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Author: kat

  • 30 Holiday Self-Care Ideas

    30 Holiday Self-Care Ideas

    Those of us living with sensory sensitivities, anxiety, cPTSD and/or PTSD often find this time of year, this busy, bustling, unnervingly ‘happy’ time of year, to be especially tricky.

    The Holidays, with their seemingly blind obsession with being “Merry & Bright”, are supposed to be about joy and festivities. It’s like there are joy police hiding around every corner waiting to pounce on us if we dare voice distress over these days of over-crowded stores, traffic chaos, endless little (and big) moments of socializing, and the pressure to entertain and to be entertained.

    For those of us living with sensory sensitivities, anxiety, cPTSD, PTSD and any number of other ‘reasons’ we might be a sensitive soul, we often find this time of year, this busy, bustling, unnervingly ‘happy’ time of year, to be especially tricky.

    I know I do.

    I don’t remember a time when I didn’t live with anxiety. I must have been born with a racing heart and sweaty palms. I was diagnosed with ADHD as a 1st grader and autism in my 40s. I developed cPTSD from growing up inside the cruel chaos of a narcissistic single mother. And about a decade or so ago, I developed PTSD. These create multiple new dimensions to my life.

    For example, I absolutely cannot stand grocery shopping right before a major holiday — there are so many more people than usual and they all seem incredibly rushed and stressed to be there. It’s just too much. It exhausts me.

    And the pressure, both internal and external, to find the ‘right’ gifts that I learned from a mother so twisted in her thinking that gift giving became a sport of sorts that no one ever told me the rules to. What if they don’t like their gifts? What if they think I must be off my rocker getting that coloring book of Bible verses and pretty flowers for my Mother-In-Law?!? Gah. I rarely enjoy giving a gift thanks to my history.

    Over the years I’ve developed many coping strategies for not only surviving, but actually (sometimes) thriving during the holidays. I’m not saying I never find things flaring up, they always do as stressors increase. But I can say that when practicing intentional self-care around the holidays, I find that my triggers are more manageable.

    With this in mind, here are 30 Ways to Honor Your Experience Living with Anxiety and/or PTSD During the Holidays:

    1. Don’t try and tell yourself that somehow this year will be the year you don’t get anxious or triggered. That’s setting yourself up to feel even more anxious if your symptoms do flair up.

    2. Do tell yourself that if you experience increased anxiety or are triggered that you are capable of handling your big emotions and reactions. Being triggered doesn’t mean you’ve failed. It means you’re human.

    3. If small talk wears you out, avoid talking with strangers and those who only engage on that surface level.

    4. If diving into deep conversations is too much for you, avoid those who insist on the deep dives, or refuse to dive with them when they begin — stick to small talk — you don’t owe anyone your private and deep thoughts.

    5. If giving gifts causes your anxiety to soar, consider making donations in the recipients’ names instead. I acknowledge this can hold it’s own anxiety. You know your situation the best.

    6. Also, you have permission to consider declaring this a gift-giving free holiday for you.

    7. If you find yourself at a holiday party or gathering becoming completely overwhelmed or triggered too much, it’s ok to simply leave early. It’s ok to care for yourself.

    8. Consider limited contact with friends and family members who refuse to acknowledge and respect your struggles.

    9. Take care of your body! Drink enough water, eat your veggies and practice good sleep hygiene as able — they will matter even more during this time of year.

    10. Everyone has limits — respect and honor yours. You cannot be all things for all people so the best thing you can do is be the best you can for yourself.

    11. Practice caution with alcohol — it may offer a temporary reprieve, but in the long run it will not help and over-doing-it often makes things worse in the long run.

    12. Check in with yourself regularly. Do you need an evening alone? A warm bath? Have you eaten enough today? Check in regularly, it’s too easy to lose touch with our physical needs when our anxiety gets pumped into overdrive.

    13. Set realistic expectations for what you can do this holiday season. Resist the urge to add just one more thing to your To-Do list.

