The Disappearance of Personality

GKKaty

I’ve spoken before about my grandfather, and his Alzheimer’s Disease, but as with all stories, changes and new instalments occur.

Last I wrote, they were taking him off the Aricept. That was less than two months ago.

 

~

 

Last weekend, my parents saw him. He seemed well in general, until he asked after me, when he insisted he’d never been told that I have a partner.

He has met my other half several times over the last 6 years – but according to his brain, he had never heard of this, and asked what he’s like, and whether we would marry.

I wondered if he had forgotten my O.H because that little pathway is inaccessible.

But the fact that I’m with someone, might have stuck.

It seems not only has he forgotten the most important person in my life, but he’s forgetting more of me every day.

I cannot explain away that sadness.

 

My heart broke when I realised he will never know my future. Even if he lives long enough, he’ll never know my marriage, my children. And they would never know him.

Because he’s not just losing his memories of his family.

He’s losing himself.

 

~

 

I’ve talked before about my wish to be a scholar, and how in this topic I just can’t bring myself to understand the science of the disease.

Nevertheless, I told my mum he might have just had a bad day – that loss isn’t linear in this disease. That the protein build up on his neurons shifts every day, and that only specific neurons will have been affected.

 

But he used to have such a sense of honour, of loyalty; such a love and respect for education, and he used to get everyone out of their chairs to go for a walk, or play tennis, or croquet.

Hell, we played croquet less than six months ago, at his request!

 
It seems the man my mother had to sit beside knows none of those things. 

 

 

~

 

From my understanding, he’s not supposed to lose his core identity only a year or two into a disease described as “early stages, slow moving”. Not two months after he’s been taken off the medication that only halted it for six months in the first place.

 

The loss of new events, the inability to find the right words to explain things and the personality differences don’t occur in stage 1.

 

~

 

Which means he’s shifted in stage 2 of a 3 stage process.

And the small child inside who remembers him bouncing me on his knee has realised:

 I’ll never get him back.

Noticing in Alchemy: Lists

Redefinition Alchemy is heavily-dependent upon noticing.

If I don’t realise I’m angry at something, I can’t stop myself being angry about it.

If I feel okay as I am, I won’t make an effort to change.

 

And alchemy is all about changing something – a thought, perception, experience or action.

 

The Reading Habit

In 2009 I realised I had no idea which books I had and hadn’t read out of the 200 in my bookcase. So I began writing down every book I finished reading, with a note about how much I enjoyed it.

I’ve always loved reading, and think of myself as an avid reader.

But for the year of 2011, I read a total of 12 books. In my mind, that doesn’t mean an “avid” reader. That’s a “reader”.

I could see that in 2010, I’d read 26.

So this year, I made the goal to read 26 books again – that’s one a fortnight.

By July, I’d read 19. Feeling chuffed, I turned my attention to my dissertation, and then my reading ended, until last week, when I had to force myself to get back into the reading process. I have 5 weeks to read another 4 books.

 

Through taking these notes, I became aware that the label was no longer true, and that I wanted to get back into a habit that I knew sustained me.

 

The Writing Habit

In 2009, I also began the challenge for National Novel Writing Month; to write 50,000 words of fiction in 30 days. This involved keeping a track of your daily word-count.

This year, however, I’ve taken it a step further. Rather than knowing I can write 7,000 words of fiction in a day, I’ve take notes about how long I spent writing.

In 2009, I found I could write about 1000 words in 45 minutes.

This year? Those 7000 words were written in less than 4 hours throughout the day. If you’re interested, I update my progress, including the charts and graphs depicting my words-per-hour statistics here.

 

Taking Notes

So now, I’m finding other ways to notice, to take notes and to build on my own understanding. I write to-do lists, talk in my monthly newsletter about my goals, and try to keep track of how I’m feeling during each of these times.

When I know a month has been tiring and stressful, I can look at my lists – did I read any books, meditate, write, talk to my best friend, take my iron tablet or exercise?

If I didn’t, why not. In previous months, did it help to do those things?

 

Tracking

Throughout taking notes, I’m able to plot the way my brain and body work, and can steer my actions towards the future self I want to create.

I know that “the-me-in-three-years” enjoys reading, still writes and is relatively fit (ideally). So that means I need to read, write and exercise now.

If you’ve ever tried to make goals like these, you’ll know it’s easier said than done. But through tracking my progress and noticing patterns, I can give myself the motivation I need, and pick times of the day when I know I’ll get the most out of the new habit.

 

How do you keep track of your behaviour?

Do you have any goals you still haven’t met?

