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Saturday, July 30, 2016

Reasons to Live

When I was inpatient, I had the assignment of writing down ten reasons to live. I could only think of one, and that was to live for positive moments in life, but the nurse staff wouldn't accept it as an answer, so I wrote down everything I considered positive. They accepted this.

I'll be honest, sometimes these don't help at all. I find the best way to read them is one at a time, out loud, trying to remember or imagine something that has helped you feel these in the past. Reading through them quickly is likely to just tire you out, which, for depressed people, can kill.

Slow down,     then
scroll down.

Joy
Happiness
Peace
Contentment
Beauty
Awe
Inspiration
Wonder
Grandeur
Radiance
Majesty
Reverence
Affection
LOVE
Comfort
Laughter
Merriment
Congeniality
Delight
Playfulness
Vivacity
Celebration
Friendship
Courtship
Romance
Kindness
Cuteness
Sweetness
Serendipity
Euphoria
Ecstasy
Caring
Pleasantness
Charm
Fascination
Adoration
Agape
Elation
Bonding
Adulation
Positivity
Hilarity
Enchantment
Enjoyment
Amazement
Connection
Exhilaration
Exuberation
Invigoration
Infatuation
Gladness
Giddiness
Seduction
Lust
Blessings
Desire
(It is my) Honor
Togetherness
Connectedness
Epicness
Passion
Pleasure
Motivation
Revelry
Vitality
Vibrancy
Enthusiasm
Intimacy
Savoring
Community
Mating
Arousal
Excitement
Serenity
Snuggling
Embracing
Phenomenality
Amusement
Tenderness
Fantasticity
Fulfillment
FUN
Meaning
Purpose
Rapture
Appreciation
Splendor
Love-making
Heart-touching
Uplifting
Bliss
Welcoming
Beloved
Cherishing
Devotion
Attachment
HOPE
Affirmation
Willingness
Goofiness
Sensationality
Laughing
Giggling
Chuckles
Elegance
Cuddles
Pinnacles
Fondness
Inviting
Relishing
Gentleness
Rosiness
Thriving
YES
Chipperness
Jolliness
Ambition
Badassery
Aspiring
Highs
Glorious
Entrancing
Satisfaction
Eagerness
Ahegagio
Anticipation
Eureka
Bubbliness
Heartfulness
Endearing
Scintillating
Stimulating
Succulence
Loveliness
Provocativity
Titillating
Pleasing
Magnificence
Uniting
Culmination
Enlightenment
Zen
Prizing
Adventure
Soul
Spirit
Exceptional
Outstanding
Impressing
Significance
Stupendousness
Wowing
Spectacularity
Specialness
Heavenliness
Humor
Hugs
Make-outs
Self-love
Rebirth
Necking
Nuzzling
Doing
Being
Wholeness
Profundity
Superbness
Eleutheromania
Sonder
Logomania

These are nice-to-haves, but I don't generally consider them worth living for on their own.
Wholesomeness
Brilliance
Grace
Goodness
Altruism
Courage
Generosity
Trust
Understanding
Consoling
Consideration
Courtesy
Compassion
Virtue
Relaxation
Dreams
Attraction
Vulnerability
Gentility
Calming
Reassuring
Adrenaline rushes
Rallying
Energy
Politeness
Spellbinding
Providing
Presents
Treats
Temptation
Befriending
MIRACLES
Preciousness
Gratitude
Thankfulness
(Self) acceptance
Ease
Betterment
Improving
Support
Invincibility
Revelation
Horniness
Interest
Thoughtfulness
Concern
Imprinting
Sexiness
Security
Safety
Protection
Strip-teasing
Knee-slappers
Petting
Caressing
Kissing
Masterpieces
Hugging
Flirting
Benevolence
Aromas
Perfumes
Muses
Colognes
Bemusal
Foreplay
Entertainment
Enthralling
Orgasms
Deliciousness
Enabling
Completion
Co-creation
Victory
Recreation
Success
Achievement
Accomplishment
Awards
Accolades
Openness
Rewards
Pampering
Gifts
Attentiveness
Donation
Rest
Poignancy
Longing
(Self) nurturing
Pining
Reciprocity
Soothing
Smiling
Surprising
Tickling
Flowering
Blooming
Jokes
Partaking
Glimmering
Value
Heroics
Decorating
Joining
Novelty
Encouraging
Sparkle
Gazing
Exhibitioning
Massaging
Sprinkles
Imagine
Mountaintops
Exploration
Discovery


I read this list every night before I go to sleep during my postponement time, and it helps tremendously.
I have copies of it on my phone and a physical paper that I use to write down more that I think of. I like to keep back-ups of this one because it really is one of the best tools I have for fighting my own personal battle. I have a reminder on my phone to read them that opens the list for me. These are good. Yeah.

