The Supreme Canuck wrote:SFC: Thanks! And if we are in the same boat, I'd love to hear how you deal with it. Being both interested in discussing controversial things
and conflict-averse is a bad mix.
Mostly, I haven't been, because it's just today, reading what you wrote, that's making me think this would explain
a lot in my life. Years of writer's block. Being so perfectionistic that I get anxiety about things I used to love to do, to the point I can't do them anymore because I'm too worried about whether or not it will be perfect. Procrastinating and procrastinating and procrastinating. Burying all those feelings with food or cigarettes or alcohol.
Things have improved lately because I've decided to ignore feeling guilty and do what I think is healthiest for me. I quit smoking. I quit drinking hard liquor. I'm changing my life in stages, bit by bit, instead of trying to do sweeping changes and then getting frustrated when it doesn't work. Now, I do a step and get it implemented into my life. Then I move on to the next step. Some steps are harder than others. I haven't started working out regularly, even though I really want to. Rather than feeling like a complete failure, I just keep reminding myself of the good changes I
have made, and I keep psyching myself up to stop handicapping myself.
I have quite a bit of plot worked out on a novel with ideas for the beginning and end of two others. I thought I would do lots of writing when we got back from the boat, but apparently, I need to break that into smaller steps as well, so I'm going to start (next week), writing one hour a day whether I feel like it or not. I'm not going to worry about it being perfect. Then, I will slowly increase the writing time. I'm also back to doing cross stitch, something I love, but something I quit doing because I was getting overwhelmed over how to make it perfect.
One of the things that has helped me is being married to a man who insists "near enough is good enough". He broke me of the habit of following a recipe so meticulously that I would get stuck trying to make sure I was being perfectly accurate with the amount of flour, for example. He just throws stuff together and makes it fantastic. I have the skill set for baking, and there was no need for me to be so meticulous. Instead of starting out meticulous and learning to relax, I had started out meticulous and gotten
more meticulous, to the point it would cause me anxiety just to
watch him refuse to follow the rules. But then whatever he made would taste good.
Of course there are areas where being accurate is very important, but the things I'm trying to do don't fall into those categories. So yeah, if you're still reading, I've been dealing with this for almost twenty years without realizing it, and only now, am I getting the mechanisms in place to not suffer so much anymore. I do know what triggered it in me, but now I'm having the revelation that a genuine problem was triggered. I didn't just suddenly turn into a lazy bum. If I don't succeed this time, at least I know it's a real problem and I'm not just some loser, and I'll go seek outside help. But I think I'm making progress.
And now that I've detailed all of this, you can let me know if it's anything like what you go through or if it's something different.
"Do not speak badly of yourself, for the warrior that is inside you hears your words and is lessened by them." -David Gemmel