Two New Blogs Added to Dissociation Blog Showcase! (DBS)

Special Request: If you find value in this blog showcase, please add the Dissociation Blog Showcase link to your blogroll so others can find it. Thanks!

We have amazing writers amongst us who give insight and hope to anyone struggling with dissociation, or to their loved ones. It’s a brain trust, and I treasure it. When I find new blogs, I update the Dissociation Blog Showcase (DBS) on Sunday evenings. Tonight I’ve added the following two new blogs, plus a title change to a third blog:

Life with Dissociative Identity Disorder

Pretty on the outside, messy on the inside

[Not newly added, but title changed from ‘Dissociative Identity Disorder’ to:]
Sarah’s Take: Dissociative Identity Disorder Unplugged

Please use the DBS link above to access these blogs, and check out the entire directory of (currently) 181 dissociation-related blogs!

As always, be careful and safe. Many of these blogs do not provide trigger warnings, nor are they obligated to do so.

If you, or someone you know, experiences dissociation and blog about it, write to me with the URL at

sarah.e.olsonATgmailDOTcom

I review each blog before adding it to the Showcase. Thanks so much for the feedback and well-wishes for this project!

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Permanent link to this article: http://thirdofalifetime.com/2010/11/07/two-new-blogs-added-to-dissociation-blog-showcase-dbs-5/

Best Tweets for Trauma Survivors (week ending 11/05/10)

Best Tweets for Trauma Survivors is a weekly Friday feature. My selections are entirely subjective, and I know it will never be possible to include every great resource tweeted. But I can try! I’ve personally read all tweeted links, and believe them to be of great value.

Disclaimer: I am in no way responsible for content found on any other website. Stay safe, and don’t follow links if you believe you might be triggered by them. Also, I will not be re-checking links from older Best Tweets posts, and if the site’s archived URL is different from the one I’ve provided here, you may need to do a search on their site.

NEW and REALLY COOL: You can now “like” and “share” this post everywhere with the touch of a button or two at the end of the linked tweets! Feel free to do any or all of that! (And thanks.)

 

Photo Credit

@Tamavista “The obstacle is the path.” ~ Zen

 

Six Standalone Tweets to Ponder

@spiritsully “There are two primary choices in life: to accept conditions as they exist, or accept responsibility for changing them.”

@docmarion “The silence within can be a comfortable place. The storms outside must still be faced.”

@PixelProject “Do the right thing because it is right. These are the magic keys to living your life with integrity” ~ W. Clement Stone

@rcinstitute “WisdomWednesday: wisdom is knowing that the only way to teach is to be your lesson.”

@PsychDigest “You can’t depend on your eyes when your imagination is out of focus.” ~ Mark Twain

@Tamavista “Don’t forget to love yourself.” ~ Kierkegaard

Linked Tweets

On Forgiveness

@DarleneOuimet Forgive the Abusers? A bit of a Rant (via @DrKathleenYoung)
[SEO: This resonates strongly for me, and apparently as well for people in the 170+ comments. “So my point is not to put the blame where it belongs in order to stay there in that anger or resentment, but rather as a stepping stone to healing. I have no resentment anymore. I am not angry about my past because I have worked my way through it. But I HAD to go through the stage where I was really angry, and where I did not think forgiveness would ever be possible or necessary. I had to give myself permission to be angry, permission to speak, to have a voice, to vent and rage and FEEL all the emotions that I was not allowed to feel before as a victim.” Also, check out the video linked as an addendum to the post, Forgiveness and Blame by Daniel Mackler.]

Patricia Singleton at Spiritual Journey of a Lightworker has blogged extensively on the topic of forgiveness as it relates to abuse survivors. Below are three key posts:

@patriciasinglet Prelude To Forgiveness
[SEO: A list of 16 tips on “how to do forgiveness”, from the perspective of an abuse survivor. No. 1: “Don’t let anyone try to push you into doing forgiveness until you are ready to do it. You will know when the time is right for you.”]

@patriciasinglet Forgiveness, Done In Layers
[SEO: “Forgiveness isn’t a one-time thing. I find myself doing it over and over again. Anger and hurt can hide from your conscious mind and be triggered by what seems like unconnected events.”]

@patriciasinglet Forgiveness Is Not Forgetting The Child Abuse
[SEO: Written in response to the post above, “Forgive the Abusers? A bit of a Rant”, this article outlines the “musts” and “shoulds” laid on child abuse survivors to make them forgive whether ready or not, and how those statements create further doubts, confusion, and self-abuse.]