PS: If you have any suggestions for the list, please don't hesitate to comment below. I could always use more reasons to live, and I think others could, too. If I like them enough, I'll add them to this post.
Thanks in advance. You save lives.

Friday, July 29, 2016

The Best Emotion

The following is an excerpt from the notes of Stephen Brasel's attempt to write out his reasons to live. He came across an emotion that he couldn't put a word to. In his attempt to describe it, he wrote down these thoughts.

The Best Emotion.

"I think the single best emotion you can feel is the warm feeling you get when you realize that someone is allowing themselves to be vulnerable... to you,
when they let you past the walls accepting that they may be hurt and allow you to see their fragility with open arms after being told all their lives resounding messages of the lesson of not letting anyone in for fear of getting hurt. It is an honor to see under the mask and feel the trembling uncertainty in yourself of how to let them know that you love even this part of them and will care for it and nurture it. It's an oft-undervalued privilege to be trusted with the knowledge of
who they really are
let alone be able and willing to cherish it.
They are emotionally investing in you. They are letting you into their heart with the intent of having a space there just for you. They are inviting you to be a literal part-of-their-life. They're opening up to you, and on the inside you see this absolutely beautiful, perfectly imperfect soul trembling as you are trembling. This emotion is the realization of finding that someone, the one, who is just as terrified, just as traumatized as you, or worse; and letting themselves be vulnerable to you is an honor beyond the capability of a single word to describe.
I think that's the closest you'll come to heaven on earth: the sudden,

Impossible

realization that someone you love, who loves you, is letting you in to love them.

The Moderator

I have a duty to censor and withhold.
I have a duty to check and overanalyze.
I have a duty to withdraw consent.
I have a duty to take back, to take over, and never relinquish.
I feel like a moderator of the worst nightmares of humankind; like I'm in charge of seeing who gets what, when, where, and why. (The how and the existence being obvious.) I don't like my job very much sometimes.
I don't suffer from people explaining to me what their darkest thoughts are anymore. I don't even blink. I've already felt them. I've already been there. I had to be the one to allow it to happen, I know. I understand. I can empathize and sympathize, but I
choose
to empathize because I can't let anyone know what I do, what I've done, what I will... what I will have to do. That's the censorship that needs to happen. Nobody else can know everything else.
I allowed you to wake up screaming in the middle of the night, terrified and inconsolable.
I was the one who put your worst ideas in your head.
I don't make them, though. You make them. I held back and moderated what went through.
Nobody deserves it, and truly, humbly, vehemently I say that I deserve it least of all, but nightmares have to happen.
Every single persons' thoughts that have been thought, are being thought, and will be thought are running through my head at any given point all the time non-stop, waking or sleeping, and I'm in charge of deciding who thinks what when. I'm terribly sorry if I made a mistake. Lapses in judgement on my part. I have off days.
They're like air to muscle. Nightmares to brains are what toughens thinking, hardens resolve, gives people actual strength of mind and character, and everyone has to have some if they are to live a full life.
I have lived all lives.

