About an Unbalanced Woman


ABOUT THIS BLOG: When did life get so busy? I've given up on 'having it all' and achieving that ideal work/life balance. In this blog I'm celebrating the reality of an unbalanced life. Join me in the celebration.

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Saturday 12 November 2016

Inspiration from Obama

Official White House photographer Pete Souza reveals his favourite photos of Obama
Full set of photos here:



Looking at these photos I found myself singing that Flash Gordon song - not the noisy 'Flash, Ah Ah. Saviour of the universe" part, but the slower bit of 'Just a man, with a man's courage".

I think these photos show why Obama has been so popular. Because whatever tough job he's had to do, he's shown us that he's also 'just a man' - a human that we can relate to.

He's not an unreachable, perfect, presidential superhero. He's shown all sides of himself: a person who can be joyful, fearful, compromised and totally fucked off - even this week, shaking hands with a man he clearly thinks is a total cockwomble!!

Just a man - a husband, a father, a team member, a friend. All of those things are just as important as 'a President'.

To me that's inspirational.

I'm a mum, a wife, a daughter, a friend, a colleague and an Unbalanced Woman who spouts out a load of crap in my blog. I'm far from perfect at any of them.

I'm not a superhero with one super power. I'm an Unbalanced Woman who does a million things as best she can. Like everyone does.

That's what these photos show me.

"Just a man
with a man's courage
He knows nothing but a man
But he can never fail.
No one but the pure of heart
may find the golden grail
Oh oh oh oh"

(Queen)

Monday 7 November 2016

Therapy

Question: You're suffering from a long-term illness and working out the best treatment plan. What do you do when your Head-voice and your Heart-voice are at war in your head? When one is saying... 'Do it, do it!' and the other is saying “You stupid fuckwit of a woman - don't even think about it!"

Answer: Get yourself a therapist

This one is hard to write. I've been putting it off for a while. But as I started this blog as a sort of therapy, I always promised myself that I'd write honestly about the ACTUAL therapy I've had this year. So here goes....


When I became unwell last year, the hardest part of the initial journey was that I didn't know what was wrong with me. Lying in an MRI scanner and listening to the mechanical beeps for an hour, I was mentally writing my will and thinking about leaving my 5 year old boy without a mum. But once diagnosed (with a Vestibular Dysfuction*) I was able to concentrate on getting physically better. Knowledge is power as they say. Once I knew what I was dealing with, I could fight it.

*Vestibular Dysfuction - when the brain can't properly orientate and you feel constantly dizzy, sea-sick and can only move about slowly, looking as if you are seriously drunk - without actually drinking. It's shit!

For the next six months I had a goal, a plan and a belief that I could return to 'normal'. I made steady progress through Neuro Physio (re-training the brain to balance) and I could cope. I was absolutely determined to become me again, and be able to do everything I previously could.

Having that vision and that belief was, I'm sure, a contributor to me making such great progress.

So when I had a relapse in February and started getting worse again, I hit a new low - possibly worse than my first MRI, because I was back to having no knowledge. Now I was wondering if this was going to be an on-going cycle – did I have to accept that I may never get better? It hit me really hard. My Neuro Physio told me that I needed to come to terms with the fact that this could be it. Even with all the brain training, I may only ever be able to do 80% of what I could before. The idea of living with this illness forever was just heart breaking. The idea of not being able to do everything that I could normally do, and everything I had planned for my life, was overwhelming.

One thought kept coming back to me - Disney Land. It's been my dream for most of my life, and I've promised myself that I will go as soon as my boy is tall enough to go on all the big rides.

I couldn't accept it. Mentally, I just couldn't cope. Micky Mouse became a symbol of everything I was losing. The me I was losing. The me my family was losing and the limits that would put on them too. I lost my will to fight, and just became sad and angry. I didn't know whether I needed to keep fighting to get better, or to accept defeat and make new plans - ones that wouldn't ever involve Micky fucking Mouse. (I also started swearing a lot more, and taking my anger out on fictional mice!)

I realised that I needed help. My Neuro Physiotherapist was a wonderful woman helping me retrain my brain and make physical brain progress, but I needed help with the emotional side of my brain too. I needed to sort out how to THINK - how to DECIDE - how to KEEP GOING mentally.

