KayDee
You talked before about being completely detached. How do you distinguish between being detached and being disassociated? Disassociation is where we purposely remove ourselves from a person or situation. We can detach on purpose as well or it can be intrusive. If it is on purpose, it takes work. My detachment was pretty instant and not on purpose, so it was intrusive.
That detachment in me came from a place of more than just an inability to be able to feel my feelings. My feelings about a lot of things changed.
I detached from “stuff” and had a need to get rid of all my stuff. The stuff that wasn’t my idea of functional made no sense to me. This wasn't just an inability to feel about the stuff but that those feelings actually changed.
If you were referring to dissociation, while that too is intrusive, the person still has an awareness of reality, that doesn’t change. That which was important to them still is even though they can’t FEEL it, they KNOW it. With detachment, that which was important is not anymore.
dissociation is “I can’t FEEL my feelings, but they didn’t change”.
A key element is that my feelings didn’t just flatten (or numb if you prefer), many of them also changed. My sense of right and wrong was very skewed. This doesn’t seem to be an element of dissociation.
Treasur
Did you hurt people who cared about you or were invested with you? I didn’t hurt anyone intentionally. And I only know that some of my behavior hurt them because they told me. I didn’t understand while in my MLC. That understanding only came to me after coming out of it, when I was able to feel, use retrospection, and empathize.
I understand from what you posted that you were probably unaware or indifferent to that if you did during your crisis years - but what about your pov on that now? So different from while I was in my MLC!
Does it matter to you? ABSOLUTELY!
Do you hold yourself accountable for that or do you feel that it was beyond your control? This isn’t so cut and dry. It’s both. I know that I had no control then, but at the same time, I recognize the hurt and damage that was caused due to my MLC. So while it “wasn’t my fault” necessarily, “I was the cause”. I accept their anger, I fully understand.
And how do you expect others who were hurt by your words or behaviour during that time to view it or indeed view you now? I have no expectations as to how they view it or me. Coming out of it, I accepted their anger, I fully understood. And I know some of them see it like me, it’s not my fault but it is my fault. If that makes sense.
Did reaching some conclusion about that, or even acknowledging it to others, form any part of your own recovery and rebuilding? I would have to say that it was due to my rebuilding first that I was able to see and acknowledge what had transpired.
Do you feel you have repaired any relationships you ‘broke’ or did others repair them for/with you? Or did they just become no longer relevant in your post MLC life? A few (friends) are no longer relevant, but those are the ones that were unhealthy. Everyone in my family is relevant today. The preMLC me is not who I am now but rather I am a combination of her and someone else (but not the MLCer). Most of my family now trusts me. I don’t know if I would word it as “repair” so much as building anew as the person I am is different. There are still a few family members that do not trust me. I get it. But I have to allow them to heal at their own pace.
sachertorte
I don’t know if you have any thoughts about where he is at. It sounds like he spiraled into self-loathing. Not being a psychologist, it seems to me that he may have some other, perhaps major, issues going on. If MLC is involved here, it seems to be combined with something else too. If it’s MLC, then he seems to still be in the thick of it. I wonder if MLC or the triggers complicated an already existent, low-profile problem.
Atari25
Did you have sleeping issues or wake up from dreams /nightmares regularly during your MLC? I didn’t have dreams (that I recall) but my sleep went haywire about 6-8 weeks prior to hitting the wall. That persisted every night until a couple of weeks after I got to Floria. Not being to go to sleep, not sleeping long enough (2-3 hours in a night), sleeping too long, and not feeling rested when I woke up. I attributed that to winter blues but clearly, something else was a brew.
Have you seen a doctor about your sleep disturbances? You really have to get a good night’s sleep, even if just a few times a week.