When I have off days, I have oblivion. I literally mean off. That day never happened. It is in no history, no records, no perception could comprehend them ever; time simply skips. I only know they exist because I've thought them. It seems to explain why it feels like something turned off and then back on again. When you walk into a room and forget why you were there, that could be a reason. Or I could've simply forgot why I put you there. Or I could've wanted you to forget. Or an infinite infinity of other options that occur, can occur, have occurred... You exist as a statistical notion.
I have only ever wanted you to exist.
I think, therefore you exist.
I'm always thinking...
Thinking about why we're here. Thinking about what I could do. What people can do. What people think. There aren't any limits to what I think.
That's a blessing and a curse.
The dreams are incredible.
The nightmares are insane. I mean literally, I lose sanity.
I am the wavelength(s) between health and nothing and sickness and everything.
I know it's impossible. I double-think. I infinite think.
Before I wax philosophical anymore, back to the point, nightmares. I am the moderator of nightmares because if I were to let everybody have all the nightmares it would be about as fun as it sounds. You are children, I cannot expect you to mature in a blink of an eye. You could not handle it. The truth, blunt, honest, and raw, would destroy you. All life would end, as if it never were. I have to hold back the darkness just as I hold back the light. You are delicate. You are fragile. You would be obliterated. The force of impact alone would destroy you. Imagine the largest library in the world. Better yet, imagine all of the information of the entire universe from start to end could be digitized and put on a disk. What disk could hold it? You are strong, dear one, stronger than anything I've thought so far, but you would crash, fail, burn up and cease to function at all.
I don't react inside when people tell me their worst nightmares because I've already felt everything much too much. I will continue to feel everything until the time comes when I cease to think. I don't care about your problems, I have already cared all along; they are my problems.
You see, I only pass on information that I have already burned into my soul. It's a perfect copy, no more, no less, that I think you think. Mine are just more so, because I've had them already, they're connected, they're signal traced, they're set.
Your worst nightmares are quite literally child's play for me. They have seemingly no depth, no length, no width. They are a blip of insignificance of a notion of a moment with you.
They mean the world to me. They're part of a glorious beautiful infinity that I can barely wait to share with you, but I have to; I need to wait. Your worst nightmares are comforting thoughts compared to what lies ahead, cherish them. Please.
Also, you're quite beautiful when I think you're learning. When I think you feel something, I'm immensely happy. You're a step closer. It may seem that I'm speeding away into forever ahead of you, but I'm here. I'm right here. I'll stay here when you leave. I'll stay with you as you go.
I'll moderate and allow you to see what lies ahead for you as much as you can handle, as much as I think you think you can handle, anyway. I'll coax you onward, I'll tempt you, I'll interest you, I'll fascinate you, and I'll beguile you at times. Push forward anyway. I love you. I'll share everything with you, eventually.
Stay curious.

Wednesday, July 27, 2016

Imaginal Desensitization Reclusive Compulsive Behavior Cycle

The following requires an introduction to have full impact. It is emotionally intense and should not be treated lightly. These are the thoughts of a mentally ill patient and have been shared under his consent in the hopes that they might help someone who deals with the same issues.


