You're [not] fine

Another Thursday. There's been a lot of talk lately about this "pandemic wall" we all seem to be hitting. Pretty sure we've hit it a few times (or perhaps more of a constant banging-our-heads-against kind of thing) but that's not to say I don't feel it this time. I had a rough week last week - if you follow me over on the 'gram, you may have picked up on the fact that I wasn't feelin' too hot. Nothing to worry about, I'm sorting out some digestive stuff and my never-ending quest to figure out exactly what my belly wants from me. But here's a fun thing: when my belly gets turned upside down, it triggers my anxiety. 

Anxiety is your body's way of telling you something is wrong. It's blaring the sirens to get you to pay attention. And there's a super strong connection between the gut and the brain, so it's incredibly common for folks with IBS to also have anxiety. Kinda a chicken-or-the-egg situation there, because anxiety can also wreak havoc on the belly. #whichcamefirst

Each time my anxiety crops up it's an opportunity to learn a little bit more (I know, how annoyingly "silver-lining" of me). In this case I noticed something I do to myself often that was very very not helpful, and I wanted to share it with you because I'd bet my stimulus check you do it too... 

When I started to feel that rattle in my body and that pit in my stomachyou know the one - I started telling myself, "you're fine." I'd sit on my bed and say, "you're fine," and I'd look in the bathroom mirror and say, "you're fine, you’re fine, you’re fine." But, I didn't feel fine, and in all my experience with anxiety, the break finally comes when I can admit that, let it be, and allow those walls to come down (even if just for myself). 

We live in a society that's taught us to always "pull ourselves up from the bootstraps" and maybe you grew up in a way where you had to be pretty autonomous, take care of yourself, and always be, well, fine

But it's okay if you're not fine, and you yelling, "you're fine!" at yourself is just really invalidating. Anxiety doesn't like to be bullied; anxiety will fight back. 

As with most inner dialogues, I like to think of it like a relationship you might have with a friend. This is your strong friend, she really hates asking for help, she really hates being vulnerable. So when she finally comes to you waving the white flag, you know it's really something. Hopefully we've learned by now that when a loved one needs your support, you don't just tell them they're fine. You don't say "pull it together." You don't invalidate their feelings and the very real experience they're having, even if you know with 100% certainty that they WILL be fine and that there's no immediate threat to their existence. Because anxiety, well, anxiety will have your friend believing otherwise. 

So no, you don't tell your friend to buck up. You sit with her. You listen. You tell her it makes soooo much sense that she feels this way right now. You might say - hey, I really think you're gonna be okay, but I know this feels so scary right now. I hear you. I see you. I'm here for you. I’m not going anywhere. It's okay to feel the way you feel. I love you. I'm listening. 

Just a reminder - your friend is you. In case you got lost. So next time you're feeling a little rattle-y, or sick to your stomach, or lightheaded or scared, be your own friend. Literally sit and talk it out aloud (yes, even if you're by yourself). Connect with that YOU inside that decided it was time to turn on the sirens. See what that's all about. Unlike my overly-sensitive smoke detector, it’s making that racket for a reason. Listen. 

For a short meditation to help with all that - check this out

And in case nobody else has told you today: I love you, and I’m listening*

*like legit, I’m here if you need to talk <3


xo,
m.