T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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315.1 | Have you tried this? | VICKI::BULLOCK | Living the good life | Wed May 13 1987 16:59 | 21 |
| Hi Jody--
GOOD FOR YOU to help yourself by taking the seminar you mention.
I'm sure that will help you a lot.
Altho the allergy I have every spring (when all those little green
thing-ys are in the air) is not serious, it is sure annoying, and
it slows me up sometimes. So I have a small understanding.
As far as coping/understanding/accepting/looking at a brighter side,
I'll tell you what has helped me when I get this way about anything.
I visit someone in the hospital, or listen to the news, or (best)
listen to a friend. Most always you wouldn't want THEIR problems!
This in no way diminishes what you have, and how you cope with it;
but for me, I've found that comparison makes me see my problems
much differently.
Keep your spirits up,
Jane
|
315.2 | Woe is me. | ULTRA::GUGEL | Spring is for rock-climbing | Thu May 14 1987 11:22 | 16 |
| *Everyone* has problems! You are not alone. The "poor, why me?"
stuff is for kids! Some people think I've got no trouble because
I've been skinny all my life and I have money, but I still suffer
from acne and I am absolutely the most near-sighted person I know.
I've lived with both of these problems for most of my life (eyes
since age 7 and skin problems since age 14) and I do not go around
thinking "poor me" or "why me?" because I figured out *long* ago that
*virtually everyone* has some chronic problem that they have to live
with. I make the most of the good things I do have and I try to
minimize the impact of my negative attributes. I hardly ever think
about them. I'll bet each contributor in this conference has her
or his own story too.
Keep working at it.
-Ellen
|
315.3 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | Ian F. ('The Colonel') Philpott | Thu May 14 1987 12:17 | 37 |
|
I have been a chromic asthmatic (I have a combination of bronchial and
cardiac asthma as a result of being severely burned as an infant and
then developing pneumonia...) most all of my life.
As a child at school I was too weak for gym class, too badly affected
by chlorine to go in a swimming pool...
Despite missing classes I eventually succeeded academically.
Despite physical weakness I succeeded in my physical goals.
My condition is controlled and mitigated (but not cured) by a drug cocktail
that has affects on my activity. As a teenager I was introduced to yoga
and transcendental meditation by my doctor (before the Maharishi and the
Beatles made it popular), and that helped too.
By careful meditation and learning self control and discipline I have
reduced my dependence on drugs to an emergency only inhaler. I studied
the martial arts and achieved black belts in Tai Kwon Do, Hap Kido,
Karate, Ju Jitsu and Aikido. I managed to pass a military physical (I
didn't tell them about the asthma and they didn't find it)... In fact
since my teens the problem has only rarely affected me. Only when I
am tired and overworked, or overstressed does the self control crack
and I have trouble.
I am not unique: Steve Ovett who held all the world records for the
track events between 800m and 10000m a few years back is a more severe
asthmatic than I am.
My message would be this: if you think of it as a problem or a handicap,
then it will be a problem to you and will handicap you. Think of it
as a challenge and you can soar over it and succeed in anything you
wish.
/. Ian .\
|
315.5 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | Ian F. ('The Colonel') Philpott | Thu May 14 1987 16:29 | 65 |
|
To expand my comments on asthma and yoga/tm/exercise...
(I received a mail message from a fellow noter and stupidly deleted
it before writing down the DTN...)
Asthma may be caused by a number of things, but ultimately you can describe
the condition as an interruption of the feedback loop that controls
your breathing within the autonomic nervous system.
The condition is helped if you can increase the strength of the muscles
of the chest and heart. It appears that to a certain extent asthmatics
suffer from a "if you don't use it you'll lose it" syndrome - if these
muscles aren't exercised then the feedback nerve impulses seem to grow
weaker, and the muscle's ability to respond to nerve impulses gets weaker,
both making an asthmatic attack more likely and more serious. The
immediate problem is that *aerobic* exercise upsets the feedback loop
(by increasing the heart rate and increasing the breathing rate), which
may be desirable in most folks but which is exactly the sort of
disturbance that can trigger an attack. Hence exercise is good but
should be strictly non-aerobic. Once you've built up the muscle strength
then aerobic exercise is possible. My doctors now tell me that Nautilus
and similar are excellent for asthmatics (when I was a teenager and could
have used such things they didn't exist and I used free weights).
