Thursday, December 1, 2011

Patterns, baby, patterns!

It’s the following day, and I know that I haven’t completed yesterday’s entry, partly because it was no longer an issue, and partly because I ran out of time. There is one rule with worry: if it’s no longer an issue, let it go. That explains why I have tons of notes to self lying around, containing one-liner items to meditate on, think about, or to write about which were never pursued. You see, each time I am feeling anxious I take some time to try to get in touch with what I am feeling, and what thoughts or worries need to be addressed and from what angle, in order to help me come out of that episode. Once written, I feel more relaxed, knowing that I have what to think about later in the day during my meditation period, or in bed. In many cases, by the time I am lying in bed or meditating, I am either no longer anxious, no longer anxious about the topic I wrote about, have resolved the topic I wrote about, or am anxious about something else entirely and have a new thought to address.

In today’s case, the issue from yesterday has been resolved in my head for now. The way I did so, was by getting annoyed. Annoyed at my worry and anxiety. And that’s because I, like my brain, like trends and patterns. I mean, isn’t that what started the problem to begin with? Patterns and habits that reinforced the worry, anxiety and panic instinct are what started the problem, so patterns proving otherwise should fix the problem! Granted that if one is not consciously aware of the pattern it will not result in change, but over the past weeks and months I have been extremely conscious of the patters: the one that shows without doubt that despite anything I feel in my head, the fact remains that everything around me is normal, and more importantly, that I am normal. It is also proven that the outcomes minute to minute are and will always be normal and the outcomes each day and night have been, are and will always be normal. But once the anxiety kicks in, that knowledge all goes out the door and it’s back to feeling crazy, like I need to check into a mental institution, and that I need to quit my job.

But then reality comes a-knocking. A child needs me, an employee has a question, my boss needs my help with something, and voila, I snap back to normal and take care of the problem brilliantly. And while I am, I make a point of reminding myself that if I ever feel anxious or crazy I should remember how normal I was at the time. But believe it or not, once the spiral starts, almost nothing can bring you back. In fact, I start to think that I was crazy at the time that I was normal, or that even crazy people are normal at times, or that maybe I am bipolar or schizophrenic. Of course, if any of that was true I wouldn’t be so self-aware and conscious of that, and my behaviors would be affected, not simply my thoughts.

In essence, I am at the point where:

• What I have is an anxiety issue

• I am no longer anxious about the things I was before such as health; I guess I am, but it is manageable

• I am now at the point where I become anxious and panicky about the symptoms caused by anxiety such as thinking or doing silly things either because:

o I am not focused because I am in my head and anxious

o I am hyperfocused – meaning that I am so afraid of making mistakes that people typically make such as mixing things up, putting things in the wrong place, forgetting names, etc., in an attempt to avoid situations that would make me think I am crazy. This hyperfocus causes my brain to always imagine every scenario or possibility in an attempt to predict and control my behaviors. This results in recollection of past things which make me think that my brain is mixed up. It also causes what I call “the autofill effect”, where when reading, the brain simply scans the words and reads them as what they likely are, which in many cases is wrong. I also call it “the headline effect”, where the brain skims things and skips words even in articles, reading them like a series of headlines to just capture the gist of things.

o The mix-ups are typical and expected and happen to everyone

o The mix-ups are caused by stress-related scatterbrain which is an expected symptom of having the responsibility for a wife and four young children on my head as well as the operation of a large company.

o In many cases, what I thought was a mix-up turned out to not be a mix-up and was simply a false alarm which in many cases triggers an anxiety attack even after it was proven unfounded.

But in all cases, days, nights, weeks and months go by and as crazy and mixed up as I think I am, somehow my actions as perceived by others, my judgments, my management of family and career are all sane and smooth. So the actuality – the one that always wins – clearly shows that my thoughts, fears, etc. are just invisible mist and not concrete, because otherwise they would have manifest themselves in the form of a single screw-up or a sense from at least one other person outside of my head who is wondering what’s up with me, but for some reason, outside of my mind everyone is clueless. So what does the actuality show? What will the outcome be in spite of the realistic nature of my thoughts? The reality and actuality is that everything is normal, life is normal, I am normal, my mind is sane. Patterns are everything, and by now there has been sufficient opportunity for something strange to happen, but it hasn’t. So now it’s time for Mr. Brainy to look at the pattern that I am force-feeding to it and to use that to predict future outcomes, because that is what it does best.

I got through the night and day so far with the simple thought of “I know you think….and I know how real it seems….but let’s look at the pattern…haven’t you felt this way before? If not worse?....What was the outcome then? Do you think this time it’s different? Don’t you know that just like in the past, the reality will again be normalcy and this worry and anxiety will have once again been a useless waste of time and caused unnecessary distress when you simply could have enjoyed life?

Patterns, baby, patterns…isn’t that your forte?

Oh, but the symptoms? Perhaps we should get rid of the symptoms so that there are no longer any anxiety triggers? But you see, if you get rid of one trigger there will always be another, because the problem isn’t the worries or the triggers, the problem is the underlying anxiety. And it’s the anxiety is what has to be tackled. But the symptoms won’t go away as long as the anxiety is there. So the anxiety has to go first and then the symptoms will follow, which means that there will be a period where there are symptoms which would usually trigger anxiety which have to be seen for what they are and not result in additional anxiety. The anxiety over the symptoms has to go first before the symptoms themselves subside. Otherwise it’s a self-fulfilling vicious, never-ending cycle.

So now I’ve established this:

• There’s nothing really wrong

• The only issue is anxiety

• Any symptoms are 100% attributable to the anxiety

• Seeing the symptoms for what they are and knowing that they will subside when the anxiety does if they are now allowed to cause additional anxiety helps to avoid needless spirals

• The anxiety itself will subside as the brain sees the pattern that:

o The worry that triggers the anxiety never actualizes

o Outcomes are usually neutral or positive

o Outcomes are never as bad as worried about

o The worry itself was not helpful

o The worrying was not harmful

o The worry was distressful

o The worry was unrealistic

o The worry was pointless

o The worry only kept me from enjoying the good reality

o Worry has no benefit such as helping avoid or cope with anything

o Worry is absolutely controllable, stoppable and postponable

o Worry has been replaced with positive thoughts and realistic views of myself and of the world around me

o I am in touch with my thoughts and can meditate on and think about many other things besides what-ifs and unrealistic worst-case scenarios

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