Let that feeling go…

20190122_120835-1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Breathe, breathe deep
Echoes in her mind
Voices, words, images
Swirling before, behind

Waves just keep coming
No gentle ebb and flow
Drowning, sinking lower
Dark and deep below

Sensation washing over her
Grasping, clawing, fear
Becoming her reality
In this moment here

So easy to lose oneself
In the darkness of the mind
Consumed by insecurities
Doubts and fears arise

This moment too will pass
Acknowledge it then let it go
She must conquer these demons
Not allow them to grow

Breathe, breathe, breathe deeper now
Feel your feet upon the ground
Allow the breath to centre you
Peace, love and light abound.

Indigo Wisdom © 22nd January 2019

‘Breathe…Just Breathe’

 

dsc_0338

‘Breathe… just breathe’. If I had a dollar for every time I have silently uttered these words to myself I would be living the dream travelling this beautiful country in which I live, but alas I don’t so here I am sitting in my room at home attempting to explain to you one of my deepest darkest secrets. Well, maybe to some it is not such a secret but then I would like to think that I have managed over the years to overcome the obvious outward signs.

Anxiety.

That overwhelming, all-encompassing, at times totally incapacitating illness. Often it walks hand in hand with depression, which has also haunted me for much of my life. They are not always bed buddies though. Anxiety is a condition which can strike anyone at any time. For me it has been around for a long, long time and unfortunately has not always been understood by those closest to me and I, I am sorry to say, expected that they would understand when I simply said I have depression and anxiety.

One does not simply understand these conditions unless one experiences them for themselves. To some these feelings are so foreign that it is beyond their ability to comprehend. I do not say this in judgement, sadly it is fact. And I for one would love to be able to say that I cannot comprehend it also. Many become impatient and do not understand that it is about as easy to control as a tumbleweed in a cyclone.

The anxiety attacks – when you experience that inexplicable feeling that you are unable to breathe and your chest is so tight that you could be in the grip of a giant anaconda. The blood rushing through your body, hot and extremely uncomfortable making you feel as though you are melting from the inside. You feel yourself searching, desperate to hide, to become invisible to the world, to remove yourself to almost anywhere but where you are at this precise moment.

Anxiety for me has been the inability to take that phone call. It’s been the overwhelming urge to turn away and hide rather than open up that door and step outside into a world which I felt is coming at me from every angle. At one time in my life I worked at a place where the entrance was an archway through which I drove to access my office. Many times I was physically unable to make myself drive through that archway. The drive to work would be fine however the moment I attempted to drive through the archway I would experience the most overwhelming urge to turn around and drive away. At these times I would park my vehicle, close my eyes and say those words, like a mantra, ‘Breathe – just breathe’. As I focused my mind on taking a deep breath and feel it entering my body, I would also make myself become aware of my hands on the steering wheel, the seat supporting me, my feet on the floor… grounding myself, bringing myself totalling into the moment. Sometimes this would take mere seconds, other times it would be minutes but then and only then could I drive through the archway and go about my work day with others totally oblivious to any trauma I had experienced.