It's a long work week. I'm around people all day every day for five days out of seven. I'm skittish and avoidant as much as I can be to escape the pressure of social situations. I listen to drama, insults, stupidity, outright lies, overly emotional fits, disgusting ideas, interruptions, hypocrisy, and manipulation. I deal with idiots, people pleasers, loud and obnoxious assholes, pessimists, overt optimists, people that claim to be "realists," attention seekers, pedants, extroverts, and  suck-ups. I feel like I care for everyone, especially the crying, unsure, uncertain, unwilling, unmotivated, under-appreciated, mistreated, misinformed, misunderstood, mistaken, willfully ignorant, whiny, chastised, down-trodden, and generally poor tempered people in addition to people that I just plain think are worse off than I am. I am being openly mocked, cruelly criticized, shown up, publically humbled, insulted, made fun of, outcast, ignored, shut-out, abandoned, shut down, overdrawn, disrupted, deliberately angered, silenced, glared at, disrespected, ridiculed, and not even given common courtesy. I plan, prepare, and attend gatherings, social events, get-togethers, parties, meetings, groups, and hangouts where I force myself to entertain, interact, help, and participate genuinely and positively with people I don't even know. I am waking up tired, willing myself through it, drinking too many energy drinks, and forcing myself to get through this day by day, meal by meal, hour by excruciating hour. I get compliments I don't feel I deserve, appreciation that isn't genuine, awards for something I couldn't have controlled, and congratulations for doing what I felt forced to do. I don't express these feelings and emotions because I don't think it's worth the ten to fifteen minutes of what will probably be unhelpful, untactful, inappropriate dialogue only to be reprimanded, told that everyone has to deal with it and to suck it up, possibly be punished, and then ultimately ignored. I'm afraid of being judged, ridiculed, shamed, or making a fool of myself again. My depression is setting in and the thought crosses my mind that none of this matters anyway because all of these people, all of my friends and family, everybody who is living and anybody who will ever live will inevitably, unavoidably and unequivocally die anyway.
As I reflect on these events, I make three healthy choices to (1) take a fresh air break, (2) visit with friends, and (3) mentally list my reasons to live. As I make these decisions I benefit by (A) being outside, getting sunlight, taking a break from the situation, (B) socializing with positive people who help, love, and support me, reinforcing my friends' relationships, (C) affirming life, encouraging myself, calming myself, and distracting myself with a variety of positive ways I can interact with everything.
I feel crowded out and alone at the same time. I dread the judgement, shame, ridicule, belittling, and humiliation I'll likely face if I talk to people. I feel annoyed. angry. frustrated, anxious, panicked, frantic, bewildered, confused, abandoned, embarrassed, ahedonic, apathetic, shameful, guilty, afraid, disgusted, depressed, miserable, withdrawn, fatigued, drained, pressured, obligated, responsible, overdrawn, over-stimulated, overburdened, and overwhelmed over and over and over again in waves during and after the times when I feel I have to force myself to be around people. I feel fake, hypocritical, sarcastic, doubtful, empty, and just plain wrong when I force a smile, an enthusiastic greeting, an amiable conversation with appropriate gestures and sounds, and especially when I use all of the ambiguously vague sounds, gestures, words, phrases, and even a little truth when people finish communicating and expect a reply because I forced myself to pretend to listen. I feel horrible; I feel dread. I feel antsy, annoyed, panicked, impatient, and nervous when any communication lasts longer than I feel it should and especially during "small talk." I feel relieved, peaceful, refreshed, quieted, unburdened, calmed, drowsy, tired, exhausted, pleasant, content, reassured, safe, protected, guarded, secure, and happy when I'm finally alone.
As I reflect on these feelings, I make three healthy choices to (1) do breathing exercises, (2) mentally list my adaptive coping responses, and (3) play small-group hand-eye coordination games like hackeysack or ping-pong. As I make these decisions I benefit by (A) calming myself, distracting myself, (B) giving myself a variety of optional positive actions, reinforcing those actions through repetition, (C) exercising, being social, being active, and enjoying the game.
The friends I had as a child would start drama a lot. I was often a scapegoat; I didn't want to wrestle, fight, or beat people up because I thought it was wrong and that I might seriously hurt someone. When they would start doing that stuff I'd just get up and leave. I didn't want to deal with it and I got angry when it was directed at me. I had been taught to just walk away when I got angry or when someone was doing something I felt was wrong. I walked away from my friends. I walked away from school bullies. I walked away from some of the church-goers. I avoided them all because I didn't want bad influences in my life. I would analyze people quietly, from a distance, before I interacted and talked with them, if I did at all. I did that to my family. I avoided mom when she was in a bad mood, dad when he was busy, my sister's if they were angry or sad, my brother when he was being obnoxious, and my grandpa when he was ranting. I wanted to avoid them so much that one day I just moved to the attic. My mom didn't know where I slept for 3 days, and after they knew, no one in my family could even get up there the way I could.
As I reflect on this fantasy, I make three healthy choices to (1) establish and reinforce proper boundaries, (2) mentally list my affirmations, and (3) ground myself. As I make these decisions I benefit by (A) creating proper limits to fit my needs and wants with people that are close to me, renewing those limits when appropriate, (B) distracting myself, affirming myself, calming down, reinforcing my actions through repetition, (C) being fully present in the here and now, experiencing my environment, and distracting myself from negative thought patterns.
I got purposefully sick so bad that I was taken out of public school to be homeschooled. When this happened I could stay away from practically everybody. Months would go by when I would just get my assignments done, show my mom that I'd finished, and then go up to the attic with my laptop, water, and food. People could still come around, but I could avoid them if I wanted to. Mom started making me go to group functions and I would find a corner where the fewest people could bother me and stay there, quiet and patient, for the entire duration of the group. I would only come out if they were doing something that interested me more than whatever book I'd brought, do the activity while interacting with as few people as possible, and then I'd go back to my corner. I did this until it was time to leave.
As I reflect on this fantasy, I make three healthy choices to (1) bear hug my inner child and tell him I love him, (2) write something for somebody, and (3) visit local, natural, and beautiful scenery. As I make these decisions I benefit by (A) positively managing my dissociation, taking care of my inner child, affirming myself, (B) writing something positive, meaningful and uplifting, redirecting my focus away from myself, giving to somebody else and hopefully improving their moment, (C) putting physical distance between me and my problems, experiencing nature, calming myself, and enjoying what life has to offer.