The second and more important thing is to improve control. In a [very]
severe asthmatic attack autonomic breathing stops completely, and you
have to tell yourself to breathe (a truly frightening experience for
anybody who hasn't experienced or seen such an attack). Yoga exercises
and TM both develop a greatly heightened awareness of the body's internal
functioning (everybody has heard the usual advice to a beginner to try
to listen to their own breathing?). In advanced practice people do learn
to control their autonomic reflexes. This is usually demonstrated by
the yogi who can slow down pulse/breathing or lower body temperatures
to an abnormal degree. What the asthmatic is seeking is exactly the
opposite. You learn to take the irregular pulse and breathing rate and
substitute a metronomic but normal pace breathing and pulse. This can
be used for controlling an attack: at the first symptoms of onset, instead
of reaching for an inhaler you can use the exercises to get into a truly
relaxed state and control the breathing. With the breathing under control
the disturbance to the autonomic system will usually go away and you
can slowly let it take over again. An advanced student (more so than
I, I fear) can set up a sort of subconscious monitor that does this
continuously, a sort of personal pacemaker. In any event it appears
that the confidence you develop in controlling minor attacks makes them
less likely to occur, and also reduces the risk of more major attacks.
Two caveats:
1) always see a physician before starting a course of exercise (and
if using a club, it is advisable to tell them of your condition).
2) relying on yoga to stem an attack may be dangerous. Recent research
into the use of inhalers has shown that occasionally patients relying
on them take too long to recognize the seriousness of a life threatening
attack and seek hospital assistance. The same sort of thing is possible
if you use yoga: it certainly doesn't *replace* medicine. Again learning
the relaxation techniques is harmless, but you should discuss with a
physician the advisability of using these techniques to fend off attacks.
ie It works for me, but it may not work for you, so get professional
advice.
/. Ian .\
|
315.6 | a little clarification, maestro | LEZAH::BOBBITT | Festina Lente - Hasten Slowly | Fri May 15 1987 14:38 | 18 |
|
Thank you all for the advice so far. It is helpful. However I
feel that some clarification is in order. In the basenote I said
"Sometimes I wonder "why me?" - I'm sure things could be a lot better,
but then again, they could also be a lot worse."
If you have a similar experience to convey, please do...but don't
think I'm trying to throw myself a pity party. That is NOT the
point. I am asking for advice on how to function in a more healthy
way. I am VERY aware that there are people in the world with far
worse problems than me. I am directly related to some of them
(many health problems are hereditary).
Feeling better already :-)
Jody
|
315.7 | book recommendation | VINO::EVANS | | Fri May 15 1987 16:15 | 7 |
| "You can Heal YOur Life" by Louise Hay
I liked the book, not sure if I buy all her ideas. You might get
something out of it - keep what makes sense for you, toss what doesn't.
Dawn
|
315.8 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Fri May 15 1987 17:57 | 40 |
| The following response was made by a member of our community who wishes
to remain anonymous at this time.
=maggie
======================================================================
While I agree that using one's handicap as a crutch is not good, in
some cases acknowledging one's handicap and recognizing that one has to
do things differently than other people can be a great help. At least
it was for me.
I'm not going to go into the details here because it is too difficult
to explain in a note. In brief, for the greater part of my life I
have been fighting an undiagnosed psychiatric disorder. About six
months ago the disorder was diagnosed and explained to me. Having an
understanding of what was wrong with me and the ramifications of the
disorder on my life has made it MUCH easier to cope with day to day
reality. It has also given me something to grasp onto when my
perception of reality starts getting a little warped. Prior to knowing
that I had this disorder, I was crippled by my feelings of guilt and
inadequacy at not being able to cope with life. Now that I understand
that there is a disorder, I no longer expend the energy fighting myself
for being inadeqate. Rather I can look at myself and see me for what I
am with my weakness and not somehow feel that the weakness are my fault
for failing at life.