The Rest of the Best

@psychcentral Supporting Individuals with Depression: The Importance of Self-Care
[SEO: What you need to know about limits, boundaries, and self-care issues when supporting someone who is depressed. If, on the other hand, you are the depressed person, it’s a good reality check to consider what the people in your life may be experiencing when supporting you. It would be an act of caring on your part to point them to this article.]

@SarahEOlson2009 6 Ways to Open Up and Talk in Therapy
[SEO: “You’ve gathered up the energy and resources to start psychotherapy. It’s a big step and you’re excited to begin. But you find yourself unable to talk in therapy. What’s the point of talk therapy without the talking? We find it so incredibly easy to open up online, but when we’re in the therapy office, we become suddenly mute. There are many strategies to help “open up” and be able to talk more freely while in psychotherapy.”]

@thereseborchard Unload Your Guilt!: Guilt is one of the main rivers feeding into the great lake of depression. (video) (via Beyond Blue)
[SEO: A visualization exercise to relieve some of the burdens of guilt which we all lug around. “I have to come up with a visualization technique that allows myself to unload some of the guilt. This one, I think, helps. Except for the fact that I stole the rocks, and I feel guilty about that, and I don’t know how to get them back to the place where I found them without looking like a terrorist.” A sense of humor helps, too.]

@psychcentral Creative tips to express and ease negative moods
[SEO: “The side effect of exploring your emotions through creative activity is that it acts as a form of auto-therapy to actually elevate your mood. This is confirmed by English novelist Graham Greene, who wrote: “Art is a form of therapy. Sometimes I wonder how all those who do not write, compose or paint can escape the madness, the melancholia, the panic inherent in the human situation.” ” See also next article below.]

@arttherapy Art Therapy Helps Children Cope With Tragedy (CBS story and video)
[SEO: Although the focus is on children who use art therapy to cope with the death of a loved one, the article explains well why art therapy is beneficial for anyone dealing with trauma. “‘It allows them to take the pain and to take the sadness, take the frustration, take the questions, and put it outside of themselves,’ art therapist Mary Gambarony said, ‘and that’s very healing in itself to get it out of you, put it on something objective in front of you and be able to look at it.’”]

@goodthingZ 13 Tips for Dealing w/a Lousy Day
[SEO: 13 coping strategies for those lousy, crummy, horrible days that we all experience, and good reasons why you should consider using them. Keep this list handy.]

@SarahEOlson2009 Military Mental Health: There’s an App (and Money) For That
[SEO: (NOTE: The article and mood tracker are both aimed at veterans with PTSD, but ANYONE — including civilians — can download the app for free to their phone and use it for the same purposes. I have not tried it because I don’t have a smart phone. I’d love a review of the app from both a veteran and non-veteran point of view. Anyone?) Article describes a new “free smart phone application for Android devices designed to help soldiers and veterans to track their emotional health. It’s called the T2 Mood Tracker (from the National Center for Telehealth and Technology) is available for free download now. (The iPhone app is in the works.) It’s basically a mood tracker, allowing users to track their mood, happiness and stress levels throughout the day.” Anyone can download here and use the app, free of charge. FAQ at that link.]

@PTSDdotOrg PTSD: So Much to Tell You, and I Can’t Say a Word
[SEO: A detailed article that attempts to describe what PTSD is like, aimed at those who don’t have it but need to understand it. Includes a comprehensive list of symptoms, treatment for trauma and flashbacks, and a video, “Understanding PTSD: A Rough Guide”. A good place to start for loved ones.]

@SarahEOlson2009 40 Excellent Blogs for PTSD Support
[SEO: A truly outstanding collection of blogs which focus on issues faced by trauma survivors of all types. “No matter the trigger — war, abuse, the death of a loved one, natural disasters and many others — and no matter the person, he or she can find themselves stricken down by this harrowing medical condition. Though PTSD and its co-morbid diagnoses swell from varying circumstances, those suffering from it are not nearly as alone in life as they may feel. Even beyond the resources listed here (in no particular order), other blogs, websites and forums specifically catering to the needs of victims provide an online community promoting hope and the pursuit of healthy therapy. Use them as a stepping stone towards stability and peace, though please understand that none of the advice provided here takes the place of professional therapy.”]

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Favorite TweetStuff (week ending 11/05/10)

It’s time again for my weekly roundup of the beautiful, the bizarre, and the amusing, all rescued from my Tweet stream. Enjoy!