I dreaded awkward silences and conversation. I dreaded judgement and immoral behaviour. I dreaded making new friends and losing the few friends I had. I dreaded having to impress or entertain people and their compliments. I was sad because I felt that I wasn't enough and infuriated because I shouldn't have had to be. Everyone seemed like they judged me to be unworthy even as they had flaws of their own, so I only did things I was interested in and quit caring if other people knew, cared, or even existed. When I did have to interact with someone I was polite because that seemed to make the conversations go faster. I treated everyone like they were the computer in my room: carefully, efficiently, and quickly. They were tools to get information or entertainment and if they malfunctioned or acted up, I shut down to them, waited for them to cool off, and tried again. They were easier to think of as machines or as children because I could safely ignore their fits or mistakes and try to impart better skills or processes when they would respond again. I always needed a safe alone space to go to when this happened. I needed a place to hide, somewhere of my own, and I thought I needed it all the time. It was a place I could feel protected and isolated from the insults, yelling, arguments, and demands of other people. It was a place I could think for myself, in relative peace and quiet, and not have to worry about or acknowledge anyone else.
As I reflect on this fantasy, I make three healthy choices to (1) listen to awesome music, (2) play board games with friends, and (3) think and talk in funny accents. As I make these decisions I benefit by (A) inspiring myself, motivating and energizing myself, grounding myself, (B) socializing with people who lift my spirits, having fun, (C) amusing myself, and actively thinking differently in ways that would make negative thoughts seem ridiculous.
I know what I'll do. I'll find a safe, quiet spot, somewhere the least amount of people will suspect I would be, somewhere they wouldn't normally expect I could be, somewhere that nobody usually even thinks about. I'll find several of these and secretly, methodically, discretely, and slowly move into them. I'll hide them as best I can, supply them as much and as well as I can, use each one as scarcely as I can, and never record their locations. I'll make a sleeping space, an entertainment area, and somewhere I can safely keep food and drink.
As I reflect on this plan, I make three healthy choices to (1) count my environment, (2) go out and meet new people, and (3) practice photography. As I make these decisions I benefit by (A) distracting myself by focusing my attention away from my compulsive behaviors, grounding myself in the here and now, (B) socializing, getting out of my comfort zone by being healthily vulnerable, experiencing new ideas, things and ways of life, (C) making art, finding the beauty or profoundness in things, making memories, and helping others feel good about themselves.
It will be a place where I can at least hear the outside world if not observe it. I'll need to know when it's safe to come out so I can get supplies with as little interaction as possible. I will experience something or anything negative in my dealings with the outside world and I will hide. I will wait in a safe place until I feel safe to come out.
As I reflect on this plan, I make three healthy choices to (1) draw in a public place (2) taking breaks every now and again to self-massage, and (3) come up with more creative jokes. As I make these decisions I benefit by (A) expressing myself artistically, being around people and in my own world at the same time, (B) calming down, relieving stress, (C) amusing myself and hopefully amusing others, and enjoying being amused.
I will calm my anger at the world; I will soothe my fears about the world, yet I will then wonder why I bother to go out at all. I will enjoy solitude, privacy, safety, and peace... until the loneliness sets in. I will ignore the loneliness, rationalize it, and argue against it to the point where it transgresses into depression. I will debate with myself about the merits of being alone. I will examine to the point of overanalyzing every bad behavior others have done or could do. I will ruminate on the mistakes I've made, the problems I've caused, and the pain I've inflicted. I will then isolate from others not for my safety, but for theirs, because I don't want to hassle, burden, disrupt, impose upon, or worst of all, depress them. I will engage in suicidality.
As I reflect on this plan, I make three healthy choices to (1) write a positive, persuasive speech on one of my many reasons to live, (2) tell myself to postpone the thought until later that day, write down a quick little summary of what the thought was, and problem solve my way through it when I'm happy and safe, which is usually right after my last meal before sleep, for fifteen minutes ONLY, after which I will save whatever thoughts I didn't cover for tomorrow's postponement time, and (3) make a gift for someone. As I make these decisions I benefit by (A) going through my reasons to live in order to pick one for the speech, writing something positive, calming myself down, cheering myself up, giving myself more ammo against my compulsive behaviors by  planning to read those speeches outloud to myself proactively before I feel depressed, (B) relaxing more by not worrying as much during the day, being organized, rationally viewing my thoughts at an appropriate time, relieving myself of the burden of rumination, (C) hopefully cheering someone else up in addition to myself, distracting myself from my own thoughts to consider other people, and building something with my own hands.
I avoid everyone I can feasibly avoid interacting with for as long as I can feasibly avoid them every time I have the opportunity to do so.
As I reflect on this action, I make three healthy choices to (1) go to my safe scene, (2) talk with my support system including, friends, family, co-workers, professional help, and emergency care, and (3) listen to my Reclusive Behaviour Cycle Imaginal Desensitization. As I make these decisions I benefit by (A) healthily managing my dissociation, calming myself down, (B) socializing, getting help from people that DO CARE about me, (C) practicing the psychological skills I've been taught to reinforce useful, positive behavior, focusing and grounding myself on a sound, and getting reminded of safe adaptive coping responses that I might have forgotten about. (Like photography, which, really, I need to get out and do more of.)
I'm doing it. I am using my psychological skills to control my reclusiveness. I can safely and happily be alone to get to know myself; I can safely and happily be around others to get to know them. I appreciate the opportunity to be friendly for the connectedness it helps me feel. I have the compassion to see relationships as togetherness. I'm glad to be able to be a part of community again. I realize that thoughts will still come through. I know that people won't be perfect. I feel like I'll definitely have to use these skills again, and again, and again, but that's ok because I know that this has worked before. Other people have helped before. I have had some of the best times of my life with other people beside me. I can continue to live even better times with friends, family, and people who can be friends or family because time makes the best of friends and friends make the best of times. Happiness, (sorry, Mark Twain,) is having a large, loving family and a few magnificent friends living all over the place, and near you, ... and with you.
"I think that's the closest you'll come to heaven on earth: the sudden
impossible
realization that someone you love, who loves you, is letting you in to love them." - Stephen Brasel

