Exercises
Help Yourself
Through the Hard Times
by Collin Perry
Some years
ago I had a thriving construction business, a comfortable
home, two new cars and a sailboat. Moreover, I was happily
married. I had it all.
Then the stock market crashed,
and suddenly no one was looking at the houses I'd built. Months
of murderous interest payments my savings. I couldn't make ends meet and lay
awake nights in a cold sweat. Just when I thought things couldn't
get worse, my wife announced that she wanted a divorce.
With no idea what to do
next, I resolved literally to "sail off into the sunset,"
following the coastline from Connecticut to Florida. But somewhere
off New Jersey I turned due east, straight out to sea. Hours
later, I climbed up on the stern rail and watched the dark
Atlantic slip beneath the hull. How easy it would be to let
the water take me, I thought.
Suddenly
the boat plummeted between two swells, knocking me off-balance.
I
grabbed the rail, my feet dragging in icy brine, and just
managed to haul myself back on board. Shaken, I
thought, What's happening to me? I don't want to die. From
that moment, I knew I had to see things through. My old life
was gone. Somehow I'd have to build a new one.
Everyone, at some point,
will suffer a loss—the loss of loved ones, good health,
a job. "It's your ‘desert experience'—a time of feeling
barren of options, even hope," explains Patrick Del Zoppo,
a psychologist and bereavement specialist with the Archdiocese
of New York. "The important thing is not to allow yourself
to be stranded in the desert."
So, can we actually do things
to help ourselves through bad times? As I discovered, you
can take charge of your own cure. Here's how:
Let Yourself Grieve
Counselors agree that a
period of grieving is critical. "There's no shame in this,"
says Del Zoppo. "Tears aren't a sign that you're simply feeling
sorry for yourself but are an expression of sadness or emotion
that must find an outlet."
And it doesn't matter if
the grieving takes a while to surface, as long as it finally
finds expression. Consider the case of Donna Kelb. One spring
day her 16-year-old son, Cliff, Jr., and 15-year-old son,
Jimmy, were sanding their boat. Suddenly Donna heard a scream.
Rushing outside, she found her two sons lying on the ground
near the boat.
Jimmy had gone into the water
and returned dripping wet. When he picked up the ,
he was electrocuted. Cliff, knocked to the ground by the current
when he tried to grab the tool, recovered.
Donna
was so numbed by this tragedy that she didn't cry for weeks—not even at the funeral. Then back at work one day, she
began to feel dizzy."Finally I went home, locked myself in
my room and just wailed," she says. "It was as though this
great weight was being lifted from my shoulders."
What Kelb experienced after
her tragic loss was what Del Zoppo calls a "first-line defense
that shields the consciousness from some extremely unpleasant
reality." Kelb
couldn't begin healing until nature had allowed her time to
sort out her tragedy.
Understand Your Anger
"Anger is natural," says
Del Zoppo, "but it can be released in a wholesome way." Properly
understood, it can serve your recovery.
Candace Bracken's future
seemed full of promise. The 25-year-old airline service coordinator
had a new baby and a new job. Then one day, she began hemorrhaging
uncontrollably. Acute
was diagnosed, and Bracken was given two weeks to live. After
the initial shock, she felt angry. "I
had taken care of myself, lived a straight and narrow life,"
says Bracken. "Things like this weren't supposed to happen
to people like me."
She reeled at the thought
of her imminent death, and withdrew. "I just gave up," she
says. Then a doctor told her she needed to arrange for someone
to care for her daughter. "How dare you tell me to find someone
else to raise my child!" Bracken snapped. At that moment,
she realized that she had strong reasons to fight for her
life. Her anger, formerly crippling, now sparked her. It helped
see her through a harrowing, but ultimately successful, bone-marrow
transplant.
Face the Challenge
Another obstacle on the
road to health after a significant loss can be denial. Instead
of facing what has happened to them, says Dr. Michael Aronoff,
psychiatrist and a spokesperson for the American Psychiatric
Association, many people "try to fill up that empty feeling
looking for an escape." The man who rarely touched a drink
will begin hitting the bottle. A woman who watched her weight
will overeat. Others—like me—try literally to "run away."