@SuuperG “Never underestimate the otherness of others.” (via @ssanquist)

@2morrowknight Beauty Of Morning Light (by @karimworldpix]

@MetaVisions “It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education.” ~ Albert Einstein

@DocJohnG “Caring.com — Answers to 5,000 Questions! Choose ‘Depression’ and the first result? ‘Is embalming necessary?’ Whaaaat?!?”
[SEO: This was tweeted on October 31st, and I verified the result personally then. The question has since been removed, at least from the ‘Depression’ section.]

@Flipbooks Top 10 Most Bizarre Shoes in History (via Listverse)
[SEO: Eww my feet hurt just looking at these!]

@2morrowknight The 5 Stages of Pain After Being Unfollowed (by @tremendousnews)

@JeanetteJoy “A balanced diet is a cookie in each hand.” ~ Author Unknown
[SEO: Especially right after someone unfollows you.]

@wendmagazine Even Whales Give High Fives
[SEO: A stunning photo providing perspective on the relative size of a whale and human.]

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Best Tweets for Trauma Survivors (week ending 10/29/10)

Best Tweets for Trauma Survivors is a weekly Friday feature. My selections are entirely subjective, and I know it will never be possible to include every great resource tweeted. But I can try! I’ve personally read all tweeted links, and believe them to be of great value.

Disclaimer: I am in no way responsible for content found on any other website. Stay safe, and don’t follow links if you believe you might be triggered by them. Also, I will not be re-checking links from older Best Tweets posts, and if the site’s archived URL is different from the one I’ve provided here, you may need to do a search on their site.

NEW and REALLY COOL: You can now “like” this post, and “share” it everywhere with the touch of a button or two at the end of the linked tweets! Feel free to do any or all of that! (And thanks.)

 

Photo Credit: Hubby Dan!

@CarePathways “Simply put, the beauty of fall
can be savored but not saved.”

Six Provocative Standalone Tweets To Ponder

@PsychDigest “The Universe is one great kindergarten for man. Everything that exists has brought with it its own wonderful lesson.” ~ Marden

@CarePathways “People spend their lives struggling, trying to be someplace that they’re not. They never get to arrive.”

@karenkmmonroy “Forcing a transition, forcing ‘something’ to happen, takes you out of alignment with flow. So does the resistance of same.”

@LillyAnn “The more I ask, the less I understand; the harder I seek, the less I find. Slow down — let go.”

@zebraspolkadots “In creating change from the inside out I had to stop focusing only on what I was doing and connect it to what I was thinking and feeling.”

@InspirationDay “The end of wisdom is to dream high enough not to lose the dream in the seeking of it.” ~ William Faulkner

Linked Tweets

The colder, shorter days and coming holiday season are not always a joyous or easy time of year for trauma survivors. If you need help, find it. Line up resources now, and know how to contact them when you most need them. My special thanks to @unsuicide for tweeting suicide prevention resources on Twitter.

Suicide Prevention Resources

@unsuicide Suicidal? Read this first
[SEO: Compassionate and honest, this speaks to you directly about wanting the pain to end, and how to think about it in ways which don’t include you having to die. It does not judge you for your feelings, it encourages you to understand why you feel them. If you understand the why, you can see better solutions. “While we are together here for the next five minutes, I have five simple, practical things I would like to share with you. I won’t argue with you about whether you should kill yourself. But I assume that if you are thinking about it, you feel pretty bad. … Being unsure about dying is okay and normal. The fact that you are still alive at this minute means you are still a little bit unsure. It means that even while you want to die, at the same time some part of you still wants to live. So let’s hang on to that, and keep going for a few more minutes.” Includes hotlines to call to talk with someone, and a list of related articles and resources on Metanoia’s site.]

@unsuicide Hello, Cruel World by @katebornstein — ebook helps you stay alive (PDF)
[SEO: Four pages, a mini-version of her book of the same title, she speaks as you might wish a friend would when you are contemplating ending your life. “You’re better off alive, no matter how messed up you think you might be right now. And you’re better off alive no matter how mean someone is being to you. You are simply better off alive than dead—no matter who or what you are, no matter who or what you love, and no matter what you do. Just don’t be mean. Being mean never works. Never. So that’s the only rule I can think of that’s worth following in life: don’t be mean. Yes, you can be mean to yourself if that’s what’s going to keep you alive. I’m sorry if that’s happening to you. But keep in mind that there are alternatives that hurt a lot less, and I hope you find one soon.” Includes exercises.

