RedLeader
Bluelight Crew
Hello. People often say that insanity is "repeating the same behaviour and expecting a different result." Close to this, I understand that being exposed to the same behaviour time and time over is sufficient to drive a person mentally insane.
I've always been a person who lives a dynamic life. I like to move/travel a lot, try new things, work different jobs, etc. I don't know how anyone could be a homebody, work the same job for thirty years, drive the same way to work each day, have the same conversations with coworkers every morning, go to the same place for lunch each day, and so on. I avoid predictability, love the challenges of uncertainty. However, as a result of totally screwing almost every aspect of my life up with opiate addiction, I'm imprisoned by circumstances into a life that is very narrow, rigid and repetitive. Repetition and monotony have always been large fears of mine, and things I've been running from most of my life. But now I'm stuck in a routine that is slowly driving me insane. And having been on various medications (prescribed and self-administered) for ten years in attempt to help me calm down, now not taking anything (aside from vitamins/supplements) is really making the resulting anxiety, stress and obsessive-compulsiveness (I count repetition by instinct, see patterns in things, etc) really intense.
I also have strong physiological reactions to repetition. I get tremendous anticipation anxiety when I know that I'm about to be exposed to a repetitive stimulus. An example of this would be a situation at work where if I do something too quick, a sequence of four beeps will sound off. Another example would be walking into a room where a person is and knowing that this person's going to utter a token catch phase (My friend J, for example, will say "There he is!" every time I enter a room - up to twenty times a day). And when the actual situation occurs, my synesthesia* kicks in and I get some unpleasant physical reactions. For example, if I hear a word spoken that begins with "ben---," I get a horribly bitter taste in my mouth that is overwhelming enough that I am making a face. The syllable "inc" makes me physically shiver, especially through my sides and lower-back. Let's say that I'm riding in a car with someone and we're going on a usual path somewhere and are about to go around a turn. I know that this person always says "want to go through the drive-thru up around the bend?" after the second traffic light. Once we get to that second traffic light, my heart races and my skin crawls knowing that the person's about to say the catchphrase that contains a word that's going to make my mouth go all bitter. The more I am stuck in repetition, the more my disorders seem to invent new situations like these, and the more I suffer from the outstanding stress of it all.
*This is a disorder where your senses cross. Tasting sounds, for example.
I tell this to people in real life and they look at me like I'm nuts. Or they tell me to "calm down" and "not let it bother me." But I figure that maybe a few people in TDS will be able to relate to this type of thing and how a solution is more complex than some hackneyed phrase.
Mindfulness and mediation help to the extent that the demonization and horror behind what's going on calms down, but it does nothing to stop the immediate physical responses to repetitive things. I hate getting stressed, I hate being angry. I wish that it were as simple as being able to meditate in the mornings and this all would go away, but it's not. It's overwhelmingly physical for me, and the immediate physiological reactions come so quick that any mindfulness or CBT strategy seems to not be able to be put into place before I go through an amount of physical suffering. I try and vary the things I do in my personal time as much as possible, but my options are really limited right now, given the mess I've made of my life.
It feels like a watered-down version of the Chinese water torture situation (oh!). It is this type of thing that is situational-typed in movies/television as driving people to insanity. But I don't want to snap and do something horrible, no, but I'd like to be able to break free of this type of situational anxiety. I need to be able to find some type of balance, where I am connected to the world enough to still interact with people and things that are very repetitive, but disconnected enough that I can tune out the things that bother me.
I'm rambling a bit, forgive me. But can anyone relate to any of this?
I've always been a person who lives a dynamic life. I like to move/travel a lot, try new things, work different jobs, etc. I don't know how anyone could be a homebody, work the same job for thirty years, drive the same way to work each day, have the same conversations with coworkers every morning, go to the same place for lunch each day, and so on. I avoid predictability, love the challenges of uncertainty. However, as a result of totally screwing almost every aspect of my life up with opiate addiction, I'm imprisoned by circumstances into a life that is very narrow, rigid and repetitive. Repetition and monotony have always been large fears of mine, and things I've been running from most of my life. But now I'm stuck in a routine that is slowly driving me insane. And having been on various medications (prescribed and self-administered) for ten years in attempt to help me calm down, now not taking anything (aside from vitamins/supplements) is really making the resulting anxiety, stress and obsessive-compulsiveness (I count repetition by instinct, see patterns in things, etc) really intense.
I also have strong physiological reactions to repetition. I get tremendous anticipation anxiety when I know that I'm about to be exposed to a repetitive stimulus. An example of this would be a situation at work where if I do something too quick, a sequence of four beeps will sound off. Another example would be walking into a room where a person is and knowing that this person's going to utter a token catch phase (My friend J, for example, will say "There he is!" every time I enter a room - up to twenty times a day). And when the actual situation occurs, my synesthesia* kicks in and I get some unpleasant physical reactions. For example, if I hear a word spoken that begins with "ben---," I get a horribly bitter taste in my mouth that is overwhelming enough that I am making a face. The syllable "inc" makes me physically shiver, especially through my sides and lower-back. Let's say that I'm riding in a car with someone and we're going on a usual path somewhere and are about to go around a turn. I know that this person always says "want to go through the drive-thru up around the bend?" after the second traffic light. Once we get to that second traffic light, my heart races and my skin crawls knowing that the person's about to say the catchphrase that contains a word that's going to make my mouth go all bitter. The more I am stuck in repetition, the more my disorders seem to invent new situations like these, and the more I suffer from the outstanding stress of it all.
*This is a disorder where your senses cross. Tasting sounds, for example.
I tell this to people in real life and they look at me like I'm nuts. Or they tell me to "calm down" and "not let it bother me." But I figure that maybe a few people in TDS will be able to relate to this type of thing and how a solution is more complex than some hackneyed phrase.
Mindfulness and mediation help to the extent that the demonization and horror behind what's going on calms down, but it does nothing to stop the immediate physical responses to repetitive things. I hate getting stressed, I hate being angry. I wish that it were as simple as being able to meditate in the mornings and this all would go away, but it's not. It's overwhelmingly physical for me, and the immediate physiological reactions come so quick that any mindfulness or CBT strategy seems to not be able to be put into place before I go through an amount of physical suffering. I try and vary the things I do in my personal time as much as possible, but my options are really limited right now, given the mess I've made of my life.
It feels like a watered-down version of the Chinese water torture situation (oh!). It is this type of thing that is situational-typed in movies/television as driving people to insanity. But I don't want to snap and do something horrible, no, but I'd like to be able to break free of this type of situational anxiety. I need to be able to find some type of balance, where I am connected to the world enough to still interact with people and things that are very repetitive, but disconnected enough that I can tune out the things that bother me.
I'm rambling a bit, forgive me. But can anyone relate to any of this?