Ring Theory – comfort in, dump out

Once upon a time, a long, long time ago… Not really but I can’t remember exactly when so… I heard of this thing called ring theory. I can’t remember how or where, I may have read about it or watched something that was talking about it. I don’t know. What I do know is that when I heard about it, I thought, yes!!!! This is exactly what I’ve been trying to explain to those around me, all summed up in a neat and tidy, easily understandable package.

I’m just gonna quote this article here, rather then try and explain it myself.

“Susan Silk, a clinical psychologist, and her friend Barry Goldman came up with the concept of Ring Theory, after Susan’s experience with breast cancer. Susan noticed that during her journey with breast cancer, people close to her (as well as, complete strangers), though often well-intentioned, would vent or in an attempt to “fix her situation” by giving their opinions to her. However, what Susan needed most when she was suffering was not their emotions about her experience, but rather their comfort. Hence, the idea of Ring Theory was born. Ring Theory is essentially the idea that a person experiencing trauma and grief needs a specific kind of support during their time of crisis….

The rules of Ring Theory are pretty simple and can be explained in four words, “Comfort In. Dump Out.” Here is how it works. Whoever is in the centermost of the rings gets to whine, complain, cry and vent as much as they want and need to. As Silk states, “That’s the one payoff for being in the center ring.”

The people in the other rings can also express their feelings and concerns. However, the one distinction is with whom they can process those emotions. That is where the concept of “dumping out”, comes into play. The people surrounding the person in the innermost circle express their negative feelings and anxieties only to people in the larger rings. It’s not that you are not allowed to grieve or feel, it is just that venting about your pain to someone who is already feeling their pain deeply is not helpful to you or them.”

You would think that this would be common sense… Or at least I would think that… But apparently it is not. Living with chronic illness, it’s been a common experience for me, to have loved ones vent their fears and the things that suck, basically, about my having this illness, on me. Like WTF? Yes, I understand how my illness affects your life and that that is hard for you but hello… Do you not get how much harder this is for me. I’m the one who has to live with this illness. It feels completely unfair and inappropriate. Like I an being asked to hold others grief while simultaneously trying to process mine. Anyway you go about it, the message is clear. I am a problem, a burden, ruining other people’s lives.

Currently, I’m going through something that I’m not yet ready to talk about publicly. I’ll be fine but I’m in a constant state of stress… confusion, fear, grief, anxiety…trauma. I have been judged, shamed, yelled and screamed at… abandoned, by those who are supposed to love me. Again, I understand the affect on your life but… It isn’t ok to expect me to be able to hold it while I’m processing my own trauma.

I’m basically a walking meltdown at the moment. My tolerance level is beyond miniscule.

*Sigh* Try and remember, if you care about someone, and want to prevent traumatizing then further… comfort in, dump out. Comfort in. Dump out.

“That” pattern

Someone that I know died recently. I know, not really the polite way to start this but I figure I might as well cut to the chase. I don’t want to talk about this person specifically. I didn’t know them well enough. They have family, loved ones, that story is theirs to tell, should they choose. What I want to talk about is the effect that this death is having on me.

Deaths occur in the periphery of our lives all of the time. Someone we knew from school. Someone we used to work with. People we knew from various places and various times throughout our lives. Deaths we hear about in the news. Even the deaths of celebrities. These deaths impact our lives in varying ways. At least, for me, I know this to be true. Some hit much harder than others. This one has me slayed.

The first place my mind goes, anytime that I hear of a death, is the family. I imagine the anguish they must be going through. This is particularly difficult for me if there are children involved. This death is no different. As intensely as I feel all of that, it isn’t what I want to talk about. While it hasn’t been said directly, it appears that this death was a suicide. I’m triggered by this.

I’m no stranger to suicide. Having spent more then half of my life mired in suicidal ideation, and knowing others who have completed suicide… family members… Others on the periphery…

A significant number of these people had reached out to me in some way. Some to ask directly for help, others asking for support but in ways that were more subtle. This person included. I helped in what ways I could within my own limitations. I’ve experienced guilt in each of these instances. If I hadn’t let my own issues, my own fear, social anxiety, my own whatever interfere, perhaps I could have been better able to help.

Sitting here today, I realize that I am also experiencing survivors guilt. Like I said, more of my life than not, has been spent in the agony of depression, despair, hopelessness and suicidality. I have a deep and visceral understanding of what it feels like to want to die. To not be able to see your way past the pain. To want freedom but have no means of escape other than ending you own life. I know what it feels like to attempt to end your own life.

I also know what it feels like to survive. I was fortunate enough that my attempt was only that, an attempt. I am fortunate enough to have lived to see the other side. I no longer live in a state of perpetual pain, not in that way anyway. My life is far from perfect. There is a lot of shit that I deal with, especially with my physical health. That said, I have healed and thus know that healing is possible, in many ways.

I am feeling guilty for this. Why do I get to live, while these others do not? Why was I able to move past all of that? Why was I able to release myself from that hell? There’s nothing special about me. These people deserve healing, freedom, as much as I do. Why me? Why not them?

I was able to survive. Does that mean that I have some special knowledge that I could have imparted? Could I have helped? Did my own selfish focus on my problems prevent that?

I know that you cannot save another person. I do know this, but I’m feeling guilty for not trying. But what do I think I was going to do? Be such a good friend that they would no longer want to die? That’s absurd. No, more likely I would’ve given of myself to an unhealthy degree trying to ensure that they could not kill themselves. That is my pattern, isn’t it? Trying to save others, no matter the cost to myself? That is where my focus should be. Healing that is the only way that I can ever affect any real positive change. The only way that I can truly help anyone.

Ovulation Blues

I’m feeling sad today, or no, more accurately, I’m feeling sad right now. Today I am feeling all kinds of emotional and my mood is all over the place because I’m ovulating and apparently, at least for this month, this is what it does to me.

I don’t really get it though. I’m ovulating. My body, my hormones obviously want me to have sex (oh, yes they do) because the whole idea is that I have an egg and biologically we want it fertilized (biologically only. I in no way, shape or form want more kids. I love my son but… I’m Good), right? So…. Why make me wanna curl up in a ball and sob? Doesn’t seem helpful. Hormones, what do you do?

Apparently, my grandpa died five years ago. I know because a poem I wrote at that time came up in my Facebook memories today. No need for condolences, it wasn’t that kind of death. My grandfather was a narcissist and a womanizer and a child molester. No, that’s not what is bringing up the sadness. What it does bring up is the confusion I felt at the time of his death.

The Patriarch

Confusion bleeds
As invisible as the wounds left
By your hands upon my skin
My sadness repulsive
Tears staining my face
Despite my own disgust
Your death
Inconvenient
Causing guilt
To stain my conscience
Saturated in filth I cannot cleanse
Unlike your hands
Washed clean
All of the ghosts you’ve disavowed
Buried in shallow graves
They haunt me
This scarred lineage your true legacy
And yet I am surrounded
By your false image
And all of this grief

I think maybe, a long with pain and trauma, confusion is one of the biggest legacies left behind by abuse of any form. I’m reflecting on that today. My whole life has been shrouded in confusion. Confusion in the wake of abuse. The confusion of a child. Confusion stemming from being if a different neurotype and not knowing it. The confusion of not understanding my place in this world.

I still don’t… understand my place… But I’m working on it… And I have more pieces of the picture that is me…. And maybe that’s all that really matters. And maybe for the moment, I just need to grieve for that little girl with none of those pieces. I just need to be sad.