Watch your language

This week has been … weird, for many reasons and no reason at all. Probably because it has been raining for most of it. Work has also been quite hectic (yes, I know, everyone says that), with way too many little bits of things that fill up your day without having anything to show for it.

On Tuesday I had a phone call from a friend whom I have not spoken to in forever. It was… simple. Uncomplicated. And shame, then the poor guy caught me at the most horrible hour of fed-up-ness. First problematic thing was that the Lilliputians were singing along to a movie that they have been watching on repeat for weeks now. Why do they do that? I cannot remember doing it as a child but then again, that was because you would have had to rewind the tape first… that’s maybe it.  And the dogs were being dogs, barking at anything that moved from the safety of the dry living room. Protecting the house without getting wet, you see.

So my rant started, and summarised all the chaos together with all the little things that were annoying me, which then turned towards myself. Comments about weight gain and not getting to everything. I depicted exactly how chaotic mornings have been here, because of my less than sunny disposition before 9 am.  So he told me to watch my language. I was surprised. Don’t get me wrong, the guard in front of my mouth is a drunk sailor, but… he’s known me since school, I did not think that that was a problem.

Continue reading “Watch your language”

When we disappoint ourselves…

Emotional tracking continued

Please forgive this incoherent ramble but there has to be a home for this as well amidst the planning and the sorting and the dreaming.

I wrote about the emotional tracking here and I am struggling today to give the anger a name. I have looked up synonyms: irate, annoyed, displeased, irked… I have weighed them up and turned them around in my mind and on paper… but nothing felt appropriate, nothing was exactly right. And then it dawned on me, what I am feeling is not anger or rage… it is “disappointment”.

Continue reading “When we disappoint ourselves…”

Discipline – when motivation does not show up for work

My dance class started again after not being allowed studio time due to the COVID pandemic and all the ins and outs of lockdown. Last week I was a little early and my dance teacher who is beautiful and dynamic and also married to a professional dancer commented on how hard she finds it to motivate herself in these strange times. I was quite surprised, because she is the perfect picture of drive and motivation.

This reminded me of a quote that was on the breakroom wall at one of my student jobs: “You will not always be motivated, so you must learn to be disciplined.”

The conversation was picked up by one of the other dancers who arrived and turned to how you should be disciplined in the most basic things in your day and this got me thinking of my own life. She used the example of something simple like, picking something up that had fallen beside the wastepaper basket immediately vs. leaving it there for later defines how disciplined you are. Little things like making the bed, sticking to a routine, getting up early…

I did the silent tally in my head. There are things that I struggle with that others have just made a part of their day. Something stupid like cleaning up the kitchen after dinner. I tend to stack the dishwasher and then leave the pots and pans that cannot go in there for… I don’t know… the fairies. And EVERY morning I am angry that I did not just take the time to clean it up. One would think that by your mid-thirties you would have started doing grown-up things. But no, every morning I have this fight with myself as I pack lunchboxes. At least I make the bed.

When I was diagnosed with depression and the associated anxiety, this was a lesson that my psychologist also wanted to teach me… but it did not root at the time. Looking back all the little changes that I started with to just cope were there to teach me discipline. Because the motivation at the time was just to keep the tiny Lilliputians alive.

When the prodding continued and we figured out that there were vestibular issues associated with my hearing loss, which obviously contributed to the anxiety, I had to go through rehab to literally get my balance back. Simple little things were not simple at the time and with despondence came disappointment and the motivation flew out the window. So I had to find some discipline to keep at it.

I have written a lot about routine and planning and how important those things are to me. And I realised that sticking to anything takes discipline.

The first step for me is therefore deciding what I want to achieve and formulate a plan. Together with that plan things need to be in place to help me stick to it. Some days are easier than others, on some days I get up feeling like I am going to conquer the world and then the discipline is not really needed and on other days I wake up feeling like I want to hide out somewhere and on those days, I just need a simple recipe to go through the motions. Thigs need to happen and I need to do them.

What is true is that I tend to stick to the things that I enjoy. So I stick to my bullet journaling and my morning pages and the planning, because I enjoy it. I stick to the running because I like how it makes me feel. I stick to the story at night for the Lilliputians because I love reading with them. But those damn dishes!

So perhaps I should figure out what the things are that I enjoy within the stuff that sometimes feels like work. Perhaps that will help me keep the momentum. I also need to consider that I may be avoiding something because I think that it is such an effort and then when I finally do it, it takes me 10 minutes.

And sure, I will also celebrate the things that I do manage to do and tick off the list. I will acknowledge tomorrow morning, for example, that even though I did not wash the pan, I at least made the bed.

Disposition documentation

Mood and emotional tracking, an ongoing process

My experience with psychiatrists is somewhat limited. I saw one for two years on and off in my twenties and started seeing one again after the Lilliputians were born for postnatal depression. I am however a big believer that if you identify that something is up, it is important to deal with it and not ignore it. And you cannot manage what you do not measure.

One of the very first tasks she gave me was to track my emotions on a day to day basis. This was never for her to review but instead for me to become aware of how I am actually doing. As this process developed I realised that it also helped me to identify triggers for specific things. This first task was given almost two and a half years ago and I am still doing it. My plan for this has been quite varied, as I have not yet been able to find a perfect fit.

Initially, I had it as part of my habit tracker where I would fill in daily if I was feeling happy or sad, etc. But I only kept it up till the middle of the month and then abandoned it. So August 2020 gave me some time to review this process and read up about the importance and the purpose of emotional tracking. For some inspiration on mood charts, you can start here.

I had to go back to the drawing board and decide what the purpose was. I identified that I want to see a pattern over time and I wanted things to be clearly defined. I want to be able to link certain emotions with specific events or lack thereof. For example being more agitated on days that I missed my run. With this mission, I came across Dr. Susan David, who wrote a book titled Emotional Agility.

Although I have not read the book myself I have found various resources and little extra’s that enhance this title. The one that I want to chat about today is the notion that we sometimes use very vague terms to describe our emotions. For example, saying that you are happy can mean a lot of different things. It can be that you are grateful, or content, or even relieved. Saying that you are angry can mean that you are frustrated or disgusted or offended. She defined the various descriptive words that can be linked to anger, anxiousness, shyness, happiness, feeling hurt, and feeling sad. You can view the different ones here.

I have translated the various ones for my journal and will use these as a guide to check in with myself on a daily basis. Every day will therefore probably have more than one word, but at least this makes more sense to me than saying I am happy or sad.