggling tonight
Feeling like I have no one anymore to confide in or even catch up for a coffee
I feel so abandoned
Maybe I should disappear, run away
I feel so lost now with no one to talk to
Jo
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Hi Jo,
I hear you struggling. I see you. I am here to talk.
I know you are grieving the loss of a friend today, and in our mental health that is an especially hard thing to deal with. I can only say that she was there for you for a while, and maybe in time she can be there for you again. However if she can't be there for you right now, then that is unfortunately the way things stand.
Are you still working? I forget if you have told me. Is there someone from work, perhaps one who might know about your mental state that you might garner a new friendship with?
If I were there in person, I would be there for you to catch up and have coffee, but I am on the other side of the country, so consider this a steaming mug of cyber hot chocolate with marshmallows. Picture me with a blanket to get you out of the rain (it is raining cats and dogs here in wa) and a comfy chair to curl up in while we talk.
GA
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Hi GA
I wish we were living closer. hot choc with marshmallows - yum.
GA, I don't know what to do. She has been my friend for almost 18 years and the last 4 years we have caught up weekly for either a chat, coffee or walk or shopping.
But right now, I am lost, confused, angry and guilty and so so emotional. What have I done? It's me, you see because of my BPD (borderline personality disorder) one of the traits is to become close to someone and then something happens (even if it's a little thing gone wrong) but BPD sufferers struggle regulating their emotions. And feeling or worrying about abandonment is another trait of BPD. You know I wish i was a different person, not like this.
I do work 3-4 days a week, one lady does know but I am scared of getting too close to her now in the fear that she will abandon me as well.
I feel so alone right now, I wish i was on my island hiding away.
GA, thanks for your reply, I know you are doing it tough at the moment yet you find time to answer on here. I really appreciate it.
Thanks for the cyber hot chocolate!!! Sending you a big warm hug
Jo xx
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Hi Jo,
Would love to run away together and do a eat, pray love thing....
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Hi Jo,
I had replied to you but it system errored on me, so I'll retype it as best I can.
It makes only natural sense that it hurts right now, after losing so long and obviously close a friendship. I am hurting after losing a 7 year marraige, let alone a friendship lasting 18 years.
One of the things to consider is that, for better or worse, you do have BPD, and your mind is making something worse than it is. You won't be able to see how much of it really is you and how much is her. I am at the same point with my husband. I can't see the forest for the trees right now, and won't for awhile. In time, you will know.
The other thing to consider is that while it is natural for you to be afraid to be abandoned, this lady at work is not your old friend. They are two different people and will react differently. Even knowing someone for seven years proved I could still be wrong how people reacted. This potential new friend may react more positively then you expect. Neither of us really know how she'll react.
So swings and roundabouts. It is great to hear that you are working most of the week, despite what your head may be telling you. None of us except us on here, fellow sufferers know how much effort it can be to simply face the world.
GA
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Hi Jo,
I am sorry you had such a rough day. I suppose that our individual issues have consequences, even though we cannot control the issues nor do we want the consequences.
Your idea to get stuck into the exercise is, hopefully, one that you can make a routine. I finished up work today so I can focus on rehab for my leg so I can stall surgery for as long as possible. I intend to go every day and I hoping that the side affect of the rehab will be greater fitness generally, maybe some weight loss and -needless to say - improvement in the depression.
My youngest son is a people pleaser, too. I can see the angst in his face when he feels like he cannot please his mother and I at the same time. The funny thing is, I don't think either of us want him to please us, just or him to be himself and be happy, yet he has convinced himself that it is better he do what he thinks we want rather than what he wants. I think there is a little something in that for all of us. Nudge, nudge, wink, wink.
Good on you for standing up to the psych. I know it is hard to do, having been in a long term relationship with a girl with low self esteem. Sometimes I think it is like people suffering anorexia nervosa. The only person that cannot see they are malnourished is the sufferer. I think people with low self esteem are the only ones that cannot see they are good people or have good qualities.
I heard a saying today; "There is so much bad in the best of us and so much good in the worst of us, that it ill behooves the best of us to talk about the worst of us." So my question to you Jo, whether you are among the best or the worst of us is, what is one of your good points? Are you a good listener, a good mum, do you have a good heart? I'm guessing all three.
I know you cannot confide in private here but I will listen to you, as will others. We will support you.
I hope you sleep better (slept better, depending on when you read this) and keep posting.
You are worth it.
Kind regards, John.
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Hi Mary,
I don't know when you will read this but I hope you are feeling better.
I will make some enquiries re the dispatcher positions and if/when they may be hiring and get back to you in coming days.
I need to sleep now so will write more tomorrow, but I am thinking of you.
Kind regards, John.