    14. If driving increases your anxiety, consider taking a train, Lyft, or public transit to holiday events.

    15. If driving calms your anxiety, volunteer to be the sober driver and enjoy some holiday music while you drive your friends and family home.

    16. When attending Holiday events, have an escape plan for if you get overwhelmed, i.e. drive yourself, alert your host/ess you made need to leave early, have taxi money in your wallet.

    17. If you will be traveling by air, consider buying noise cancelling headphones to give you a buffer from the noise of airport travels.

    18. Allow yourself to feel your feelings without judgment or shame.

    19. Release any Holiday traditions that feel draining, feel forced, or feel like hell to even contemplate continuing.

    20. Decide which Holiday events will attend based on your needs — NOT other peoples’ wishes.

    21. Stick with any routines that nurture your peace of mind. Routines are the foundation of thriving while living with anxiety, cPTSD and/or PTSD.

    22. Be sure to remind yourself of the good things in your life, no matter how tiny they might seem to you. Find the good things, write them down, add to your list as you’re able throughout the season.

    23. Give yourself permission to take breaks at holiday events and family gatherings. Even if it means hiding in a bathroom, sitting on the toilet lid while you play a game on your phone for 10 mins.

    24. If you know an event will have people or things that will trigger your symptoms, I strongly encourage you to consider NOT attending this year.

    25. See a counselor. If you have a therapist you see regularly, consider adding an extra session or two. If you haven’t found a therapist that’s a job fit, try again if finances allow — it’s worth the effort once you find the right one.

    26. Journal when you’ve had an especially bad day AND also when you’ve had a wonderful day. Document it all.

    27. Let go of perfect. Make mistakes, offer yourself grace, try again. Perfectionism is one of the ways shame holds us hostage — fight it.

    28. Remember, it’s ok to be happy, and it’s ok to be sad, anxious, afraid, disappointed. Give yourself permission to feel all your feelings this holiday season — without judgment.

    29. Protect your privacy — no one is entitled to the nitty-gritty details of your inner world. Disclose only what you want, to who you want to.

    30. Be yourself, love yourself. In the end, you must be your own advocate and cheerleader — keep reminding yourself what you’re ‘getting right’ and offering yourself grace for the things you wish you could handle differently.

    My holiday wish this year is that all of us are able to stay present, find joy and continue to provide soothing self-care to ourselves.

    Thank you for reading.

    ***This piece was adapted from one originally published in 2019.***

  • Today is my dog’s birthday

    Today is my dog’s birthday

    ….cw: PTSD, suicidal thoughts, sexual assault/trauma…

    .

    Today is my dog Luna’s birthday. She’s turned 8. These days the fur on the bottom of her chin is now more white than black. I wonder how old she’ll get to grow into.

    Today is Tuesday, the garage truck is making it’s noisy way up the block – Luna is paying close attention.

    Today is just days before the 12th anniversary of that night in Salem.

    This week it has hit me so, so very hard, almost as if it’s making up for not capturing more of my attention last year. That was a blessing of the uLMS dx late last August, my mind was so consumed with the danger of my cancer it had hardly a moment to remember this anniversary.

    Not so this year.

    This year, this week, I find myself wound tight. As if my entire being is ready to fight or take flight to avoid remembering.remembering.remembering that night.

    The other day, I read a critique of *The Body Holds the Score the other day that was basically saying the author had overreached in what counts as trauma when he widened his definition farther out than just those who have served in combat roles.

    Like, what?

    Seriously?!?

    In this day-and-age “intelligent” people are still trying to convince themselves (and others) that trauma isn’t something that happens everyday, in the most ordinary of settings?!?

    It’s disappointing.

    Well, it’s disappointing and also dangerous.