Another example was once again about getting to work however it was to do with my fears and phobias. I was, and still am to a much lesser degree, afraid of heights and also afraid of water. It did not occur to me when I accepted a role as massage therapist on the beautiful and unique Fraser Island, on the Fraser Coast in Queensland, that I would have to face those fears on a daily basis. I was very excited to have the dream job, doing what I so wanted to do in such an idyllic setting. However, actually getting to work was a challenge. I would travel to work from the boat harbour at Hervey Bay to Kingfisher Bay each work day. The jetty at that time had a railing on only one side. It was quite long and quite high. Herein lay the problem. When the tide was in my fear of water would arise, when the tide was out, my fear of heights would kick in. I developed strategies such as I would always try to ensure that I was either in the middle of the groups of disembarking tourists so that I really didn’t get to see either the water nor the distance to the water or I would try to walk against the railing with people beside me, however this was not as easy as it may sound with eager tourists searching for the beautiful sea creatures that swam around the jetty. Also I was on a very strict time limit as I had to open the spa each time I went across so I could not linger and wait until the tourists had made their way to the resort. One day I was on a later ferry, I missed the first of the day crowd which was always the busiest. As I stepped on to the jetty I realised that I had hardly anyone around me. Moved over to the rail, however the tide was at its lowest. Instantly my blood started to heat up, my breathing started to constrict and my head pound. Very slowly I walked along grasping the railing for dear life and fighting the urge to throw myself down on the firm surface of the jetty where I would not have to deal with anything… except for the fact that I would at some stage have to get up and move and people may think I were just a little crazy! Of course, I survived the walk and that evening I was able to surround myself with people so that I could safely board the ferry to return home. I knew after that day that I would either have to deal with my anxiety or I would have to resign. Fortunately, I am a therapist with many tools in my kit and I found one that worked wonderfully for me. EFT saved me from having to resign. The wonders of that therapy are for a future story, however, suffice it to say that after an intense couple of days of therapy I was able to continue with the dream job and enjoy the stroll along the jetty to get there. That day is firmly fixed in my memory, the totally irrational and yet uncontrollable all-consuming panic that overcame me will forever be with me. I see myself staring at the jetty in front of me, willing my feet to move, just one step at a time, repeating over and over, ‘Breathe… just breathe’. Another day which is equally embedded in my memory is the first day that I walked along the jetty without fear of either the water or the height… such freedom! It is possible to overcome anxiety however not everyone has the tools to do so, nor do many know where to find them. It is not always about medication, sometimes we have to think outside of the square.

There have been other times when anxiety attacks have reared their ugly heads but I will not bore you with details. I have given the examples above to attempt to explain the randomness and often illogical way that anxiety works. Much of the time, those who do not understand it are trying to apply logic to it. That, in my experience, does not work.

Anxiety is not just anxiety attacks, some may never experience a full-blown attack. For many it is a feeling of inexplicable tension, a failure to be able to think clearly and sometimes, speak coherently. For others it can be the inability to be around others for fear that they will see some or all of these symptoms. For me anxiety has made me feel at times that I have let so many people down, that I have never achieved as I should have or as they may have expected me to… a feeling of being a failure in the eyes of those who matter.

So I ask you, anyone who may be reading this, if you know someone with anxiety please do not judge them. You do not know the inner battles that rage within them. If someone is acting a little strangely or out of character a simple “Are you okay?” is sometimes all it takes to break the hold of the monster within, other times it may take more but it is worth a try and you never know when you may just change the course of another’s day. Never forget those magic words… ‘Breathe… just breathe.”

Peaceful journeys until next time,

Indigo (aka Trish)

When…

DSC_0307

When your tears become a river
Washing out to sea
She will shed hers too
Alone so you cannot see

When harsh darkness shrouds you
And with pain and anguish cower
She will hold back the shadows
In this your darkest hour

When you need a beacon
To light a pitch black path
She’ll be right there beside you
The light of love in her heart

When you are tired and weary
And the demons starts to rise
She will slay them for you
With the fury in her eyes

When you feel you are deserted
And that you face this world alone
She’ll reach out and take your hand
And guide you safely home

Trish Johnston © 31st August 2016

Chains

chains

Locked up in a world
where your light is fading fast
life becomes a challenge
when you hold onto the past

Chains become so heavy
though you are unaware
that these chains do not bind you
for it’s you who keeps them there

If your grip you loosen
then open up, let go
sit back and watch them fall away
peace and calm will flow

Some may protest loudly
shake, shudder and rattle
others will be whisper quiet
as you no longer fight the battle

Open up and welcome freedom
embrace the change within
give yourself permission
to let your new life begin

You may be surprised
when the truth you find
nothing keeps us chained
except our own mind

Trish Johnston 2nd August 2016

Living in the Moment

DSC_0414

There’s a joy in living
That we don’t always see
Sweet and precious moments
That set your spirit free

Awaking to a new day
Knowing it’s just the start
Of the rest of your life
And yesterday is past

Put this day to good use
Live it, don’t pretend
Be right here in this moment
And your joy will never end

Trish Johnston 10th November 2015

The Flame of Death

20140802_212133

You walk into the fires of hell
As though drawn into a trance
Seduced by the flickering flame
By its alluring dance

You die there in that flame
Your body crumples in a heap
Your soul rises up above you
You are the phoenix, at your peak

