Posts Tagged ‘hurt’

Got stress?

Thursday, May 13th, 2010 by Sara

Last week I was riding on the El and saw an advertisement for a study about depression. It announced that people who have more anxiety than usual, who are unusually irritable, or having trouble sleeping may be depressed, but come join the study and see if our new magic drug will cure you! (flippancy added)

As someone who has been unnecessarily put on drugs, I feel outraged by these advertisements and what it reflects about our society’s tendency to use drugs as a means of managing people’s upset.

Six years ago, I was diagnosed with bipolar disorder. I mentioned to my new doctor that I was experiencing cycles of exhaustion and hyper-energy and after a 10 question survey, she diagnosed me with bipolar disorder and prescribed Lithium.  Two more doctors confirmed her diagnosis within a matter of minutes– it was a  “classic case”—one added an anti-depressant to help off-set the possible low that would come from the Lithium’s attempts to reduce the high.

So I spent my college years taking serious drugs and meeting with psychiatrists, psychologists, and doctors, many of whom didn’t think I had bipolar disorder, but kept me on the meds anyhow “just to be safe”. These are not innocent drugs to be on: I gained 50 pounds, slept 16 hours a day, and generally felt dazed and foggy.

What I know now is that my “classic bipolar” was, in fact, the culmination of all my efforts to suppress my emotions, which I experienced to be an overwhelming “puddle of mess” inside of me. I didn’t know how to interpret what I was experiencing or distinguish one feeling from the other;  I remember people would ask me how I was feeling and the honest answer was, “I don’t know”. It took me a really long time to move through upset—I could spend weeks in a funk.  And, as hard as I tried to suppress my emotions, they would find a way to erupt—and then they felt uncontrollable and scary—so I tried even harder to suppress them.  Even joy was threatening—I was so relieved to not feel depressed that I would explode with hyper, manic energy.

I would like to think that this doesn’t happen very often that I’m one of only a handful that has been medicated unnecessarily, but the truth is, bipolar disorder is the fastest growing mood disorder diagnosed in children. We as a society are unwilling to look at and nurture emotions in children (or in ourselves) and instead tell ourselves that we are bad or wrong for feeling things. And now, in addition to the old messages—that anger is a symptom of PMS, or irrational bitchiness, that we need to stop being a wimp, grow thicker skin, or “just get over it”, we are being inundated with the message that all of our troubles can be cured with medication.

I was fortunate to find a psychologist in my senior year of college who encouraged me start doing work with my emotions. He would sit with me patiently and watch me struggle to put words to the “puddle of mess”. He told me to hang up a list of emotions on my wall and check in with it several times a day.

I’ve come a long way since then. My on-going work with the Wright Leadership Institute has taught me invaluable lessons about the gifts that come from honoring my emotions, expressing them, and holding them as Divine.  Being with my emotions takes considerably less energy than trying to suppress them. I can move through the hurt and upset in a matter of minutes instead of weeks. I’m more grounded and alive and I use my emotions to help me understand myself better. And even when I am scared or hurt or angry, I know that I am okay; I can dig into the pain and not feel like the world is coming to an end. And I feel joy more fully and meaningfully because I’m not holding my breath waiting for it to disappear.

I hold a vision that someday there won’t be a market for anti-depressants and mood stabilizers; that we will use medication as a last resort and that instead, our society will hold emotions as a valuable resource and will teach children to engage fully with them.

I would love to have you join me in my vision. Start tapping into the power of your emotions at our next More Life Training June 4-6, 2010.

Why do we have to keep hurting each other and feel hurt?

Thursday, January 21st, 2010 by Angela

I think the real questions are “how do we deal with being hurt” and “when we are hurt how we express it responsibly”. I realize we feel hurt all the time every day by people we know and even by people we don’t know well. We just choose to ignore it, pretend it doesn’t hurt, deny it, or we stuff ourselves with food, smoke a cigarette, hurt someone else, kick the dog or some other soft addiction.

I remember Drs. Bob and Judith Wright teaching their feelings curriculum and the importance of hurt and understanding it, experiencing it. They talked about any feeling that you don’t allow yourself to experience or feel will impact how much you can experience other feelings like joy. So, if I mute hurt, I won’t have the full range of joy available to me as well.

I remember at one of Judith’s trainings that if you were going to open yourself up to love, you had to open yourself up to being hurt because they go together. I started to understand that as I allowed myself to feel. As I let people really matter to me and the impact they had on me- I began to realize and feel all the big and little hurts that happen. Some may call them silly but simple things like someone not calling back, not looking at me when I talk, someone not saying hi to me- all hurt. I have experienced bigger hurts when I have lost people who matter to me. I look at these situations and go- why wouldn’t I want to feel hurt? Hurt is a good thing because it means I cared or something or someone mattered to me. Aren’t those all good things so why does hurt get such a bad rap?

I was coaching several clients of mine who were participating in leadership program as facilitators of small groups. I started thinking about the importance of being hurt and mattering. I coached them to have a contest on who of them would have the most hurts. They looked at me like I was insane and why would I want to do that. I told them let’s do it and compare what we learn at the end of the day.

At the end of the day, we all learned and grew a lot. They had experienced a lot of hurts. By doing the contest, they stayed more conscious of feeling hurt, felt it and let it go rather than letting it build. They realized that in order to experience hurt that first they had to let the other person matter or the situation matter which made them lead more effectively. They learned they had to be engaged in life and risk more which also lead to them being more potent and impactful as a leader. They also discovered that when they got really angry at someone, they were able to realize there was an earlier hurt they didn’t deal with it. So, I say, go and feel hurt today and deal with it responsibly!

In what ways have you experienced hurt today?