So a made an appointment with a Counselling therapist, and it's possibly the best thing I ever did. To be honest, for the first 3 sessions, I really wasn't sure! I felt that she didn’t understand the problem. But to be fair to her, it was ME that didn’t understand my own emotions. I wasn't giving her the right details. I was still too angry at my situation. I was linking my physical condition and my mental state too closely together, I couldn't separate them - when I felt physically poorly I was sad, and when I felt physically OK I felt... well, OK, but overwhelmingly frustrated by my limitations.

The regular fight in my head was:
Physical Brain: I'm so tired. The more your push me, the more I need to rest. You can't do everything you used to - accept it; do less; enjoy the quieter life. Let's sit on the sofa and have a brew.
Emotional Brain: But that's not who I AM! I'm missing out on LIFE. I don't enjoy quiet, I NEED the variety, I need the party, I need to be who I WAS. 

My Emotional Brain thinks in shouty capitals a lot!

The break-through happened in my therapy session after I did the worse thing I could have possibly done as a person with balance issues - I went on a roller coaster. It was definitely an act of rebellion. I knew it was an absolutely stupid risk that could totally fuck up all the neuro-physio progress that I'd made. But I also felt that I was leading a restricted life, and it was breaking my heart. It was head versus heart, or my Physical Brain versus my Emotional Brain, and Emotional Brain was now calling the shots. It wanted to know what would happen, like a child pushing boundaries... I needed to know if the Disney dream was ever going to be achievable. 

I picked a day when all the circumstances were right - I was feeling reasonably good, I had people with me who could look after me if I crashed into a spinning nausea, I had the next 3 days off work if I needed to recuperate. I was still scared shitless though! Physical and Emotional brains were battling in my head as I queued up:
EB: It's the Dora the Explorer roller coaster, it's fine for a 6 year old - how bad can it be?
PB: You absolutely crazy fuckwit of a woman - there's a sign that says 'Not suitable for people with motion sickness' - that's an understatement for what you have!

But because I'm either feistily determined or stupidly stubborn (you can decide which), I did it. And it wasn't at all as bad as I expected. So... I went on three more, each progressively bigger and faster.

I'd love to say that was the moment when I realised I was better, but oh no, I just got the consequences later. Somehow the adrenaline must have kept me going, but later that day I was crying, and the next day I paid the price properly. I felt awful. I could hardly move off the sofa. I thought I'd broken myself and I had a new reason to be angry - at myself - for being a crazy fuckwit of a woman (PB: Well, I told you, didn't I?!) However, by the next day I felt a lot better, and the day after that, better again (EB: Ha. I knew it -it was worth the risk)

And this is where my therapist, Jeanette, comes in. She helped me realise that instead of being a straight battle between Physical and Emotional thoughts, I'd rather cleverly brought in a third voice in my head - 'Intellectual Brain'. IB was the one who made sure I took the risk at the right time, considered the consequences, and made sure I was ready. It sounds so simple, but she was right. She helped me to think about other times I'd used this third voice to make decisions, and that this was the voice I had learned to trust. I needed to listen to them all, but IB was like the mediator.

This was my turning point. I started to feel more positive about making decisions, taking risks, testing my physical limits in a sensible way, and keep my emotional side happy that I was making progress.

When Jeanette and I booked our last session I said that I wanted to do some drawings as a way of remembering what I'd learned, and to help me easily recall the concepts of balancing my physical, emotional and intellectual voices.

This is what I drew...
1. I need to stop looking back at who I was, and understand who I am now, and what I'm capable off. Being able to do 80% of what I could before may be true, but are there new things I can do too? If I'd lost a leg, I wouldn't try to grow it back! I'd work out how to live the best life I could with one leg.

2. My roller coaster rebellion taught me how to push my physical limits to allow me to have fun, but in a safe way.

3. I had felt restricted by my illness, like I had tethers holding me back. Jeanette helped me to see those more as a harness, which helped to keep me safe. And when I was seeking to push the boundaries I was using intellect to 'measure' how far I could go.

4. I finally accepted that resting is not lazy - it's essential. I can still do almost anything I want to as long as I accept that my body will pay the consequences, and I make time before and after to give it chance to do that.

Will I get to Disney Land one day? Yes, I absolutely will. Maybe not for a while yet, but I am still a determined / stubborn bitch, and I will not give up that dream. I know that it's possible, as long as I plan ahead, take sensible risks and make time for the consequences. 

Mickey, I'm coming to get you!

(Thank you Jeanette)