    It’s so dangerous for those who experience life-altering trauma(s). Those who have exposure to this person’s dis/misinformation may well end up gaslighting themselves into believing they are overreacting, that nothing really ‘that bad’ happened and then spend years or decades with nightmares and exaggerated startle responses and avoiding any-and-everything that triggers memories of the event(s) and intrusive thoughts/memories that they then try to drown out by drinking/drugs/addictions because to stay conscious to those intrusive thoughts/memories too long puts them in danger of unaliving themselves.

    I rarely go a day without at least one intrusive thought/memory.

    I cannot imagine how I would still be alive, much less sober, if I were under the false belief that what happened to me that now haunts me was not a trauma but I was simply overreacting. Staying alive and sober is hard enough acknowledging my truth.

    I hope I’m wrong about the potential damage that man’s words might have/be having.

    But I know for me, coming to grips with the truth – that a horrible, violating, terrifying crime had been committed against me – was a vital piece of the puzzle that has helped me stay alive and sober these past few years.

    The truth is where our power resides – at least, that’s been my experience.

    Radical acceptance is living within the truth of our experiences. I cannot imagine how we can heal, even if its just a little, if we lie to ourselves.

    Later today, I hope to load Luna up into the car and drive her to McDonald’s for a birthday plain cheeseburger. I say hope because my PTSD, being this up front right now, may prevent that when I try to leave the house. But I hope it doesn’t.

    For now, I’ve got the window open to autumn air and, now that the garbage truck is done and gone, the quiet of a mid-Tuesday-morning.

    For now, I’m still and quiet and that will need to be enough.

    . . .

    *If you are a trauma survivor, The Body Holds the Score is NOT a book I’d recommend reading without therapeutic support. It contains graphic details of crimes that many of us find far too triggering to be safe to read.

  • Play Your Drums Outside

    Play Your Drums Outside

    Yesterday, somewhere in my neighborhood, someone was playing/practicing marching band style drums.. It was kinda fabulous. Outside for all to hear, no hiding away in a bedroom with the windows shut.

    I wish more of us practiced in public.

    Perfectionism is sorta like a cancer of the soul: if left unchecked it grows, metastasizes overtaking everything. Killing off our creativity, our spontaneity, our joy. And please remember that I have actual cancer. I am well aware of the horrors. I use this analogy with intention.

    I’ve spent too many precious years afraid of “looking foolish,” terrified of failure.

    But what do I have to show for all that caution?

    Notebooks full of unfinished essays and poems, friends unmade for fear of being rejected, dreams unchased for fear of not being good enough (what does good enough even mean in this modern hellscape of disposable human beings?!?)…

    And all that caution never, not once, brought me an ounce of joy.

    Something I’m noticing about myself as I enter my second year post cancer diagnosis is I’m feeling calmer, more grounded in my re-emerging self. I’m embracing what lights me up more than ever before because why the fuck not?

    What-even have I been waiting for all these years?

    The narcissistic mother whose resented me since birth? She was never going to find me palatable, much less lovable anyway. Can a narcissist even actually love anyway? I doubt it.

    The people who rejected me for being too weird, too childlike, too gentle? I’m grateful they did now though. What if I’d lost even more of myself trying to stay acceptable for people so petty and cruel?

    And those first two husbands who practiced a myriad of ways to dehumanize and break a woman’s spirit? Fuck those guys, they never deserved my soft, gentle and far too loyal heart.

    Also, fuck my 4th grade art teacher for mocking me because I couldn’t trace!

    That was so fucking cruel. It crushed 4th grade me. So much so that I spent decades believing drawing-painting-collaging-etc was off limits to me because I wasn’t good at art.

    I mean, seriously, who mocks a child for, well, being a child?!?

    I think that right there sums up how so many of us end up battling perfectionism as adults: being mocked-betrayed-rejected-abandoned as children for not being fucking perfect.

    It makes me sad.

    No little human deserves that. Far, far too many spend our childhoods trying not to drown under it.

    Maybe I’ll get lucky and get to listen to more marching band drummer practice today.