 

– Rose –

Alchemy Tools: Imagination

Alchemy tools involve making a map of your future, or using your imagination to create.

Do you have a dream?

I didn’t. And that makes it very hard to picture my future.

I have no career calling to me, and thus looking at job adverts is like looking over a menu where all of the food includes something I “don’t mind” and nothing I truly love. Nothing jumps out at me and I can’t make a choice.

 

The Map and Compass

It’s clear to me that without a direction, without any idea of where we want to be, we can be lost. Without a destination, we can’t access or even create a map.

However, I’ve begun to pick out future events I’d like to happen. I can picture me-in-five-years, and she has a house, she’s got a child on the way and she’s writing her novel. I can’t tell if the novels are her full or part-time work, but they’re there.

Through knowing I want children one day, jobs working with children have begun jumping out at me – at least I can learn to be a parent by working with other people’s children.

Through knowing my novels are important enough to still be in my life in five years time, I know it’s important to devote time to writing now.  If I stopped writing completely, I wouldn’t be that “me-in-five-years” who is a writer. And I know I want to be that future writer.

Our imagination is a wonderful tool in the journey of redefinition. You can redefine your future by acting in certain ways now. And the best part is: no one can read your mind. So you can redefine life as it happens to you, too.

 

Imaginary Panic Weasels, Redefined

Ellie Di of The Headologist talks about anxiety and worries as “the panic weasels”.

She defines panic as: “a dozen weasels. Now put them in a dog crate. Now give them PopRocks and Coke, shake vigorously, and open the door. That’s what happens to my brain, my heart, and frankly, my whole day when overwhelm and stress meet in a shower of shit I just can’t handle.”

 

And for me, it’s similar. Last week I had three cases of panic weasels in three days. I was stressing about an interview, the dentist and then I couldn’t find my mp3 player.

The panic set in as I did NOT want to walk four miles to the dentist and back with a painful face/head/mouth, let alone without music to distract me and keep me calm.

 

Enter the Ferrets

Thinking of a crate of weasels running around the safe space in my head, I got to work on my imagination. I sprinkled them with water until they hid in a corner. I put up cardboard barricades which led from the wall to the patio doors. When they left, I tried to shut the doors, and when they tried to get back in, my future pet ferrets guarded the door.

I had no idea I had inner ferret guardians until Ellie gave me the tool to frame my anxiety as a weasel. But the imagery really works for me. And that means you can cultivate ferret guardians as well.

 

A Tiny Bit of Science

Your brain can’t tell ‘reality’ from imagination.

A study mentioned in The Secret talks about athletes running a race in their imagination, where their body still released chemicals and the brain wires needed to use muscles still activated.

“The mind cannot tell the difference between an actual, ‘real-life’ event and a vividly imagined one” – Dr. Denis Waitley

In more mundane life, when you watch a scary movie, you experience real fear.

When you imagine running into that person you like, you feel the butterflies in your stomach. When you see the panic as weasels, you can pick them up by their tails and chuck them out, or you can visualise ferrets chasing them away for you.

The calm that follows? It’s the brain’s way of saying “phew!” because the anxiety is gone from conscious thought.

And it’s in your control.
How about you give it a go.

Could you use your imagination to redefine yourself today?

 

– Rose –

 

Want to access alchemy tools like this for yourself? Head over to the Alchemy Forge to find out what’s on offer. 

Controlling Your Fire: Part 2 – Choosing Your Actions

This is the second post about my experience as a facilitator of an anger management course for 16-25 year olds, and the tips about dealing with anger.

Today, we’re going to deal with the preparation you can do to avoid acting out of anger, and the aftermath.

In case you missed last week’s post, “Dealing with Feeling”, here are three key points to know:

-          Anger is a neutral emotion, though your action may have a positive or negative moral value.

-          Anger is a useful emotion – giving you extra power when you need to fight or flee in dangerous situations (or in this day and age, letting you know that something is wrong and in protecting your values / world-view).

-          Anger cannot be removed entirely (and there is no need to try). However, we can manage it. This means you minimise how often you act upon it and to what degree you act.

Okay, now that’s understood, let’s begin with preparatory actions for managing your anger.


Preparation – Maintaining a Base Calm

A trigger of anger is usually more than just about that one incident. Things have been building up over time and suddenly, you reach the top of the volcano and can’t help but erupt.

It’s a good practise to have methods of releasing small pieces of annoyance so that they don’t build up.


Common methods include:

-          meditation

-          reiki

-          dance

-          singing

-          ranting (in a journal/blog/twitter/to a friend).