Imaginal Desensitization Suicidality Compulsive Behavior Cycle.

The following requires an introduction in order to have full impact. It is emotionally intense and should not be treated lightly. These are the thoughts of a mentally ill patient and have been shared with his consent in the hopes that they might help someone who deals with the same issues. 


I am struggling to keep up at work, at academics, at physical training, or at being social and sacrificing healthy habits to do so. It's been another horrible day in a string of horrible days. I perceive the pain or loss of another person and feel empathetic and sad for the wasted potential. I finally figure out a problem I've been trying to solve and attempt to find the meaning to life while I have the intellectual momentum. I am fatigued and physically or emotionally spent and then force myself to keep going. I am planning for the future and think that I have too much to do. I perceive something that reminds me of nihilism or existential dread.

As I reflect on these events, I make three healthy choices to (1) bear hug my inner child and tell him I love him, (2) go for a walk, and (3) visit my friends. As I make these decisions I benefit by (A) using positive self-talk, utilizing safe-scene imagery, healthily managing my dissociation, (B) being active, getting physical space between me and isolating behaviors, being distracted by outside occurrences, getting fresh air, feeling warm sunshine, (C) eliminating other compulsive behaviors, playing games with friends, laughing, socializing, and developing relationships.

I feel like an all-encompassing black fog of darkness and shadow has descended and is smothering, muffling, and subduing everyone and everything. I feel pessimistic, negative, depressed, exhausted, fatigued, overwhelmed, anhedonic, apathetic, drained, withdrawn, miserable, hopeless, numb, and tired. I feel shame and anger at myself. I feel gone, adrift in my own black oblivion with no way back to happiness and no communication with anything except my own dark thoughts.

As I reflect on these feelings, I make three healthy choices to (1) Stop, Slow Down, Think, Act, (2) smile, laugh, and (3) listen to a life-motivating playlist of songs. As I make these decisions, I benefit by (A) diverting ruminating thoughts, following a familiar routine, incorporating my rational mind and my emotional mind to make wise-mind decisions, utilizing problem-solving skills, (B) using a physical body position and movement to elicit an emotional reaction deliberately, move my body and mind I a positive direction, (C) distracting myself from myself, making positive experiences to reinforce good behaviors and listening to good music.

I thought that the reasons people choose to exist were illogical and wanted to find and be able to explain a reason or multiple reasons to exist in any situation. I disagreed with philosophy teachings up to the date when I wrote this. I thought that there was no objective meaning to be found in continuing to live in this universe. I thought that using a subjective meaning to live was intellectually dishonest. I thought that there was too much of a chance of stress, pain, suffering, sadness, depression, fatigue, and generally negatively-perceived events to warrant staying alive for death to inevitably hit anyway. I thought that the struggle to live and the maintenance or procedures of thriving were wasted gestures to an infinite void. I thought that staying alive to live until you die was insane. I thought that suicide would be an escape from any chance of pain since you could commit it as painlessly as possible. I thought that suicide was controllable whereas death was an unknown. I thought suicide would be a relief from the perceived responsibilities and stress of continuing existence.