As you rise up from the ashes
And fly high over the flames
You are reborn, rejuvenated
To embrace life once again

You’ve shed the pain of yesterday
You’ve left it there as ash
To disappear forever
Awaiting the breeze to catch

The wind will scatter your yesterdays
And they’ll be so thinly spread
That they’ll never reassemble
Not even inside your head

On the far side of the flame
You will sway to the dance of life
You will welcome your tomorrows
With reborn untold delight

Trish Johnston 25th June 2015

Fragile ~ Handle with Care

Fragile ~ Handle with Care

Not everything that is fragile comes with a ‘Handle with Care’ sign. The recent death by suicide of a celebrity here in Australia has reinforced to many what those of us who suffer from depression and other such debilitating illnesses know so well. Life really is so fragile. We may have a mind like a steel trap, a heart the size of the continent and the courage of a lioness protecting her young however given a specific moment when everything is either aligned or misaligned, however you perceive it, life can be gone in an instant. The desire to end the pain, the anguish and the torment can become so strong that nothing matters more at that precise moment.

Fortunately for many somehow, someway, something or someone intervenes. Who knows what it is that overcomes the vice like grip of desperation and desolation? This intervention has been attributed to many different things. It does not really matter how; the only thing that matters is that it occurs.

What I have found most interesting in recent days is the reactions of others. There have been comments ranging from “What a sad and tragic loss of a beautiful kind soul” to “What a selfish thing to do.” Obviously everyone is entitled to their own opinion and on the topic of suicide those who are willing to speak out usually do have strong opinions. Once again I am not wanting to debate this either. What I do want to say is that no one can truly understand just how desolate and desperate a person actually is at that moment they decide that the only way out is death unless they have actually been there themselves. Even those who have contemplated taking their own lives do not truly understand, for they have no taken that final step.

It saddens me greatly every time I hear of a suicide or even someone attempting or contemplating suicide because I understand, from my own perception and perspective, the black hole they find themselves in, the feelings of futility in even attempting to keep on trying to claw all the way to the top where the light is.

I have shared with many stories of darkness where people have contemplated different methods…the beautiful man who held a gun to his head and then thankfully realised the finality of what he was thinking; the person who contemplated the speed with which they would have to hit that tree or that bridge in their vehicle to actually take their own life; the one who has drawn the blade across their own skin without feeling the pain, not realising until they saw the blood flowing that this was their life they were watching flow away; the rope; the medication; the gas… so many different methods. The most important thing about this is that they did not succeed! Whether it be a failed attempt or something that was only contemplated and never put into action they are here to tell the story! That is a great triumph and a step towards healing.

Who knows what the trigger may be which creates this downward spiral? It could be anything at all, a word, a conversation overheard, a scene, a memory. We are all individuals and we will all react in different ways to circumstances. If we put two people of like age, background, lifestyle in to a situation just because they have major similarities does not automatically mean that they will react the same. Society as a whole have no right to ‘judge’, what is required is education, not only for the sufferers but for their loved ones, their work mates and people in general. We ‘mental health sufferers’ do not advertise our illness and it is not like a broken limb where it is obvious to everyone. So often the most heartfelt cry I have heard is “They just don’t understand.”

Somehow, in some way, I hope that I can work towards raising the awareness of those whose paths cross mine. There are so many organisations out there who help not only the sufferers but those who are in their lives. Please, if you think someone needs help seek advice from those who are best equipped to assist you and in that way you can be of the best assistance to the sufferer. Who knows…you may just save their life.

Hidden Caves

Hidden Caves

I hate this place,
this hidden cave
This place I go
when I can’t cope

It cuts me off
from all I love
It cuts me off
from any hope

There is no light
Its dark in here
I don’t care
Don’t want to see

I cry my tears
While no one sees
These tears I cry
While no one cares

This pain I feel
I can’t explain
No one cares
Alone again

I push them away
They do not try
To stay around
And I know why

Not worthy of
Another’s love
Just poke and prod
And push and shove

I love this place
This hidden cave
Where I go when
It gets too much

Don’t bother me
Just stay away
Leave me alone
In my misery

Trish Johnston 9th December 2010