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#345920 - 11/21/10 08:48 AM
Re: Living in a fog
[Re: Git'in Better]
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Member MaleSurvivor
Registered: 12/05/04
Posts: 92
Loc: Claremore, Oklahoma
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I am glad I am not the only one. I have been like that for years now. Actually, since I entered therapy, nothing has been the same. I sometimes wonder if I should have even addressed this issue of abuse. I had pushed it so far down, that I could have gone on without it bothering me. Of course, my behavior bothered everyone else that I loved, so I really had no choice. I just find that I feel totally disconnected and like I am in another reality and just observing what is going on around me.
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"Even if you're on the right track, you'll get run over if you just sit there." - Will Rogers
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#345926 - 11/21/10 11:33 AM
Re: Living in a fog
[Re: Michael]
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Member MaleSurvivor
Registered: 01/02/10
Posts: 647
Loc: United States
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This sounds like disassociation, a defense mechanism we used to preserve and protect ourselves from what happened to us. The mechanism keeps working long after our abuse and it takes effort to get back into our bodies, get grounded, and be present.
That this kind of disassociation should come up as you are working through issues with a T makes sense to me. When I feel that way I work to stay in the now, I close my eyes and imagine myself as a tree with roots deep into the ground, strong, wide and safe. Then I work on feeling that sensation in my body and mind. Once I feel that connection to the present then I try and discern what I was feeling, thinking, or reacting to.
I really recommending working with your T on this, as they can help get some perspective and come up with strategies that will work best for you.
-efm
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Everybody here's got a story to tell Everybody's been through their own hell There's nothing too special about getting hurt Getting over it, that takes the work
- "Duck and Cover" by Glen Phillips
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#346273 - 11/26/10 12:08 AM
Re: Living in a fog
[Re: pufferfish]
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Registered: 11/25/10
Posts: 4
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Ah, yes...the "fog" I know it well.
When I was in my mid-twenties, I had a Dissassociative Fugue that lasted a few months. Apparently, got into my car...drove hundreds of miles away and woke up one day.
Wasn't until a few weeks ago, talked with a friend about that experience. A lot about that time frame was "blank"...I started having dreams and it kind of came together.
Weird fog for a couple of days after, and earlier memories started coming forward. Shared with a friend as well...just totally honest about crap I'd never talked with anyone about before.
Tonight I was listening to Christmas music. First song came on, and I found myself swaying from side to side.. arms extended, hands curled and an interesting tingling sensation in my forearms. Caught myself in that moment; and laughed at the sensation of being an overgrown toddler.
Said to myself, screw being a sensible adult...I'm going to keep this up and enjoy the experience to the end of the song.
In that moment, I felt fully connected to my own core being. In that and this present moment...an awareness, connected experience and sensation I hadn't known in a long long time.
Poking at a scabbed over scar is a harrowing experience. But seems like something is in process of working itself out...like finding me.
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#347345 - 12/06/10 10:07 PM
Re: Living in a fog
[Re: sLiPpeth]
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Registered: 12/03/10
Posts: 30
Loc: Southern California
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Yes. The "Fog" is very common. I had many episodes like that when I was a teenager and my 20s. The disassociated feeling is something that is very common for us. I sort of "snap" out of it by sort of "meditating" and just concentrating on myself and becoming aware of my surroundings. That usually brings me around. Did that sound weird? It's always worked for me.
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