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Tuesday, August 08, 2017

Flashbacks, ASD and a loved one in the room



Flashbacks can happen anywhere, anytime, but  when they ignite while  a person is interfacing with a loved one, what does that other person experience?

One occasion of emotional flashback, confounded by ASD, follows.


Image result for free clipart for to do listImage result for free image bathroomFriday night, my husband and I devoted our "date night" to looking at some items in preparation for a DIY bathroom remodel.  Tile, tub, mirror, toilet --nearly everything was  in need of replacing.  While the work will be done by my husband and son, I have pretty much assumed the role, after some discussion,  of the designer.  I had done some research .  I had a list in hand: what we needed to buy today;  what could wait.   Keenly aware of the holiday weekend sales, I wanted to pick up anything we were pretty sure about before the sales prices lapsed.  

Notably,  the toilet model we had already chosen, based on one we used in a previous remodel. It happens to be an unusually heavy piece.  For reasons of limited garage space, I had decided that it would be best left at the store until we actually needed it.  [That sale was ongoing for the next few months.  No rush.]




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Note:  For purposes of this discussion, I will use the term flashback to refer to emotional flashbacks, such as occur in complex PTSD. For more information about emotional flashbacks or CPTSD,  please see Pete Walker's very helpful website.  http://pete-walker.com/flashbackManagement.htm

ASD- abbreviation for Autism Spectrum Disorder, for which I have a diagnosis.  For those unfamiliar with the impact of ASD on an otherwise functional adult, I have emboldened in purple aspects of this story which I believe are particularly confounded by ASD in me.


-----STORYTIME, continued------


Walking through the store, we were working pretty well together.  We looked at a washing machine (it was on the list); medicine cabinets; tubs of various sizes. Pat wanted to look at the toilet again. "Fine, I'll see you in the tile section."  Eventually, we'd exhausted the choices to consider in this store. I left Patrick in conversation with one of the retired contractor/sales people, telling him I was going to the paint counter. 


Image result for valspar sweet melonMy paint chip in hand, I waited.  Standing around waiting is hard for me.  But, I kept reminding myself that I was an adult: I could do this. There was nobody else in line except the guy who was being helped already and apparently somebody in absentia, whose large order was in process.   Yet, I strained to determine if the two sales people had even noticed me standing there.  Likely they had, but no eye contact had transpired.  I felt nervous. Impatient. Fidgety. Unsure how to be sure that they were aware of me, lest somebody else pull up and get their attention before me.  
Image result for free image shopping cartIn this harried state of mind, I perceived Patrick out of the corner of my eye, rolling his cart in my direction.  All-efficiency, he started to say something about, "just buying that toilet now."  

Stunned, deafened, blinded by an unidentified-by-me flashback state, I tried to talk him out of it, while continuing to focus my attention on the main thing: keeping my place in line. My befuddled words probably sounded something like, "No!"   
For his part, he couldn't see what the big deal was. "After all, we're here now: why not buy the toilet and take it home with us?"  he thought.
My thoughts,  unspoken:  Well, first it wasn't on the list. [The paint, on the other hand, and even the washer, were on the list.]
Second, it's too heavy to have kicking around in the garage.
Importantly, I'd already decided that we would not buy that toilet until later, when we needed it.

I got my paint sample.

Patrick finally gave up his quest, but not before trying a number of alternate ways to press home his point.  By now, I was really upset. Stunned.  

I was seething mad.  The trouble seemed to be with him, although I was pretty sure he hadn't done anything particularly wrong.
After checking out, the next item of business was to be dinner.

Oh, grand.  Go out to dinner now? 

Pat suggested a place to go. He doesn't usually suggest a place, so to reinforce that behavior, I said, "Fine,"  although I truly didn't want to go to that restaurant.  I was mad;  shutting down. 

Seated in the restaurant, Patrick offered an observation: he thought I might be in a flashback.
Oh, good grief. Now he's calling it?  [He has been reading Pete Walker's book*, to his credit]. 

But, flashback work isn't a discussion with one's spouse.  I needed to get myself grounded and do some breathing: work the 13 steps to flashback management. [See www.pete-walker.com*]
We ate our dinner. My eating disorder scrambled by the flashback,  I ate very mindlessly, consuming much of Patrick's dinner, reaching across the table and dipping into his mousaka with my fork.  At this point, boundary-wise, I was beyond caring what I was doing. 