After working for bosses
all his life, John Jankowski had always longed to have his
own options and stock-trading firm. He finally got the start-up
money and did well. Then
came a downturn in business, and before long Jankowski was
in serious financial trouble.
"It was like my whole life
had been shattered," he says. With financial resources exhausted
and the pressure of a family to support, Jankowski's thoughts
turned to escape.
One
morning, while on a run, he just kept going. After jogging
westward for two hours, he staggered back home. "It finally
dawned on me that I couldn't run away from my troubles. The
only thing that made sense was to face up to my situation,"
he says. "Admitting failure was the toughest part—but I
had to before I could get on with my life."
Get out and Do!
"After a few weeks, I urge
people recovering from loss to get back into a routine," says
psychiatrist and Boston University professor Bessel A. van
der Kolk. "It's important to force yourself to concentrate
on things other than your hurt." Consider these activities:
Join a support group. Once you've made the
decision to "get on with life," you'll need someone to talk
to—and the most effective kind of conversation can be with
someone else who has undergone an .
Read. When you can
focus after the initial shock, reading—especially self-help
books—can offer inspiration as well as relaxation.
Keep a journal. Many
find comfort in creating an ongoing record of their experiences.
At best it can serve as a kind of self-therapy.
Plan events. The idea that there are
things to look forward to reinforces that you are forging
ahead into a fresh future. Schedule that trip you've been
postponing.
Learn new skills.
Take up a new hobby or sport. You have a new life ahead; a
new skill will complement it.
Reward yourself.
During highly stressful times, even the simplest daily chores—getting up,showering, fixing meals—can seem daunting.
Consider every accomplishment, no matter how small, a victory
to be rewarded.
Exercise. Physical
activity can be especially therapeutic. Therese Gump felt
confused and adrift after her 21-year-old son committed suicide.
A friend talked her into taking a jazzercize class. "It was
just mindless stretching and bouncing to music," Gump says,
"but it made me feel better physically, and when you feel
better physically you feel better mentally."

"Exercise gets you out of
your head and your troubles," Aronoff explains, "and it allows
you to experience your body with your two feet on the ground."
Get outside Yourself
"Many people who survive
traumatic situations eventually find the need to take meaningful
action," says Dr. van der Kolk. "They may
start organizations, write books, work for awareness. Along
the way they discover that a powerful way to help themselves
lies in helping others."
You don't have to suddenly
become an organizer to reach out to others. Irene
Roberts, a 68-year-old medical secretary, underwent grueling
chemotherapy for ovarian and breast cancer. Throughout
the experience, love from her family and friends, as well
as prayer, helped Roberts maintain her humor and positive
outlook.
Doctors and staff were touched
by Roberts's optimism, and when she'd ask how they were feeling,
they would respond. "I'd just lie there and listen," she says
with a twinkle in her eye, "never letting on that they were
helping me more than I was helping them. The truth is that
thinking of others rather than spending a lot of time thinking
about myself played a huge role in my full recovery."
Be Patient with Yourself
People often ask, "When
will this terrible pain stop?" Experts resist being pinned
down to time frames. "Roughly, it's a minimum of six months
before you even start to feel better," says Anorak. "And it
can be as long as a year, possibly two. A lot depends on disposition,
the support within your environment, and if you get help and
work on it."
So, be easy on yourself.
Recognize that you'll need time, and that your own pace of
recovery may not fit with that of others. Congratulate yourself
at each step through grief: I'm still here, I've made it this
far!
Sailing is a slow business.
I made it to Florida in five weeks. In attempting to "run
away," I'd embarked on a trip that gave me a structure, a
daily outdoor routine requiring physical exertion, and plenty
of time. I was still hurting, but by the time I anchored in
Miami, I was ready to try again. At what, I wasn't sure.
"Why not get back to writing—to what you were trained for?" said my dad. He was right.
And here I am now, writing to you. It feels good to be back.
(1 590 words)
( From Reader's Digest, May, 1997 )
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