Which is not to say that I now simply sit back and say that I can't do
things because of this disorder - or use it for an excuse. Now I know
the scope of what I'm dealing with and how to fight it.
To me, it was as if I had wanted to be ballet dancer but only had one
foot - and everyone had two feet, but everyone said it was normal to
only have one foot and what was my problem anyway. Then to be told,
yes it is more difficult for you with only one foot, and that's ok. It
doesn't mean I can't dance, but at least I understand why it is more
difficult.
I hope this makes some sense.
|
315.9 | Holistic Solutions | GNUVAX::TUCKER | Peace of mind... | Fri May 15 1987 18:09 | 3 |
| Try HYDRA::HOLISTIC notes file.
|
315.10 | ANOTHER HELPING CONSIDERATION | FRSBEE::BENNETT | | Mon May 18 1987 08:01 | 10 |
| Read "LOVE IS LETTING GO OF FEAR" by Jerry Jampolsky. Or listen
to Roy Masters on the AM Radio dial (95.6) From 4pm till 5pm week
days.
Both these sources will help you understand yourself and when you
can do this you'll see the "problem" will give you up.
Basically , these people get into the "mind areas" and show how
the mind controls the body and that by itself the body does
nothing.
|
315.11 | You're doing great!! | XANADU::BURROUGHS | | Mon Jun 01 1987 18:48 | 51 |
| For years I felt inadequate communciating with people, and it was not until
I was in my twenties and teaching high school that I realized there was a
chronic problem underlying my difficulty-- dyslexia. Giving the problem
a name helped my self image a great deal! I wasn't weird-- I had a
definable problem. It's a problem that will never go away, but it's
one I can work on and compensate for, so that I can function as an
effective communicator.
I have two primary ways of coping with the problem-- one is to work
on it from year to year, strengthening various cocmmunication skills;
another is to supplement my skills with whatever it takes to be
effective in a given situation.
Developing skills takes a lot of time and energy for me, so I concentrate on
one area at a time and I congratulate myself whenever I make progress.
Reading and spelling came first. Years of experimenting and drilling.
By the time I was 13, I could read at a 5th grade level, and the same year
I won a regional spelling contest. Writing came next. Speaking was MUCH
tougher! I only learned to speak with confidence by teaching in a classroom
setting 5 classes a day for several years, when I was in my twenties.
Carrying on conversations came after that. Beer helped a lot with that one!
At our weekly ski club meetings, everyone else was stammering and jumbling
thoughts, too, while they hoisted a brew, so I didn't feel so strange trying
to have a two-way or multi-way conversation with folks. Carrying on arguments
is still something I'm working on-- the emotional climate of an argument delays
my listening and speaking responses. I'm also still working on being able to
handle questions during a formal presentation.
Compensating and supplementing for the weak areas can be tricky. During a
presentation, I usually have one or two people in the audience primed with
answers, so that I can call on them to help out. Or I think through the
most likely questions ahead of time and cover them somewhere in the present-
ation. That way I can just say, "We'll cover that when we talk about ___. If
I don't answer your question then, be sure to ask it again later." Some-
times I just have to come out and tell someone I have a problem and get
their cooperation. And sometimes that doesn't work because the person
responds with abuse rather than cooperation. That's their problem!
I know what you mean about the occasional "Why me!" thought. It's a natural,
especially at a time of major frustration! I usually take a deep breath
and think about how well I've done in overcoming the problem and how well I
communicate overall. And if I find myself raging about some abusive so-and-so,
I turn my thoughts to the influences that helped me grow as much as I have.
In the last 5 years or so, I've changed my self image from "a person who has
trouble communcating" to something much more realistic and much more positive.
I've read lots of books on the subject of dyslexia, and the two most influential
for me were "Reversals: a personal victory over dyslexia" and "Can't Read, Can't
Write, Can't Talk Too Good Either". That helps, too-- to share the experience
in a positive way. It's healing and reassuring. Nothing like putting things
in perspective!
|