Once we'd eaten, I asked if we could go straight home, so I could process the flashback.  Pat was fine with that. As we circumnavigated the city on the interstate,  I was quiet, feeling depleted, exhausted, spent, powerless, unmoored.  What was there to say? 

Once home,  to his credit, Patrick decided to take a walk while I tried to settle myself.  No more had I gotten semi-grounded than I became aware of utter exhaustion and headed upstairs to ready myself for sleep. 
 . 
By the next morning, I had realized a few things. Yes, this was certainly a flashback.  I haven't had a  flashback this strong for quite awhile.  But as my little summary of healthy living is, "No rush; no crisis; you are safe,"  this scene hit my big five:  time (we have to hurry and get this toilet!);  crisis (the sale is going to pass us by!); safety (Defined in ASD as predictability quotient: in this case it reads, "You might have thought you had a good idea of the evening's agenda but, ha!  Here's an item you didn't anticipate;" and space (the garage/where you keep your car will be filled to the brim with remodel items, including this very heavy toilet, even though the fellows haven't "broken ground" yet.) If that weren't enough, money is clearly involved here (gotta get that sale!)  No wonder I was quite undone.  Not even to mention that this "bomb" was dropped  while I was studiously attending to the all-consuming task of waiting at the counter.   

Part II:  So, what about Patrick?

It seems to me a sign of recovery that I even raise the question.  It's very not-ASD of me to think about his position.  But I was curious, once I leveled off into adulthood.  What goes through his mind when I disappear into a flashed back state?  Especially if his behavior is what triggered it, as was the case here.  He agreed to an interview so I could write this piece.

JO:  Pat, what was your experience when I reacted so strongly to your idea about buying the toilet the other night?  Where did you feel it?  What did it feel like? Did you experience any emotions? thoughts? What did you anticipate would happen next?  When and how did you figure out I was in a flashback state?

Pat's response:
"The first thing I noticed was that you were not in your adult state.  Typically, when I make a suggestion, you counter the idea, and so on. Back and forth. This is normal.  In this instance, there was no dialogue at all.  You had a frightened, confused look on your face and you made very direct eye contact: your "I am really serious here," face.  When you go head to head on something, you usually make eye contact."
He continued, drawing on the vast knowledge he has of ASD from 30+ years working in the field of special education, including time as a Teacher Consultant on behalf of students on the Autism Spectrum.
"It's normal with ASD that one gets defensive when things are "wrong" or "not planned."  The person with ASD usually reacts very strongly, "This cannot happen! This is not right!"  For you, it seems that when something is not in the program (of expectations), you revert into your child state."

Switching to past tense and third person, he continued.  

 "The scene was so simple.  I thought, 'Joan's  waiting in the paint line.  While she's waiting, I can buy the toilet, get it into my car and then meet her at the check-out.  We can leave together.'"
 I expected her to say, "OK, Dear."
But, instead, I was met with  this wall of resistance.  I tried the" ask; rephrase, ask again" technique that sometimes helps me figure out what the push-back is about. 

"I felt impatient.  In my stomach, I felt fear and anxiety."
"I struggled with pride.  I perceived judgmentalism, criticism, condemnation;  I was tempted to believe that I was a bad person for upsetting Joan."
"I asked myself, do I keep pushing here, or do I back off? I did not back off immediately. I noticed that didn't seem to help my cause. Finally, I reasoned, "If this is a flashback, it won't budge because of a rational argument. "
"Eventually, I realized that it was unnecessary and unfruitful to keep pushing. But, I couldn't discern what the big deal was.  Finally, I decided it was not the time or place to try to figure that out. I perceived that Joan was no longer interfacing with me as an adult.    As I tried to attune to what was going on with her, I felt flashback-ish.  There would be no reasoning together for awhile. So I dropped it."

The  interview process, all very rational, helped us toward resolution of the interpersonal conflict that arose in the midst of the flashback.
My personal work with the flashback steps helped me calm down and recollect myself into my adult state.
[Just in time to process another completely different flashback a few days later.]


 --This post is copyright 2017 by the author, Joan K. O'Connell, all rights reserved---

Wednesday, July 12, 2017

Dear Diary,

Today, my daughter and her husband closed on a new house!

