A 6 month hiatus from writing, it’s been hard. It is no reflection of my desire to write but a reflection of myself. I, at times feel that I say the same things repeatedly, obsessively, redundantly. Searching for the perfect vehicle to present the truest of abstraction. How does one truly help others understand the deepest emotions. What words can be used to describe the innermost self. I will continue to reflect, assess, adjust, remember, dream, make, look, listen, laugh, cry…seek clarity.
Showing posts with label identity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label identity. Show all posts
Saturday, December 19, 2015
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
Why am I private?
Its been awhile since I have written, by choice. Sometimes I am uncertain of what or why I write. I am unsure if anyone cares about what I write or if I even should concern myself with what others think. I started writing this blog really to open myself up, to document, record things that effect me or interest, inspire me. I wanted to create a bridge a place where others could find refuge and I know this happens through the personal messages I receive from you. Everyday I experience something that inspires me to write and share here. This at times is my journal, a look into myself.
I have recently been spending time contemplating myself and my role in this world. I am complex at times and am uncertain of the path I have chosen to walk. I try at all times to remain humble and self evaluate. I try to protect myself from the true vulnerability I experience on a daily basis. I work at removing the instinctual barriers I display with others. I try to be myself and allow myself to feel a wide range of emotions. These are hard things for me to do but I continue to push myself because I believe this is where I continue to grow. I challenge myself to get out of my comfort zone and experience nervousness and excitement. I continue to engage in speaking opportunities which really makes me feel inadequate and vulnerable. Standing in front of others and speaking is a scary thing for me to do, yet I push myself to grow.
I don't know why I am scared of what anyone thinks of me, but I am
I don’t know what Im doing…I just keep doing.
Thank You for taking a minute to read this, I am always amazed that anyone cares.
B
Saturday, November 8, 2014
If Normal were a color- An open letter to young readers
Painting a picture of normal
If normal were a color it would have many profound shades. Many struggle with the palette of normal and believe to their core they are not. However who claims normal to be a pure consistent hue of certainty? We know young people struggle with personal identification and normalcy. We know many adults model what they believe to be a normal persona in thought and action. Young people are particularly susceptible to decision making which may have an immediate effect on their current situation. Most who suffer from behavioral health issues seek a life of pure consistent normalcy. This innate drive is fostered by internal and external factors alike. Young people want to feel, be normal to others. They seek concrete reinforcement form their immediate surroundings. I was never comfortable with myself as an adolescent. I never felt as though I fit in. I surrounded myself with others who didn't fit in. I engaged in behaviors which made me numb to the uncomfortableness. I felt lost, trapped, hopeless. I put myself in the position to allow others to define me, my character. No matter how hard I tried I could not find normal…or at least what I thought normal should be. As I have grown older I still struggle with the socially acceptable “normal”. I still do not know what that means and I somehow have found comfort in understanding that there are many shades of normal.
In my painting of normal there are many colors and shades, on most days my painting looks completely different then it did the day before. And I find comfort in that.
if you struggle with normal please know you are not alone, if you cannot find someone to talk to out of fear of judgement, please know I understand.
B
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Saturday, May 24, 2014
being scared
That day in 1988, the last time I used drugs, I was scared. I didn't understand what I was doing or what I was going to do. I knew and had learned that being in hand cuffs and living in jail cells was something I didn't want to continue doing. I literally had nothing except some drawings, some letters and a few photographs others had sent me. There is very little more demoralizing than being treated like an animal. I hated every second of it. I despised the world and wondered every minute what others where doing. I knew I wanted to try something different and made no promises to anyone. I wanted to disappear from my life. I wanted to start again. I wanted take control of writing the story of my life. I was sick to my stomach listening and reading what others had authored about my character. I had made a plethora of terrible decisions but I wanted to believe I was not a terrible person. I wanted to change my life so people would leave me alone and stop saying negative things about me; I had no clue what that meant or how I was going to do that.
