Just thought I’d write about what’s on my mind today. I realized this week that the 80s were 50 years ago, and no, I’m not ok. Who decided to allow time to pass like this?

I’m listening to Relient K because this is what I do

I’m thinking about a bunch of people who I’ve noticed who are suffering. There’s this girl I found on Instagram who’s dying of cancer and she’s just a kid, and it’s horrible. She’s @briestrongerthancancer – people are still sending her messages of love.

What’s so important as chaos happens (ie w government) is to stay calm, because the only way people who seek to terrorize win is when they successfully scare you. I’ve had a bunch of experiences that, initially, terrorized the shit out of me. I learned over time to focus on data- what I knew, and what I could/could not do about it. It provides a path through those dark days. I recommend it to anyone struggling right now with the reality of everything. What is actually true, and what can you/ can’t you do? Make a list. It’s ok to be a limited person. It’s much better to be a functional, limited person, who has emotions working for them, than to imagine all of the the things one might do, and consume guilt-trippy information. Even though well-intentioned, guilt-trippy information only adds fuel to the fire. What happens when Godzilla walks through a city, and no one runs, but just, steps to the side so he can make it to…. Godzillina on the other side? There are some broken buildings maybe. I’m a little bit embarrassed that I just wrote that. I probably should not post this.

However it is natural and right to feel frantic when there is terror. I once had someone tell me that, when faced with terrifying things, that I had done something wrong by “being afraid” the wrong way. That I’d insufficiently managed my fear. That is abusive bs.

So. Panic. Then get out a physical piece of paper, and write a list of what you actually can and cannot do, and do not read any sources of guilt-trips. Consider what does make a difference, and what doesn’t. Set timers for how long you spend on different tasks. Look places that will get you emotionally flooded only in conscious doses; it makes you feel more in control of the flooding and like you chose it, and less like it happened to you by accident and is now an emergency.

I preach these strategies to myself regularly, just so you know. I’m no expert. They are little life rafts that I return to time and again when I need them. And I do need them just like everyone else does.

The other things I just wanted to share for people who might need little life rafts:

  1. gratitude journal. make a quick list in the morning if you think of it. It helps with reframing
  2. go on the stupid mental health walk

Sending you love in whatever you are facing.

RELATED ARTICLES