@unsuicide Need to talk? International list of people who listen and care, 24/7
[SEO: The International Association for Suicide Prevention’s website is a wealth of help and resources if you are suicidal. If you are not suicidal, bookmark this site so you can point anyone you meet online to resources in their area, worldwide.]

Therapy Issues

@NAMIMass Do I really need help? When mental health problems occur, recognizing them is the first step to recovery
[SEO: A great overview of the stereotypes regarding seeking therapy (that it’s only for people with severe disorders, or that it’s not needed until a bigger problem develops). The key for most people is determining whether the problem is impairing good functioning. “It is good to be worried about cars on the road, so you are more careful when you walk across; but when you are so worried that you cannot cross the road at all, it has impaired your functioning.” Article includes a list of common symptoms, and how to find a therapist. See also the next article below.]

@PTSDdotOrg Choosing an Anxiety or Trauma Therapist (via Treating Anxiety blog)
[SEO: “Focus on the human part. It’s a relationship. Yes, a business partnership but anxiety and/or trauma therapy also introduces you to novel concepts like calm. Not to mention brave new worlds. Brave new worlds which offer a great deal, but you have to be comfortable opening your mouth first.”]

@ssanquist 9 Rules for Surviving Therapy (via Beyond Blue)
[SEO: If you wonder if your therapy is going anywhere, or if the problem is you or your therapist, this list explores reasons why it could be either of you or both. Really good therapy requires really good communication, especially on the therapist’s part, because you may not know enough about your issues to communicate them completely yet. Ask for clarification if you need it. Be assertive, but not aggressive. Assume the therapist is in your corner unless and until proven otherwise. And check out these 9 rules for surviving therapy: you — and your therapist — may be viewing your therapy process with inaccurate assumptions.]

@FaithLotus Alternative Healing: Expressive Therapy
[SEO: This is excellent. Faith explains the difference between “art therapy” (which usually involves a prompt by the therapist) and “expressive therapy” (which may or may not utilize “art” to express it, and does not necessarily use a prompt, meaning, it can be purely spontaneous). “In a nutshell, she said that it is an outlet a person can use to express feelings and emotions. This can be done with painting, sculpting, drawing, etc., but it doesn’t even have to be art-related. Expressive therapy can be done through drama, writing, or any other way that you find to express yourself.”]

The Rest of the Best

@fromtracie The October Blog Carnival Against Child Abuse is up!
[SEO: A look at child abuse by various bloggers under the categories of Advocacy and Awareness, Aftermath, Healing and Therapy, Poetry, and Survivor Stories.]

@zebraspolkadots Deeper Than Skin Deep (via Overcoming Sexual Abuse)
[SEO: “This got me thinking about the different things that affect my outward body and things that have affected my soul—those things that I have tried to fix with a band-aid or with coping medication such as alcohol and drugs. It eased the pain for a while only to have it return again. This way of thinking made sense to me because there were many mixed messages that were fed into my soul as a child that I battled with for most of my life. It was those messages and false beliefs that I had to tackle during my healing. I had to go deeper than the sexual abuse, find the mixed messages, connect them with the emotions that were attached to them, and replace them with truth. Once I was able to put the healing truth in my soul, I was able to overcome them.”]

@psychcentral 4 Steps to Getting Unstuck
[SEO: “In order to get unstuck we need to understand that there are perceptions, judgments and opinions that occur so quickly beneath our awareness that we get stuck before we even notice any thoughts arise. Your mind judges exercise as “bad” before the conscious excuse comes up. Your partner was “wrong” milliseconds after he opened his mouth.”]

@patriciasinglet Hearing Negative Self Talk? (via Emerging from Broken blog)
[SEO: “I became aware years ago of the negative self talk that went on in my head. I tried all sorts of ways to deal with it or combat it. I heard all kinds of cute sayings and instructions such as ‘tell the committee to shut up, the meeting is over’ and tell them to ‘stop renting space in my head’. … Maybe I thought it made sense to ignore the voices because like many of us I grew up with my needs being ignored, so it was familiar and comfortable to ignore them myself. I don’t think I ever saw those nagging critical voices as expressing a need but maybe they were after all. Maybe I thought it made sense to ignore them because I didn’t have any other solutions about what to do about negative self talk.”]