I have the opportunity to speak to many about recovery, change, and motivation. I get to re-live this moment. To go to a place deep inside myself and remember the fear, the uncomfortableness of my life. I get to feel humbled about my journey. Its easy with the business of my daily life to forget how vulnerable, scared, and fragile I feel at times. I still feel uncomfortable with the world and myself at times. I have come a long way from that person in 1988. And it has not been without mistakes, there has never been any perfection in any of this. I continue to author the story of my life. I am continually surprised when others say nice things about me.
I hope this story is a good one for someone to read…
B
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Sunday, April 20, 2014
an examination of ego
Humility. Humble. Accoutability. Power. How does one learn Humility? Can it be taught? and what does it have to do with Power. Accountability is a value, trait most of us are taught at an early age. But how accountable do we keep ourselves? and what does accountability have to do with power. I try to live my life with humility. I acknowledge my wrong doings and try to repair any harm they have caused. I try to practice the ideal “not have everything I want, but want everything I have”. I keep myself accountable. I have very little interest in power and believe in giving power to others, empowerment.
But I am human and I have ego. And ego corrupts these tenants. I believe I have to keep my ego in check, to seek a humble existence. I observe ego in others. I watch power corrupt others, destroy people, relationships, lives. I don't know the answer to all these questions, nor do I understand the full complexities of these values, tenants.
I know I am aware…are you?
B
Saturday, March 22, 2014
Am I Normal?
What is normal and where can I find it? If I find it will I know I have found it? I have never felt “normal” even as a child I never felt like I fit in anywhere. As I think back of the kids I spent time with I never really felt close to many people. I never felt like I truly fit in. As I became a teenager, this only worsened and I began to dislike myself. I spent time with very few people and that time was guarded and uncomfortable. I had a serious of relationships with girls who I truly believe cared about me and my well being. But I was unable to have a healthy relationship. Something I am not proud of. My best with relationship came in the form of self destruction. My inability to feel “normal” and the residual consequences of hating who I was, was the perfect storm of addiction and self harm. I not only wanted to feel normal, I wanted to feel.
As I have aged my definition and desire for normalcy has changed and continues to change. At times, Im okay, other times, I want to hide from the world. I don't know what normal is. I understand and have taught myself and shared in normalcy with others, but rarely do I feel it. I know after years of practice, modeling how to act, feel, express myself; but I am still lost.
I still look at myself and contemplate…Who am I? Am I ok? Am I normal?
B
Saturday, December 28, 2013
1988- Journal entry
I wrote this when I was early in my recovery and still trying to figure out what was going on around me and within me. I was 18 years old...
Life is a mirror, look at what you see.
The crowd behind you begins to flee.
The rage you feel begins to surge
you clinch your fists, you feel the urge
Shatter your life, break the mirror
feel the pain, the pain is fear.
your all alone, no one around
the thoughts in your head are the only sound
it really sucks, its always the same.
the life I lived was a no win game.
Try and be happy I know I should.
Try so hard...I wish I could.
To end it all I think I would.
All I did was fucking cry.
I never had the nerve to die.
Every thing's the same, nothing new.
What am I suppose to do?
It's my desicion
I'll decide.
to take the ride
or run and hide.
B
Life is a mirror, look at what you see.
The crowd behind you begins to flee.
The rage you feel begins to surge
you clinch your fists, you feel the urge
Shatter your life, break the mirror
feel the pain, the pain is fear.
your all alone, no one around
the thoughts in your head are the only sound
it really sucks, its always the same.
the life I lived was a no win game.
Try and be happy I know I should.
Try so hard...I wish I could.
To end it all I think I would.
All I did was fucking cry.
I never had the nerve to die.
Every thing's the same, nothing new.
What am I suppose to do?
It's my desicion
I'll decide.
to take the ride
or run and hide.
B
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Sunday, August 18, 2013
I want to be loved...
“He allowed himself to be swayed by his conviction that human beings are not born once and for all on the day their mothers give birth to them, but that life obliges them over and over again to give birth to themselves.” ― Gabriel GarcÃa Márquez, Love in the Time of Cholera
I want to be loved. I want to be cared for. I want to be liked, respected. I want to matter. I want others to think I’m okay. Often times I think about my funeral. I imagine what people may say about me in my passing. I think about the ending of the story of my life and does it end well or in tragedy. I am not perfect, nor will I ever be. Probably better to not be perfect as I need a reminder where I need to grow as a person. I want to be okay with me. I want to look in the mirror and know and be comfortable with the person I see. I want to smile more, laugh more. I want to let down my guard more. I want to feel safe more. I want to be less scared; scared of myself and the world.