  • it’s important not to let them catch you up into the drama though; talking to an empty chair is just as good

-          punching pillows

-          yoga

-          regular walks / runs

-          massage

-          play a game

Some of these techniques will also work during the moment of anger; but if you go for a walk once a week, take ten minutes a day to meditate and get a massage/reiki session once a month, your levels of stress will generally stay lower, which means your reactions to things that may cause anger will also be lower.

Question #4: What can I do for myself to release excess energy and chill out?


Perspective

Will this matter in 24 hours time? Or a year?

How long is your journey? Is it worth being in a bad mood for the rest of the day over? Will getting into an argument help?

Is this even about the situation which has triggered your emotion?

Some of the physical predispositions to anger include feeling ill, being hot, being tired or feeling hungry / thirsty. If our basic needs aren’t met, we’re more likely to react with anger.

Take a step back and see what this is really about, and if it really matters.

Question #5: Will this matter in 48 hours time? Is it worth causing a stir over?

 

Prevent A Future Situation

One of my most useful new practises since beginning the course last May was to speak to someone as soon as something bothered me the second time. This stopped it going from a one-night irritation to a full blown rage over the course of many nights, but also didn’t make it seem like I was complaining every time anything happened. Once I could let go. Twice and it became a pattern.

 

My new routine became:

-          say what the side effect is, then say you think X might be contributing and could we come to an arrangement that means the other person can still be free but I don’t get the side effect:

“Hey housemate, how are you?
“Good, you?”
“Really tired. I couldn’t get to sleep last night.. worry, work, and at times your music was a little loud.”
“Oh..” (or sorry, or silence)
“I wondered if you’d be up for maybe setting a level or a time to finish music by, or if there’s something you could suggest that I do to alleviate this that wouldn’t mean disrupting your chilling out time?”

I’m taking responsibility that it’s MY issue with her music and that I’m willing to change how I act if I can. I’m also opening dialogue so she can realise that her music does affect me.

I’ve not called her a name, raised my voice or made any comment about her behaviour being “bad”. It’s also good to state about this making you FEEL something. Annoyed, tired, restless, anxious… people connect with emotions better than an abstract action.

Question #6: How can I approach this issue once it becomes a pattern?


Aftermath

- If you lost your temper, I’d suggest apologising. And explaining which action annoyed you, why (you could share your view with them?) and how it made you feel.

- If you got angry by yourself (and didn’t do anything to show them), then I’d suggest trying the above tip (6) after you’ve calmed down.

Mini-note: I often find preparing this conversation brings up the anger again. Tell yourself you’re going to go and sort the issue out without the use of anger. The anger has told you that this bothers you; its message has got through. Now let’s be nice and calm and express our feelings to another human being who also experiences emotions.

 

You can’t control the feeling of anger, but you can control how much you let it build, how you act on it and how you choose to view it.

~

Tips:

- Keep yourself calm on a daily basis

- Take up calm-promoting exercises

- Avoid gossiping

- Keep alert to the triggers as you get annoyed

- When you’re predisposed, take extra breaths

- Put it in perspective

- Are your basic needs met?

~

 

Questions For Thought

How do you create your space of calm?

What are your thoughts on anger management?

Do you have an effective method of calming down, or approaching others?

Did you have a question I’ve not answered?
It would be great if you’d post any of these thoughts in the comments section for everyone to share and learn from.

– Rose –

Controlling Your Fire: Part 1 – Dealing with Feeling

Emotions are a key part of the human experience. Some of the most “troublesome” of which include guilt, anger and despair.

As a facilitator of an anger management course for 16-25 year olds, I’ve picked up a few tips in managing this emotion, and wanted to share these insights with you, as redefining our world isn’t confined to just looks or the way we speak to ourselves.

Although this post will focus on anger, the tips could be used to control any emotion.


Key Points

Firstly, I need to explain three things, so that we’re all on the same page:

-          Anger is a neutral emotion: although your action may have a positive or negative moral value, the feeling itself is neutral.

-          Anger is a useful emotion – giving you extra power when you need to fight or flee in dangerous situations (or in this day and age, letting you know that something is wrong and in protecting your values / world-view).

-          Anger cannot be removed entirely (and there is no need to try). However, we can manage it. This means you minimise how often you act upon it and to what degree you act.

Okay, now that’s understood, here are a few points for managing your anger.


Dealing with Feeling

The feeling itself is most people’s first point of call; so that’s where we can begin. After a bit of training, we can find the gap before you get to anger; but for now, I’m going to talk about when you’re in that state of anger or high annoyance (or any highly charged emotion).

The example I use during the course is “I’m on the bus, trying to read my book, and someone’s on the phone loudly. I cannot concentrate on the words of my book when someone is practically yelling a conversation from the other end of the bus.”

