I get derailed easily and fast. Relatively minor events can send me into a tailspin that spirals me into a dark and lonely place. Small moments send me back to terrible times and I make associations with the present and past that do not exist.
I've been looking for a cat for a few months. I adore cats, and due to my ex-husband hating them, I've been without a cat for many years. I'm also late 40's, and single AF, so cat lady felt appropriate. I really wanted a black cat. And I found my perfect little panther named Vixen. She was shiny black with sparkling blue eyes. I submitted to adopt her and a home visit was planned. I started looking at pink cat beds and towers. I planned where her play area would be. I dreamed up the Facebook post I would do about her. I believed I would get her any day.
The day before the home visit I received a text saying my kitty, Vixen, had been adopted by someone else. I was never given a heads up that others were in the running before me and I could lose her. I started out angry but this morphed into hurt. Friends were trying to comfort me sending me cat pictures of other adoptable cats. It was just a cat, right? Yet losing this cat got bigger in my head. The cat became every major loss I'd experienced. Not getting her became every situation where I crumbled from disappointment. "Why?" turned into "Why me?" which descended into "Why is it always me?" Loneliness overtook me. I shut off the lights, took a scalding bath, and sobbed for a loss of something I never had.
When this kind of spiral happens it amplifies anything in my life I see as off or wrong. Headlight out, drain in the bathroom sink is messed up, taxes aren't together, medical procedure I'm scared about. None of these are life-ending things. Life fucks up every day and these are truly minor inconveniences. Yet my nervous system was in full survival mode. Logic couldn't override the feelings.
I know I do this, and I know what experiences happened in my past to trigger these responses. Awareness helps as I take active steps to pull it together instead of allowing a free fall into despair. I get exasperated at myself that these "everything is awful" feelings still spring up. Yet I can't control them. I can manage them but I haven't found a way to make the thoughts not happen.
Maybe my hope of being a person that can shrug things off and smile is fully unrealistic. Would any ESFJ, Leo, Type A, PTSD person ever think the glass is half full? I'm a realist. Perhaps I can get to a place where I'm content to have the glass at all and not feeling like it's almost empty and I'm dying of thirst.
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