For those who take a minute out of your days to read this please know it means the world to me. I find it strange that anyone cares what comes out of my mouth.
I’m glad you’re listening…makes me feel like it matters and that you care.
B
I want to be loved. I want to be cared for. I want to be liked, respected. I want to matter. I want others to think I’m okay. Often times I think about my funeral. I imagine what people may say about me in my passing. I think about the ending of the story of my life and does it end well or in tragedy. I am not perfect, nor will I ever be. Probably better to not be perfect as I need a reminder where I need to grow as a person. I want to be okay with me. I want to look in the mirror and know and be comfortable with the person I see. I want to smile more, laugh more. I want to let down my guard more. I want to feel safe more. I want to be less scared; scared of myself and the world.
For those who take a minute out of your days to read this please know it means the world to me. I find it strange that anyone cares what comes out of my mouth.
I’m glad you’re listening…makes me feel like it matters and that you care.
B
Sunday, August 11, 2013
Who am I and why am I here?
Who am I and why am I here is a question that I ask myself daily. I was asked to address a conference for mental health recovery and this was the title of my speech. I believed the committee assumed I would be bringing answers to this questions not spend my hour discussing why I continue to ask myself this question. I have always longed for a different “version” of myself.
I have never felt comfortable with myself. When I look in the mirror, I sometimes don’t know the person reflected there. Most days I struggle through feeling scared. Not scared of the world, but scared of how I am reacting to it. Many people have observed and commented on my “laid back” demeanor. This has taken years of self-reflection and practice to keep my emotional state on a level plane. I know at times I project a “stand offish”, intimidating, mean expression on my face. I do this not by choice. This is part of my natural self-defense mechanism- (insert fight or flight). I do not want to mean or thought of as someone who is a jerk or scary. I really am not. One of the saddest and meanest things anyone has ever said to me is, “no matter how hard you work on recreating who you are, people will always know the true you by the expression you carry on your face and in your eyes.” This was told to me over twenty years ago and it haunts me. It’s not like I am trying to be someone I am not. I was given an opportunity through recovery to change the way my story ends. This is what I call the “gift and curse” of recovery. I believe that if I or anyone else wanted to write the story of my life, I have been given the ability to affect the outcome of how that story ends. This is what I am doing.
To be continued...
B
I have never felt comfortable with myself. When I look in the mirror, I sometimes don’t know the person reflected there. Most days I struggle through feeling scared. Not scared of the world, but scared of how I am reacting to it. Many people have observed and commented on my “laid back” demeanor. This has taken years of self-reflection and practice to keep my emotional state on a level plane. I know at times I project a “stand offish”, intimidating, mean expression on my face. I do this not by choice. This is part of my natural self-defense mechanism- (insert fight or flight). I do not want to mean or thought of as someone who is a jerk or scary. I really am not. One of the saddest and meanest things anyone has ever said to me is, “no matter how hard you work on recreating who you are, people will always know the true you by the expression you carry on your face and in your eyes.” This was told to me over twenty years ago and it haunts me. It’s not like I am trying to be someone I am not. I was given an opportunity through recovery to change the way my story ends. This is what I call the “gift and curse” of recovery. I believe that if I or anyone else wanted to write the story of my life, I have been given the ability to affect the outcome of how that story ends. This is what I am doing.
To be continued...