@ssanquist The Health Benefits of Tears
[SEO: This article propounds that crying is good for you, physically and emotionally, and discusses some of the science behind tears and their direct connection to stress relief. “Emotional tears have special health benefits. Biochemist and “tear expert” Dr. William Frey at the Ramsey Medical Center in Minneapolis discovered that reflex tears are 98% water, whereas emotional tears also contain stress hormones which get excreted from the body through crying. After studying the composition of tears, Dr. Frey found that emotional tears shed these hormones and other toxins which accumulate during stress. Additional studies also suggest that crying stimulates the production of endorphins, our body’s natural pain killer and “feel-good” hormones.”]

@natasha_tracy Holding Onto Hope in Bipolar Disorder (via Breaking Bipolar blog)
[SEO: Achingly honest — and applies to anyone struggling with complex mental disorders. The author differentiates between the hope that anyone trying new treatments must have in order to keep trying vs her personal agony of hope when treatment after treatment does not work. While she knows they didn’t work for her, she still offers to hold hope for you if you have none, because they might well work for you. “There are probably people holding onto your hope right now without you even knowing about it. People like doctors, therapists, friends, family, and yes, even me. I’m hanging onto a piece of your hope too. I’m keeping it safe. I can see it there even when you can’t. It doesn’t matter than I don’t know you. I know your despair. I know your pain. And I know there is hope. I know that as long as you are breathing, there is hope. Really. Truly.”]

@patriciasinglet Forgiving Your Body (via Blooming Lotus blog)
[SEO: This is a concept I struggle with daily. Still. “Throughout my years of healing, I have learned that I actually have a relationship with my body, and I have not always been kind. In many ways, I have been my own body’s abuser, from banging its head into pillows to overstuffing it with food that it did not need. I have hated my body for having orgasms during sex, and I have hated my body for not having orgasms during sex. I have taken a lot of my anger out on my body even though my body did nothing to deserve it.”]

@PalCheck How helping others helps you (via @DrKathleenYoung)
[SEO: “If you lug your elderly neighbor’s groceries up her steps, clearly it’s good for her. But did you know that it’s likely good for you too? Research indicates that those who consistently help other people experience less depression, greater calm, fewer pains and better health. They may even live longer.” Research, hints on helping, and ways to volunteer.]

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Permanent link to this article: http://thirdofalifetime.com/2010/10/29/best-tweets-for-trauma-survivors-week-ending-102910/

Favorite TweetStuff (week ending 10/29/10)

Each Friday I scoop out Twitter goodness from my Tweet Stream that is artsy, humorous, beautiful, sometimes just plain weird. Mostly links today — my snark radar must have been in the shop this week! Enjoy!

@CarePathways “According to quantum physics, time may be coexisting and happening all at once. Yesterday, today, and tomorrow are all now.”
[SEO: This may be the best explanation for my life. :)]

@ssanquist So cute!! [referring to Theodore]
[SEO: Theodore (@DrKathleenYoung’s pug), have you met Lola (@CarePathways’ pug)? You two seem to have a lot in common.]

@2morrowknight The 10 most annoying smartphone habits

@AnnTran_ 40 Gorgeous Examples of Beach Photography (via @ssanquist)
[SEO: Truly exquisite photos.]

@NatGeoPhotos Photo of the Day: Rooftop Golf, New York
[SEO: Extremely difficult to retrieve errant balls.]

@goodthingZ Beck’s Live Art Project

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Four New Blogs Added to Dissociation Blog Showcase! (DBS)

Special Request: If you find value in this blog showcase, please add the Dissociation Blog Showcase link to your blogroll so others can find it. Thanks!

We have amazing writers amongst us who give insight and hope to anyone struggling with dissociation, or to their loved ones. It’s a brain trust, and I treasure it. When I find new blogs, I update the Dissociation Blog Showcase (DBS) on Sunday evenings. Tonight I’ve added the following four new blogs:

Adventures in Anxiety Land

ASTRID’S JOURNAL

IDENTITYBREAKS

I Probably have Dissociation

Please use the DBS link above to access these blogs, and check out the entire directory of (currently) 179 dissociation-related blogs!

As always, be careful and safe. Many of these blogs do not provide trigger warnings, nor are they obligated to do so.

If you, or someone you know, experiences dissociation and blog about it, write to me with the URL at

sarah.e.olsonATgmailDOTcom

I review each blog before adding it to the Showcase. Thanks so much for the feedback and well-wishes for this project!

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Permanent link to this article: http://thirdofalifetime.com/2010/10/24/four-new-blogs-added-to-dissociation-blog-showcase-dbs-4/