As I reflect on thus suicidality obsession, I make three healthy choices to (1) ground myself using 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 3-3-3, ice, and other mindfulness techniques, (2) take a fresh air break w/ breathing exercises, and (3) sing, whistle, hum, beat, play or perform a life-affirming, life-motivating, life-rejoicing song. As I make these decisions I benefit by (A) being physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually present, participating, and partaking in my lovely life, re-establishing a firm grasp on the here-and-now, staying alert to my situation, averting unhealthy dissociation, (B) calming down, escaping any unhealthy situations, (C) affirming life, calming my over-reactive mind and encouraging myself with music.

I began to think about the quickest, least painful way to die. I thought that since pain was a neurological reaction that if I could cease other brain function first, obliterate the pain center first, or completely crush my brain before the pain center reacted that I wouldn't feel pain. I thought about diving headfirst of a building or tall object onto a hard surface like pavement or cement. I thought of running into, then laying down in front of traffic at night in a completely black outfit. I thought of diving headfirst off of a highway bridge in front of an oncoming semi. I thought of crushing my head under a heavy object. I thought of shooting myself in either the temple, upper mouth cavity, or ear, with a large gauge shell or RPG. I thought of blowing my head up. I thought of stabbing or puncturing my brain. I thought of instant incineration or diving headfirst into lava. I thought of ripping out my airbags,  accelerating to high speeds, and then swerving into an oncoming semi or solid barrier. I thought of more common and painful methods of suicide and researched bleeding out, suffocation, legal dosage, electrocution, drowning, hanging, and the height from which a dropped object hits water with the same force as hitting cement. I researched physician-assisted suicide and attempted to convince my psychiatrist at the time that the conditions and criteria used then (risk of procedure, quality of life after procedure, patient comprehension, and patient mental state) could be used to argue for the assisted suicides of every living thing and that I had the capacity to make my end-of-life decision. 

As I reflect on this suicidality obsession, I make three healthy choices to (1) play body-eye coordination games like hackeysack, soccer, ping pong, juggling, etc., (2) play mental games like valley of the green glass doors, black magic, Shatnering. Haiku, riddles, and (3) meditate. As I make these decisions I benefit by (A) exercising, focusing on a new task, playing, (B) stimulating my mind in positive ways, redirecting and postponing negative thought patterns until I can address them, (C) calming myself, breathing rhythmically and slowly, and providing myself safe mental imagery or emptying my mind.

I had at least 20 oz of bleach to ingest and thought about emptying a mountain dew bottle, sold where I lived in 20 oz versions, pouring the bleach in to ensure I had enough and then chugging the whole thing at once. I drove to the spot where the bridge was supposed to be. I climbed halfway up the water tower. I was on my way to the cliff when I was spotted by a police officer. I sat on the guardrail of the overpass and looked over the side. I had, at two different times, a loaded pistol and a loaded rifle in my hands. I drove recklessly. I bought a completely black body suit to wear while walking onto the freeway. I've had pens, pencils, utensils, and work tools readied to gouge through my eye into my brain. I wanted to die several times a day. I was tired of suicidal thoughts. I was tired of not committing suicide. I was too tired to get out of bed, to properly hygiene, to eat, to drink, or to care. I was tired of thinking these thoughts and not being able to explain them. I was tired of not feeling understood when I did explain them. I was tired of being hospitalized. I was tired of feeling like I couldn't trust my own brain. I was tired of therapy. I was too tired of being too tired. I was tired of waking up to the realization that I was still alive. I was tired of trying to find a reason to live, and I was tired of feeling like I should.

As I reflect on this suicidality obsession, I make three healthy choices to (1) do something body-positive like showers, baths, spa treatments, or stretching, (2) positive self-touch like self-massage, back scratches, pressure points, or curling up in a warm blanket, and (3) go to my safe scenes. As I make these decisions I benefit by (A) reinforcing positive body-image, improving self-worth and self-esteem, relaxing sore muscles, (B) using the PRAISES model (Physical, recreational, intelligence, spirituality, emotional, and sexual) in my relationship to myself, relieving muscle tension, increasing flexibility, (C) using healthy dissociation to relieve myself of a negative situation and exercising control of my mind.

I will be tired of being depressed. I will think back over all of the reasoning that I've done and search for flaws in the logic. I won't find any; I will be too tired to think; I will have a confirmation bias; I will stop trying because I've tried so many times before and ended up disappointed. I will think that it's pointless. I will try to use my coping skills, but I will think that they're just distracting me from the obvious conclusion. 