  • i got a wheelchair

    i got a wheelchair

    and i’m figuring it out and i’m zooming and zipping around and i’m just plain over the moon at my newfound freedom and so, so grateful to the generous humans who made this possible

  • Bye, Bye Uterus

    Bye, Bye Uterus

    My First Week Post Op, Pain Meds, and That Darn Cat

    One week ago today I was under anesthesia, my uterus, fallopian tubes, ovaries and cervix being evicted from my form.

    How has it already been a week?!?

    I’ve watched so many YouTube videos, like this one about Underconsumption Core, which I thought was just us living within our means and respecting the environment. We’ve watched some of season three of The Bear, which is utterly brilliant, some of these episodes are pure art. And I’ve been watching the Democratic National Convention live on YouTube as well and feeling such hope again. 

    This morning my partner returned to work, “I wish I would have taken more time off. It feels too soon.

    This morning I slept in, avoiding the inevitable tasks of self-care that are now mine and mine alone to complete. 

    There’s a neighborhood cat that has decided our driveway is their personal kitty-cat highway, our garage their clubhouse to hang out in, and our side yard is now their territory – even when our dog is on the other side of the dining room window losing her ever-loving mind barking at it on the grass bellow. The other day my partner took the dog out to potty and that darn cat came tearing out of the garage in front of them and our darn dog tried to bolt after it with a silent speed that tells us kitty better stay out of reach. It all happened so fast she ended up yanking my partner HARD as she about pulled the lease out of his hand.

    We’re both more than a little nervous about her trying that nonsense again while I’m the one holding the lease.

    I’ve got plenty of celiac safe, nutrient-and-protein dense food to eat already made and just needing me to put containers in the oven to eat. Also plenty of protein shakes to start the day because eating first thing is not my jam. I’ve already drank one of them when I took my pain meds to protect my tender tummy.

    Speaking of pain meds, I was sent home with only a 3 day prescription of Oxycodone!

    Three days!!

    I have three incision points on my abdomen and a brand new vaginal cuff made via cauterization, along with the general pain that accompanies your internal organs repositioning themselves into the new space.

    Three days…

    Thankfully, I had 2 days worth leftover from my biopsy in June so I didn’t have to start pulling back on dosing until Monday. And I’m saving one for next week’s follow-up appointment so I’m not in agony while sitting in the uncomfortable chairs at my OB’s office waiting.waiting.waiting for my turn. 

    I’ve never not waited to see her. I don’t mind waiting though because she runs late because she doesn’t leave the exam room until the patient is done – she’s given me the same time to ask questions and then receive thorough-non-rushed answers. 

    But so, yeah, I’m home alone for the first time today. 

    I won’t lie and pretend it’s all bad – the silence of being home alone is a balm for my autistic, highly sensitive soul. 

    I’m thinking of doing a weekly blog about my recovery, both to simply document it but also to help me stay mindful that my partner and I have decided that I’ll spend this entire next year focusing on recovery. I want to explain why but I’m running out of spoons and mental clarity as my pain rises.

    I didn’t expect typing to wear me out like this and I certainly didn’t expect it to cause increased pain like it has. 

    So, for now, I’m gonna close things up and I’ll explain the year of recovery concept hopefully next week.

    Love, 

    Kat

  • surviving depression’s storms

    surviving depression’s storms

    …your floundering
    Drowning life and your effort to save yourself,
    Treading water, dancing the dark turmoil,
    Looking for something to give.”
    Ted Hughes

    Sometimes you just have to breathe, and breathe again.

    Wait for the storm to roll over you,

    without letting it pull you under,

    drown you in the depths …

    because then *they win

    and I’ll be damned if

    I’m going to let *them win again

    no. *they’ve taken enough

    seared into my soul enough

    ruined too many things

    so, NO, not today…

    Today I’m gonna let this storm

    batter and beat me down,

    but I will NOT let it

    beat me under

    it will NOT

    end me