I’ve been having difficulty sleeping lately. There are times when I have trouble falling
asleep but once I do, I usually sleep well.
I don’t usually even dream much.
But the last five or six nights have not been great. The first night I attributed it to too much
caffeine at night. That has happened a
few times before and my sleep was fitful and it often felt like I had not even
been to sleep even though I had. So, I
cut out the nighttime caffeine. But it
didn’t help. Last night, it took over an
hour to just fall asleep and then it was again another fitful, dream-filled
night.
This morning, as I sat reading a book because my appointment
no-showed, I was reading a chapter about anxiety and I realized that all of my
dreams this past week are anxiety-ridden.
That’s unusual for me too but it certainly matches with the feeling that
I can’t turn my brain off at night. As I
sit and analyze myself trying to figure out what is going on, I also realize
that a lot of my thoughts over the last few days are centered on the sexual
abuse and all the emotions I had while Kelsey was sick. More specifically, I am remembering all of my
breakdown moments.
It seems so morbid sometimes the things I get focused
on. Sometimes, I am able to come to
conclusion on why I am focused on it which, of course, then resolves it. So, I am wondering why it is happening this
time. I think it is fair to say that it
started with participating in a Celebrate Recovery Step Study group. In working through the inventory, I was drawn
to think about how the abuse truly affected me and when I think about the pain
I went through and held in, sadness envelopes me. Perhaps then it is a natural extension to go
from remembering that pain to remembering the pain of my precious daughter’s
illness.
So many people told me how strong I am to go through what we
have been through. I often heard
comments like, “I don’t know how you came through it so well” and “I just don’t
know how you do it.” To this day, my
first thought in response is always, “You don’t know my breakdown moments. You didn’t see me then.” There was so much you didn’t see. You didn’t see me cry all night in my
sister’s arms. You didn’t see me on the
phone to my other sister crying and yelling obscenities mostly aimed at
God. You didn’t see me all those nights
in bed crying myself to sleep with Tim hanging on to me. You didn’t see me the night I left Kelsey in
the hospital, crying so hard that my sister talked me home on the phone. You didn’t see me in the backyard at midnight
beating a dead tree with a bat.
I don’t like talking about those times. So much so that my stomach is in knots just
writing about it…and knowing that you are reading it. It feels like a weakness, a deficiency. It feels bad.
The problem is that what I know contradicts what I feel. I know those breakdown moments were my relief
valves. Venting allowed me to pick my
head up off the pillow the next day and carry on. I also know that venting to God, even the
ugly words I yelled, at least kept me in a relationship with Him. I didn’t shut Him out.
When I first started writing this, I was seeing the lesson
as “when I am weak, then I am strong”
(2 Cor. 12:9-10) as well as the purpose and benefit of sharing pain, but I now see
that that is not the right lesson at all.
What I see now is the shame that I was running from…the shame of having
breakdown moments. I even told my class
just this morning that “Shame only lives in darkness and secrets.” Brene Brown, my new favorite current author,
says when you feel shame, you have to run to your best, safest person and tell
them all about it. Otherwise, the shame
will take root.
Now that I have shared my breakdown moments, the shame is
weakened. I didn’t even have to publish
it for it to do its good work. In the two
days since I first wrote this, I am sleeping better. Confession is so good for the soul and so
deadly to shame!
How can there be any shame on your part? I know this is normal but ... the question is still asked. I have read so many of your posts and am always moved by your honesty, the strength in your words and spirit and your heart. But of all your posts, Audra, this one made me cry because it was so raw and real and brave for you to share ... a thousand words come to my mind about you and not one could even come close to the word 'shame.' Again, I understand this is normal for what you endured but oh, how mighty and amazing you are!! And to share that "shame" is so powerful. If it was those meltdown moments that brought you to this place where you can share and help others then ... thank God (thank you, God!) for those meltdowns because you give us all strength. I am so so so so so proud to know you.
ReplyDeleteI have a great affinity for the fellow counselor, friend, and woman of God who shares her deepest, most difficult emotions, and "voices" the obscenities. I don't really understand or care to know the person who appears to have a life free of "breakdowns". The level of joy in our lives is directly proportional to our degree of vulnerability and you, Audra, have an abundance of joy!
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