B
Sunday, July 21, 2013
25 years of change
"If you do not change your direction, you may end up where you are heading" Lao Tzu
This weekend was the summation of an eventful week for me; I attended my 25th High School reunion. I have never attended one before and had many reservations about being there; I could have easily skipped it. I was asked by a friend and former classmate to attend and after some pandering by him and few others, I got up the courage to go. I was not “popular” in high school, I wasn’t in any clubs, didn’t play sports, and really struggled through the whole process. I was constantly in trouble, multiple suspensions, expelled my junior year, and dropping out my senior year. I was under the care of a psychiatrist beginning my sophomore year for suicidal ideation and self-harm. I was heavily medicated and had developed a severe substance abuse problem. I was involved in the criminal justice system and was constantly in trouble outside of school. The last two years of high school are truly a blur. I remember very little about any of it, by design. I was incarcerated at the age of 17, my senior year of high school. After some time away from the world I made a decision to never return to the place where so much harm existed for me and others. While my classmates finished school and graduated, I was beginning to author a new ending to the story of my life. I had no idea what this story would read like and was very scared that any moment by book would end. I knew that redefining myself would be a huge undertaking. I call this the “gift and the curse” of recovery. While my classmates walked across the stage receiving their diplomas I intoxicated myself for the last time. While they dreamed of college, families, careers, I dreamed of the same.
Together we dreamed of our future, our change.
While we celebrated 25 years since graduation, I carried with me in my pocket, my 25 year coin from Alcoholics Anonymous. I am glad I attended the event this weekend it was wonderful to see so many people. Many have changed so much, I know I have.
B
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Saturday, July 13, 2013
Where is Peace?
Where is peace? I asked myself
this simple question multiple times a day and night. I am victim of inner
turmoil on a nonstop basis, anxiety, nervousness, worry. At times my mind races
at a pace that my heart picks up to keep pace. I have learned many techniques to
ease my anxiousness. I look at myself in the mirror every morning and become
scared. I don’t know who I have become, what I am supposed to do, how I am to
act. I have a clear understanding of what is expected of a productive member of
society and what is considered appropriate versus not. I have honed my moral
compass to what I believe is an acceptable social level. I believe in the
tenets of good values, I practice these and seek others who share similar
believes and practices.
As I age and look at myself, I notice the landscape of
my physical identity slowly change. My hair is greyer; my skin has begun to
take on new identity. I have to remind myself that life, happiness, is not a
destination. I must continue to work on myself, to continue to look at myself
and push forward. I still have much room to grow, to become a better person.
Those of you who knew me previous to this journey you know how far I have come.
I still have many character defects. I still fight with my inner-self
constantly. Peace is a journey. I look at myself daily, take a deep breath, and
challenge myself to be better person.
B
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Sunday, April 28, 2013
Tear drops of self control
I found myself on the receiving end
of a violent tirade this week. The person was so angry he was unwilling and truly
unable to hear anything that came from mouth, including an apology for a
misunderstanding. He confronted me in an exhibit of pure rage including threats
of harm to my wellbeing. I sat in my chair, and without hesitation, didn’t move.
My hands placed securely on the arms of the chair, my body relaxed, and my face
void of emotion. And I sat, and I received his yelling and threats, and I
absorbed his emotion, and I resisted the urge to respond, and I refused to
engage, escalate, enrage. And when he finished or maybe realized I was not
going to respond, he left. This is the most desirable less likely outcome. This
could have had many endings, which no doubt would have included me returning to
a version of myself for which I have so worked to control. I understand these
situations are as much about myself as they are the perpetrator. The work I
have invested into making myself a “kinder gentler” version of myself has been
a lifelong process. To understand and adhere to a strict doctrine of conflict resolution
that is based on nonviolence. I believe this is part of my destiny, to restore
some type of balance in my life and the community.
After he left I was consumed with
emotion. . I took a deep breath and began the process of de-escalating myself. My hands shook, my face was flush, adrenaline rushed
through my body, and tears ran out of the corner of eyes. Tear drops of self
control.
Have a Blessed week, I have...
B
Sunday, April 21, 2013
The person I was...
So I haven’t written in two weeks
as I have had a lot going on in my day to day life. Spring brings a whole bunch
of projects that have been put off all winter, yard work, etc.
I had the
privilege to read through my probation record, which one of my good friends was
able to get out of storage for me to look through. It was hard to read. It
tells the story of a young man trying in every way to destroy himself. A story
that if read aloud, the narrator and audience would surely believe that the main
character would not make it, doomed to either spend his entire life in
institutions or death. To read what professionals thought of my wellbeing, my
behavior, my attitude, repeated arrests, failed treatment episodes and
interventions, to read what people outside of my world tried to put the pieces
together of what I can only describe in reflection as pure inner and outer
chaos. My prognosis was not good. I was not going to make it. And yet here I am.