My old response would be to huff and give evil glares at the people, while trying desperately to read through it – why should I not be allowed to do what I want? I’m not harming anyone.

As I took the course and then began co-leading it, my response has changed. There are a few options that will lead to a new response in your anger-provoking situation:


Question this behaviour.

“Why” are they doing this?

- In what circumstances would you be on the phone and not care if people heard or got upset? What about if some emergency had happened?

- If you were in the middle of a massive argument that could lose you your husband, kids, career or house; would you care about one person on the bus reading a book?

- Perhaps it’s just a cultural difference in what’s seen as rude?

- Perhaps they have hearing difficulties?
They’re not talking loudly to annoy me, but because they’re engaged in their activity. It’s almost never personal.

Similarly, when someone cuts you up on the road, could they be rushing to the hospital or in a blind panic at missing their parent’s last moments? Could they be late for a meeting that could earn/lose them a million pounds? Are they possibly so swamped with work they might lose their house?

Question #1: What could be happening in their lives to cause this behaviour?


Choose To Not Be Right

- They are going to talk no matter what. I’m choosing not to confront them or give in to the anger. Thus something my end has to change.

- What’s the view behind this?

Most views come under a core belief about the world and how people should behave. Try to find the view that links your triggers together. Then we can look at shifting it for this particular moment.

            For me, it’s the fact that I value people being free to do something as long as it does not negatively impact another person. For example, my reading doesn’t impact anyone. Their phone-call does.

- While these people break this view of mine, I feel annoyed for the people who are being affected; myself included.

However, I can either understand that this is my view; not one everyone will hold / have thought about, and accept that it’s not the only view.

Or I can think about creating a new view. Once I decided that I didn’t want to be upset with people who were in a hurry, I tried to change the view I held.

For example, I believe that all people face the same amounts of struggle/ suffering. The things that hurt them may not hurt me, and vice versa; so I need to remember that today, they could be in pain. If someone is sad, is it worth huffing to tell them they’ve upset me as well? Maybe they’ve got enough on their plate.

That’s a spiritual belief of mine that has no proof whatsoever. But it helps me to let go of anger.  While it works in that role, I’m keeping it.

Similarly, it’s unlikely that every car to cut me up is in a serious life/death rush; but by choosing to believe they are; I stop anger before it even develops.


Am I holding to the views they’re breaking?

If they’re having a good time on the phone to their best friend; am I not negatively impacting on them by giving them the evil looks?

Question #2: What views could I create or alter to allow this to pass by and not cause me more pain? What is this view that’s being violated here?


When In the Moment, Get Out of the Moment

Even the counsellor who runs these sessions with me gets angry and loses it sometimes.

Most of anger management is done before the moment arrives; in not letting situations escalate, or not letting the feeling itself bubble over the top of your volcano.

However, no one is immune to getting angry and seeing the “red haze” or whatever you would term it.

In this case, you want to focus on getting out of the moment; either physically moving away form the situation or taking your thought and emotional processes away from the cause of the anger.

- Counting to ten and back to one is a good creator of space in a situation.

- Walking away is also a good one (maybe go for that walk/run).

- Cleaning’s another good one to get the anger out safely.

Question #3: What do you do when anger brews? What could you do to stop that trigger from continuing to bother you? Can you remove it, stop thinking about it, walk away from it?

~

Today’s Tips:

- Open yourself to other perspectives.

- Don’t take it personally.

- People are private. You don’t know what they’re facing.

- You can’t change their behaviour. So let’s change yours.

- Change how you’re wording it.

- Change the view you’re holding onto. It’s not the only one.

- Remove the trigger

- Get to a safe space

- Use some calming techniques

~

That’s it for today. Did it bring up any questions for you?  Post them in the comments section.


Questions for Thought

What are your main views which cause your anger?

What value or belief is underlying it?

How could you redefine that moment to stop causing yourself the pain of anger?
Thanks for reading. Part 2 will be up next week, dealing with preparing for angry situations and the aftermath.

– Rose –

Relationships: The Body and The Mind

Relationships are different for everyone.

Some are simple, others are complicated. Some are positive, loving and close, others are distance, negative or harmful.

There are so many ways to begin to love yourself; your personality and your body, your style or your heart.

However, what kind of relationship do you have with your mind?

Today you can find me over at Medicinal Marzipan, talking about the relationship we have with our minds. Find the full post here and let me know how you and your mind get along.

I looked everywhere for positive, rewarding ways to communicate with my mind, but found nothing worked as well as being negative.

Then I realised the core prompt was fear.