Tuesday, September 3, 2019

The Fear of Always Being Broken

My first thought for the title of this post was "the fear of never getting back to being healthy". The major problem with this title that I found for me was that I have this illusion of healthy that I want to get back to. For me its the year 2015 I was living in Florida training for the Paralympics in rowing, that includes training twice a day most days and then even managing two semesters in community college. Now my mind like many minds likes to gloss over the weekends I spent curled up in my closet in this silent stunned dysfunction, freaking out from thunder sending my mind on loops about dying from some PTS after an incident in the summer war (that's a story for another time). While I was having fewer struggles with my binge eating disorders (partially because I wasn't fully aware of the depth of the issue) there were totally Friday binges and then Saturday and Sunday fasts. The problem that is created with cracking holes in my facade of the perfect year, is the feeling that comes from that, the feeling of having never actually been ok. This realization of never actually being ok before leads my mind down the rabbit hole of anxiety, always being broken, never being whole within myself. This leads to intense fear about a personal inability to be whole within me. It does release the idea of getting back to myself, which in some ways creates the opportunity to be better every single day, yet creates a larger fear of the unknown, and feeling like I have no idea what tools I need to get to this place of being not broken. In a way, this creates the necessity of being ok with being in a broken state while still working to no longer being in this state, which is rather hard to achieve. I'm not sure the fear will ever disappear, and I'm not sure it would be healthy for it to completely disappear,hopefully, I will at least learn better tools in which to function in the fear.

1 comment:

  1. No coincidences in life!Just this afternoon I was reading about Elul, and Rabbi Jacobson has many comments about "broken." He writes, "We've all been broken in one way or another, have all experienced broken promises or broken relationships or broken health.... Different people react differently to the hurt that inevitably accompanies breakage. Some are devastated, others grow because of it....And yet, the miracle of creation is that, paradoxically, the more broken you are now, the more whole you have the chance to become....The reality is that the world is a broken place-- a broken place full.of broken people whose job is to mend what is broken." Your heart- felt writing is such a perfect start to mending!💓

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