And if I think about, which I do daily, I don’t understand why. Why did I get
so lucky? Why did my higher power pick me to save? I know that I am truly blessed.
The majority of those with my background rarely make it. I knew that then. I
knew that the odds, statistics, the professionals, didn’t believe I would make
it, that I would come out the other side. At the very core of my soul I wanted
a different life, I am still motivated by this. I am still working on making myself
a better person, and a better life. There is little perfection in this. If I am
honest with myself and others I can and am able to recognize when I stray from
the course and correct it. I thank God daily for my existence. I hope when this
journey comes to end that others will reflect on my life and be proud of where
I have come from and what I have achieved. Although I sometimes have to be
reminded, I know that I am.
B
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Sunday, April 7, 2013
resiliency, trauma, and a history of violence
Sometimes I attend training's to
improve my work skills and more often than not, leave learning something about
myself and why I do certain things. This week I attended a training session on
trauma informed care, one the current “buzz” words in the treatment profession
at the moment and learned a lot about who I use to be. One of the sessions
addressed how to work with someone who is “flooding” or having adrenaline
overload. This really hit home as I used to be pre-wired with a high level of
adrenaline, a way to keep vigilant and be on my best defense to protect myself.
Many people inquire about my apparent calm, laid back disposition and I have
never been able to explain it in a clinical way. This has taken an immense amount
of work on myself, to let go of those things which trigger adrenaline flooding,
conflict in any way. The most upset or
adrenaline charged I have felt was a couple years ago when someone confronted
me in a parking lot, he thumped me on the chest when he was talking in a “put
down” way. I was able to defuse myself and walk away. The adrenaline rushed
through my body so strongly that my hands were shaking. I was threatened, I
felt unsafe, and I wanted to put my hands around his neck. This is one of the
greatest things I have accomplished through my recovery, letting go of conflict
and the ability to diffuse myself. I was not always like this even in recovery.
I recall many times getting into physical altercations, as a result of
escalating verbal disagreements. Confronting others unnecessarily because I
felt disrespected, challenged, or had my feelings hurt. I have a history of
violence and I was raised in an environment full of conflict, violence, and
trauma. This is how I was built. This is not something I am proud of and
something that I work on and manage on a daily basis.
B
Saturday, February 23, 2013
An orange jumpsuit and my first step to recovery
There was a moment during my life when complete truth never
felt more real. Sure I had been experiencing truth constantly and these were
the things that I wanted to escape, ignore, avoid, and run from forever. The
truth that I did not feel loved or cared for, the onset of knowing that I did
not know how to deal with day to day existence as a human being, nor did I want
to. The truth that I was severely depressed and never sadder, and I found
myself grounded in the idea that this is who I was and I could not change it.
On December 27, 1987, the owner of the business had caught me inside his
building. Technically I had broken in even though I had previously stolen the
keys to the business, and let myself in. He was angry and threatened to shot
me. He had his arm around my neck and a handgun pointed to the side of my head.
This had little effect on me, not only had I been under the aim of a gun
previously, but I had been living to die. The thought of this unknown person
threatening to shoot me in the head had a calming effect on me. Not because I
had been subdued, but the thought of a stranger completing the task of ending
my pathetic existence seemed unfair and out of line. I was angry and sad. A
stranger had placed himself into a position that I had been for so long. He
probably never knew the value of this position.
The first
night I spent incarcerated was very surreal. I had ended up where everyone had
warned I was going, but I somehow felt strangely comfortable. I felt at ease.
Sure my mind wandered with thoughts of being victimized and how I would deal
with these encounters. I lie in my cell and felt as though I was home. Not the
home I came from, but a new kind of home. I felt safe. I felt cared for. I no
longer had to figure out the insanity that surrounded me, it was gone. I was
alone and was expected to do, say, and participate very little in my new life.