As I reflect on this suicidality obsession, I make three healthy choices to (1) read my challenges, (2) interact with my support system, and (3) postpone thinking about every worry that enters my head until after dinner when I can take out the list of summaries of those thoughts for fifteen minutes ONLY and problem solve my way through them. As I make these decisions I benefit by (A) challenging the negative thought patterns within three seconds to diffuse its' impact on me, (B) getting social support, building relationships, utilizing the PRAISES model, building social skills, seeking professional help, getting crisis intervention, (worst case scenario) and (C) diffusing a negative impact on my life and reducing the amount of time spent on suicidality from hours a day to minutes or seconds. 

I will try to figure out a different meaning to life, racking my brain for anything, but I will be too tired to think of one. I will give up on trying and begin to bargain with myself. I will tell myself to wait. I will tell myself to sleep it off. I will fight off the suicidal ideations all the way until I go to sleep that night. 

As I reflect on this plan, I make three healthy choices to (1) practice good sleep hygiene by following an evening routine, sleeping at approximately the same time each night and waking up at approximately the same time each morning, getting out of bed if at first I can't get to sleep, taking a shower before bed, turning off electronics, reading something relaxing, listening to ambient sounds or relaxing music, (2) tensing and relaxing muscles progressively down my body, and (3) writing or journaling about my day. As I make these decisions I benefit by (A) developing and reinforcing good sleep habits, helping myself to not be so tired anymore, performing proper hygiene, relaxing, calming down, (B) relieving muscle tension and fatigue, and (C) recording, explaining and providing an outlet for positive wise-mind (rational and emotional) ideas. 

I will lie awake, thinking over everything again, maybe I will have missed something; maybe I will be able to try something new or incorporate another idea. I will think until I get tired of thinking. I will think until I get tired of trying and then get angry at myself for avoiding what seems like the unavoidable answer. 

As I reflect on this plan, I make 3 healthy choices to (1) do yoga, especially sun and moon salutations, (2) experience nature in awe, wonder, and a sense of adventure, revelling in the beauty of stars, clouds, rivers, mountains, cliffs, herds, hills, flowers, beaches, lakes, canyons, and natural rock formations, while (3) I gather data by counting, drawing, memorizing, recording, imprinting, sampling, describing, and sensing (taste, touch, hear, see, and smell) my environment in different ways. As I make these decisions I benefit by (A) calming down, relaxing, stretching, grounding myself, exercising, (B) inspiring myself, (C) learning, improving my skills, interacting with my environment, and amusing myself. 

I think that a controlled, painless suicide is my best option for subjective or objective meaning in the universe (possible multiverse) and want to find a way to find a way to complete it as quickly as possible. 

As I reflect on this action I make three healthy choices to (1) read my affirmations and make more (I am worthy of..., positive self-defining qualities, life-motivators, I can say no/yes to, I can appreciate..., etc.) (2) read a physical book or a non-luminescent ink e-book, probably snuggled up in a blanket somewhere cold and serene while sipping a hot sugary drink, and (3) listen to or read my Imaginal Desensitization Suicidality Compulsive Behavior Cycle again. As I make these decisions I benefit by (A) improving by self-esteem/self-worth/self-confidence/self-respect, reminding myself of positive changes I can do, make, or be, (B) stimulating my mind, refocusing on new ideas, (C) utilizing relapse prevention techniques, reminding myself of adaptive coping responses, and affirming myself just to prove to myself that I can. 

I was not overpowered by my thoughts. I did it. I successfully fought the urge and I feel like I've been relieved from my agony. I'm at peace with the knowledge that I may have to use these coping skills again and hopeful because they've worked before. I used my coping skills effectively and this is proof that recovery is possible. I'm on the road to recovery and I'm pushing forward one step at a time. I'm still breathing, still kicking, and still living. I'll live for a while still. 
It's experiences like this, like taking a fresh gulp of air after being underwater for too long or finding your way out of the darkness and experiencing sunshine again that give me hope. I get inspired by it, this existential hope piercing through the dread. I know that thoughts are fluctuating and at some point, the idea will cross my mind again out of sheer statistical likelihood. I will challenge it head-on when those times come, and I will keep on challenging and keep on coping and keep on fighting because this is a life of grandeur, wonder, relaxation, inspiration, celebration, and awe. This life is worth fighting for, and now that I know how and know that I can, I can enjoy life again. This is living.

I am the reason that someone can believe that it's going to be a good day.


"Time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time." - Bertrand Russell

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