I have written before about how I was a self-help book
addict. I read every book I could find, re-reading several of them and even
going as far as getting them on audiobook so I could re-listen to them hundreds
of times.
I did this because I absolutely believed in their base
principles, and, frankly, I needed a constant reminder. I would listen — and
would feel good for 10 to 30 minutes afterwards. But, then life would happen; I
would forget everything I learned and I would be right back to old habits until
the next time I was in my car. This went on for years.
I often felt more depressed the more I listened or tried to
read the books. Why wasn’t I able to just
do this? How come I wasn’t good enough to implement these ideas? They weren’t helping me, and I didn’t know
what else to do. I abandoned the ideas
and assumed I was doomed for a life of hardship.
Then, I decided to write Garbage
Bag Suitcase, and everything changed. I didn’t know how this book would
completely flip my world upside down, but while researching for that book, I
stumbled on a piece of research (the Adverse Childhood Experience Study) that
changed the way I understood my relationship with my mind and body. That one study lead me to more reading, but
not in the self-help section, this time in the science section. Specifically, topics on brain function.
Before I read this study, things happened to me and I felt
as though I was an unlucky participant in the happenings. I couldn’t understand
how I could “change my luck.” After I read the study, I started to see my life’s
journey in a completely different way. What if everything I considered “bad”
that had happened to me, happened for a completely positive reason? It was a
stretch, and when I told a friend she basically laughed at me.
But I couldn’t escape the thought. Was it possible that my
own neglectful childhood had caused me to see only bad things? Slowly, I
started to see tiny shifts within my own life. I was rewiring what I considered
to be my “trauma brain” but it was tedious.
Then, recently, several disappointing things happened in a
row (minor things, really):
1: My book wasn’t chosen for an independent award I was hoping to receive.
2: I submitted the book for a writing/screenwriting competition, and it wasn’t recognized there either; and
3: I also received a negative review about the book that felt very personal.
1: My book wasn’t chosen for an independent award I was hoping to receive.
2: I submitted the book for a writing/screenwriting competition, and it wasn’t recognized there either; and
3: I also received a negative review about the book that felt very personal.
All of these things happened within a few days of each
other.
In the past, any one of these things would have sent me into
a deep depression for a day or longer. The trifecta would have made me nearly
despondent. But it didn’t. After each event, after the tinge of disappointment,
I remember thinking to myself, “That’s OK, something better must be coming.” I
didn’t intend for that to be my response, it just was.
Those old feelings of depression, sadness, emptiness,
feelings that I wasn’t good enough, seemed to have just disappeared. This is
what I understood from all the trauma research I had done. I had actually
changed the pathways in my mind to a new way of thinking and feeling.
It was possible! And now that I have this new way of
thinking, I find the information I learned in my previous self-help addiction
is easier to implement then before. It wasn’t bad information; it just wasn’t
enough information for a person who was still functioning in trauma brain.
The self-help industry is a multi-billion dollar industry.
When I was in trauma brain, I talked about “how it was” because none of it
worked. Now that I have begun healing my trauma brain (I have a few more new
pathways to develop), I understand that the information is valuable, but
usually there is a lot of hard work to do before implementing the principles in
any of the books.
Some of us have never known true happiness, so trying to
“tune in” to that emotion and bring more of it to us is impossible until we find,
create and reinforce new pathways in our brain. We can feel helpless and paralyzed.
What we really need is the support of those around us to offer guidance on our
journey of self-healing!
In the end, my self-help addiction helped me heal — maybe not in the way I initially thought. I hear lots of people talk about the Law of Attraction. They are almost afraid to have a negative thought for fear it will bring more negativity. What I learned is, to begin with, you have to heal yourself from your negative thoughts. That takes patience, love and grace for yourself above anything else.
In the end, my self-help addiction helped me heal — maybe not in the way I initially thought. I hear lots of people talk about the Law of Attraction. They are almost afraid to have a negative thought for fear it will bring more negativity. What I learned is, to begin with, you have to heal yourself from your negative thoughts. That takes patience, love and grace for yourself above anything else.
If you are going to go down the path of healing your trauma
brain, you will bump into lots of negative emotions that you have to learn to
overcome. It isn’t easy.
Practice, patience, and remember that we all deserve
absolute joy.
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