I suppose you could say I was a good inmate. I was intelligent enough to
understand the inner workings of the social structure and quickly understood
the limits and expectations of those around me. I was willing to be a little
reckless both with my tongue and fists. I was preparing for the worse and
living very much in the moment. I was schooled on the inner workings of the
justice system by your run of the mill “jail house lawyers”.
I ate meals with
murderers, and shared hopes and dreams with society’s waste. People very much
like me; who could not live or function in the outside world. I was a drug addict, but I was also a
criminal. I had put all my chips into the center of the table, thrown in the
towel, and was where I needed and was supposed to be.
Life as an
incarcerated 17 year old is a tough place to be. I was constantly challenged,
threatened, and physically beat.
June 20,
1988
Today
would be the last day I would intoxicate myself. An inmate had managed to
smuggle in a small amount of marijuana. After smoking my share, I sat on a
metal table looking at myself in a nearby mirror. I sat for hours
contemplating.
Who would
I be? How would I act? What would I do? Who would be my friends? How would I
make decisions? What would I do for the rest of my life?
I realized at that moment one of the most important lessons
of my recovery; if I ever used drugs or alcohol again, I would be in that jump
suit, locked up, starring at myself in the mirror. This would be my moment of
what many call clarity; which seems ironic considering I was under the
influence. 1+2=3. This is how profound yet simple it had become. Working
through the math would become the challenge.
I am still working through the math...
B
Sunday, February 17, 2013
Maintaining sobriety through fasting-Where am I going and can I find happiness.
“The
most dangerous person in recovery I have ever met”
“My
name is Brad and I am an alcoholic and addict”
“Rarely
have we seen a person fail who has thoroughly followed our path…” The first
time I set foot into a 12 step self help group I was 17 years old. I look back
and still don’t fully understand why I was there I simply knew I needed to be
there. The meeting room was full of mostly older men, some women, and the few
residents of treatment who had also received passes to attend. I had little in
common with those who attended and shared. Their stories of losing jobs, wives,
husbands, homes, and everything, was nothing like my story. I had nothing to
lose. I was here to build something, to get something. They shared their
stories and I listened carefully. I shared very little, I had not lost everything.
I observed men share the same story over and over, I suppose their retelling of
this moment was a reminder of what waited for them outside the walls of the
meeting. Stories of waking up in alleys and jail cells. Told and retold. The
same story. Over and over. I was encouraged by my counselor to complete a
30/30. 30 meetings in 30 days. I went everyday, sometimes two times per day. I
could not get enough. Of what I did not know. I just knew I needed to be there
and going felt right. I immersed myself in all their publications, read all
their books, and observed the comings and goings of every member of the group.
I completed my 30 meetings and challenged myself to complete a 90/90. Challenge
may not be the correct word as going became an obsession and missing was
unthinkable. I got my first job while still at the residential facility. The
management and coworkers were supportive of what I was trying to accomplice. My
work schedule was made to fit around my meeting schedule. I got two sponsors
and began the process of working on my steps. One sponsor was an old timer who
helped with the step process and the other was a college student who would
teach me how to be a 17 year old recovering addict.
I remember
being very confused. Very unsure, very nervous, very scared. I didn't know who
I was, how I was to act, who I would spend time with, what I would do.
Most
days I still feel this way.
I
had something to look forward to. A glimmer of hope. What was I getting?
“Rarely have we seen a person fail who has thoroughly followed our path”
Failure, I had tasted that and knew I didn’t want to return, at least not right
now. I enjoyed my freedom too much. But what did success look like? I would
find comfort in my days of sobriety, a true mark of success. I knew that the statistics
were against me, I was expected to fail. I had built a foundation for the rest
of my life and no matter how bad a day was, or how stupid of a decision I had
made, I had tomorrow, the promise of another day. The coins I collected for
sobriety anniversary dates became evidence of this success. Proof of the
promise I never showed my coins to anyone, but carried them in my pocket as
though they were worth more than gold. Protected. Proof. Success. And my
12-step family celebrated my accomplishments like a true family. People were
genuinely proud of me, concerned and compassionate.
I will always consider
myself part of the 12 step family, much like the child they help raise, I will
forever be indebted to the people of 12 step groups for helping me become a
better person.
B
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