If I had a magic wand to make suffocated emotions, plastic waste and tiredness disappear I
wouldn’t be writing this post.
On pondering 2018 with this month’s A Chronic Voice link up prompts I noticed 3 things I learnt that caused to me
consider some new habits. It turns out all 3 of them involve toxins/nutrients
cycling though a system. So here they
are: In 2018 I learnt about the importance of Establishing,Breaking and Allowing.
Establishing good eating habits
Disruptions to our family life came in the form of my
fatigue and other symptoms. Over the last few months life for my chronically
ill husband was forced even slower. Unconfirmed, but likely due to anaemia from
me not absorbing enough iron. (At this point I can hear everyone getting ready
to tell me to eat leafy greens and make sure I have Vit C with that.)
Although this isn’t new information for me, the
importance of it was driven home last year, something so simple and obvious.
If I want to have energy to support my
husband and look after our energetic, curious children I need to get the right
nutrition.
Breaking up with plastic
We have no garbage truck to whisk away our bread bags
and milk cartons since we moved out of town. All our rubbish stays with us
in one form or other. If we can’t
compost it, or send it out to be recycled we either burn it (breathing in the
smoke), or bury it (so it becomes part of the soil that gives us our water and
food).
Horrifying! Is this a mini version of what’s happening
on the whole planet? All the rubbish/trash has to go somewhere.
My parents were upcycling before the word was invented,
so thinking about the environment and waste is not new. But if my yard and house are filling up with coffee packets and shampoo bottles I’m going to need to pay
more attention to moving towards zero waste.
Allowing Emotions
A familiar sight caused me
to double take while scrolling Facebook. It was a picture of the emotion chart my counsellor gave me that
I didn’t know I needed.
Under it was written: “The 'Emotion Chart' My Therapist Gave Me That I Didn't Know I Needed”
The colour coded wheel starts with general emotions in
the centre and fans out into more specific ones (see photo, credit unknown). It helps identify what
you are feeling.
A long time ago in a country far, far away my husband was sick. His illness was debilitating over a period of two years, but still mostly invisible to doctors and others.
Soeun’s health is manageable now. That was a stressful season of life but we
have been out of crisis for more than six years. We’re glad it’s over!
Or is
it?
Invisible emotions can spring from invisible illnesses.
So much loss and grief at the time, but it wasn’t allowed or acknowledged.
The ubiquitous yard stick of health problems kept
appearing “At least he doesn’t have cancer”.
Papering over the pain with thankfulness helped me get
through each day.
When I tried to explain what was happening people
reacted as if I had a paper cut on my finger when really it felt like my finger
had been hacked off by a blunt axe.
It actually felt like my husband was gone and I didn’t
know if he was ever coming back. (I’ve since been told losing a spouse is one
of the most stressful life events.) But that was too huge to feel and also felt
silly to say out loud as the doctors said he was fine, all his tests were
normal. And the doctor I went to see
about my mental health also said I would be fine in a few months. Plus, Soeun
was the one in pain, why was I complaining?
On the surface Soeun was just dizzy, and mostly
without a diagnosis, medical tests ruled out all the diseases he didn’t have.
And he’s pretty much fine now. So what’s the problem? When I’m explaining the
circumstances I feel like there is no problem.
This is what I see out my window. Even in "winter". |
Using the emotions chart revealed something unexpected.
It was like the shock of opening the curtains and seeing the palm trees in
tropical Cambodia covered in cold snow. When the counsellor asked me to check
off which emotions I felt during that season it revealed huge losses and grief!
“Because of course, feelings you don’t feel don’t simply go away. They
don’t seep into the ground never to return again. In fact, it’s more like the
water cycle. Whatever the earth absorbs eventually comes back as rain. Except
in this version of the water cycle, the more water that goes unused and unprocessed,
the bigger the storm. Water you ignore comes back with fury, demanding your
attention, raining big, angry drops on your head.”
So I don't have a magic wand to deal with the tiredness, trash and tears but potentially I could turn these into new year resolutions. I'm not willing to make such a commitment on the internet though, but it will be interesting to ready this again next January.
So I don't have a magic wand to deal with the tiredness, trash and tears but potentially I could turn these into new year resolutions. I'm not willing to make such a commitment on the internet though, but it will be interesting to ready this again next January.
******
Another article and video also helped me to keep thinking through "Allowing Emotions". Have a read & watch. It makes so much sense and was so eye opening for me.
The mistake I made with my grieving friend on Huff Post.
And this video from Refuge in Grief , Megan Devine:
6 comments:
Hi Katherine, thanks so much for joining us again. Great to meet a new 'member' in these linkups, especially another who's also living in Asia! :)
I find your thoughts on garbage very interesting, as I'm so used to them being out of sight, out of mind :( I suppose there are landfill areas for such trash, and in Singapore we incinerate them. But you are right - what goes round comes round. :( I definitely need to do better in that regard.
I hope you and your husband and family have a lovely year ahead! x
Thanks Sheryl. Yes fun to find another in Asia, and someone who used the same spelling system!
Thanks for sharing your emotion wheel. I'm also really good at stuffing emotions. I'm glad you are learning this while you are young. It's not as easy to change our habits the older we get, but I'm working on it.
Hi Katherine, great to meet you through A Chronic Voice! The emotions wheel is fascinating.....I am going to have a good look at it. Maybe I'll work out some of my own feelings?! Your thoughts about the environment and rubbish are so topical and so important so I hope you don't mind , but I have shared this on my regular PainPalsBlog feature "Monday Magic - Inspiring Blogs for You!", Claire x
Thanks for your comment Kathy
Thanks for the mention Claire!
Post a Comment