What a series of good feelings this stirs up for me!

Friday, October 07, 2016

Construction- 2016



Sound-cancelling ear protection!  What a gift. I can sit here in the kitchen, or on the screened-in porch typing,  dreaming, painting, listening to my inner streams of consciousness while the workers tromp in and out of the house, pound, saw, and power-nail upstairs. Amazing grace, that this sensory defensive individual abides blissfully amidst the noisy chaos of a remodel.

The project: construct a new bathroom where there was no bathroom, and connect it to an existing bedroom, creating a master bedroom with bath en suite!  Very fancy, for us.

Highlights coming soon!

Thursday, September 22, 2016

Art during Construction






Swishy dip and Blop
(c) Joan K. O'Connell,  September 22, 2016


Wet on wet.

Ochre, sienna,  umber, vermillion.
blue, yellow, rosa and green.

Colors blurring, blending, combining, running.

Salt it.
Mask it.
Turn it around.

Clean line interrupting wash.

Definition.
Preference.

Exhaling with watercolors into the paint.





Thursday, June 02, 2016

Bike riding like a kid

It's a warm summer day, just after a drenching rain. Lovely. Humid.  Good bike-riding weather, for now. I suspect it would be great horse-riding weather too, but I don't ride. 

So, off I went, the L-5 & L-6 issues notwithstanding.  Upright bicycle riding (gently) is supposed to be good for that lumbar area pain.

Earlier in the season, we experimented with various cushiony bike seats. Chose one. Returned the others. Sitting on that, vs. the seat that came with the bike I'm barely impacted by road bumps. 

Wind in my face. Mostly car-less neighborhood streets. Take my time. Gradually increase the speed and resistance. This is very good.

Observing, I realized that I had accessed a young girl in me- maybe 8. Remember? When freedom, speed, invincibility, a bit of risk-taking wonder and timelessness combined? Riding the bike for the pure joy of it. Yummy!

I wondered as I passed walkers on the boardwalk, "Do they have any idea how unstable this helmeted, sunshaded rider actually is?"

Approaching two large construction vehicles parked (illegally) on both sides of the street, I guesstimated the distance between them and dismounted, almost shamelessly, the workers crossing in front of me notwithstanding.  A few weeks ago, I'd tried to ride casually through a similar narrowing, for the sake of the "audience." Wound up tripping myself off the bike in fear.  That's the 8 year old again, but this time recalling the effect of unsuccessfully negotiating the bike wheel getting stuck in a depression at the edge of the sidewalk - ouch!

Temperature rising outdoors. Bike safely back in the garage.  The "workout" cleared my head.

Thanks be to God for the capacity to ride into the 5 mph wind!








Tuesday, May 24, 2016

Maybe we'll write a bit now

Friends-

It's my birthday today.  Thank you. : )

A plan for the coming year:  I'm going to purpose to write in this blog space, as fearlessly as possible.

 Now, here's a piece I wrote for the June issue of the Calvary Connection.




Learning to Lean
© Dancingthots,  2016

“Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make your paths straight.”  [Prov. 3:5-6]

Why not lean on my own understanding, Lord?  It’s served me well to date.  I think.


    Turning this proverb around in my mind (yes, searching for understanding), I asked myself, “What would it be like? How would I feel? How would I choose differently throughout the day if I actually trusted the almighty, loving, all-powerful God (I profess to believe in) to care for me, order my steps, provide everything I need?  What if I grasped the truth that he is with me wherever I go, even to the ends of the earth? How would I behave, interact with others, if I truly believed that I have a heavenly father who cares for me.”

I am humbled by this poem by Elizabeth Cheney.

“The Robin and the Sparrow"

Said the robin to the sparrow,
“I should really like to know,
Why these anxious human beings
Rush about and worry so.”
Said the sparrow to the robin,
“Friend I think that it must be,
That they have no Heavenly Father,
Such as cares for you and me.”

That’s worth a meditation moment.




Monday, February 24, 2014

Creations for fun, warmth, friendship, gifts and occasionally profit!


It's been a busy winter!

Handmade projects by Joan. 

Watch for an Etsy account, to be opened in the spring. 

Cowls-to-go!

Circle or Infinity scarf

More neckwarmers/cowls/gaiters