Somewhere between (àžàČ _àČ )àž and  ¯\_(ă)_/ÂŻ  every day.
Ah the ever elusive ÂŻ\_( àČ _àČ )_/ÂŻ
Iâm more like (àžă)àž tbh.
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@refusetosinkadvice
Somewhere between (àžàČ _àČ )àž and  ¯\_(ă)_/ÂŻ  every day.
Ah the ever elusive ÂŻ\_( àČ _àČ )_/ÂŻ
Iâm more like (àžă)àž tbh.
US Helplines:
Depression Hotline: 1-630-482-9696
Suicide Hotline: 1-800-784-8433
LifeLine: 1-800-273-8255
Trevor Project: 1-866-488-7386
Sexuality Support: 1-800-246-7743
Eating Disorders Hotline: 1-847-831-3438
Rape and Sexual Assault: 1-800-656-4673
Grief Support: 1-650-321-5272
Runaway: 1-800-843-5200, 1-800-843-5678, 1-800-621-4000
Exhale: After Abortion Hotline/Pro-Voice: 1-866-4394253
Child Abuse: 1-800-422-4453
UK Helplines:
Samaritans (for any problem): 08457909090 e-mail [email protected]
Childline (for anyone under 18 with any problem): 08001111
Mind infoline (mental health information): 0300 123 3393 e-mail: [email protected]
Mind legal advice (for people who need mental-health related legal advice): 0300 466 6463 [email protected]
b-eat eating disorder support: 0845 634 14 14 (only open Mon-Fri 10.30am-8.30pm and Saturday 1pm-4.30pm) e-mail: [email protected]
b-eat youthline (for under 25âs with eating disorders): 08456347650 (open Mon-Fri 4.30pm - 8.30pm, Saturday 1pm-4.30pm)
Cruse Bereavement Care: 08444779400 e-mail: [email protected]
Frank (information and advice on drugs): 0800776600
Drinkline: 0800 9178282
Rape Crisis England & Wales: 0808 802 9999 1(open 2 - 2.30pm 7 - 9.30pm) e-mail [email protected]
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(Source)
ALWAYS REBLOG WHEN YOU SEE SOMETHING LIKE THIS PLEASE; ITS SO MUCH MORE THAN IMPORTANT TO PEOPLE. IT MEANS EVERYTHING TO SOMEBODY AND EVEN THOUGH YOU MIGHT NOT SEE THIS IN THE SAME LIGHT, SOMEONE MIGHT. INFACT YOU REBLOGGING THIS COULD STOP SOMEONE TAKING THEIR LIFE TONIGHT.
PAPER CHAIN PROJECT
- For every day you go without self harming or purging, add a colourful link to the paper chain - If you relapse, just add a white link to to the chain and carry on the chain without any disruption - Over time the paper chain will grow in length and you can see your progress, and see that even if you do relapse, the are still days you go without hurting yourself. The colourful links. - Over time and through your recovery watch the amount of coloured links begin to increase, and the amount of white links begin to decrease. - If you feel like hurting yourself, look at the paper chain and realise just how far youâve made it, and realise that if youâve resisted before you can do it again :)
Please reblog, this could help someone towards recovery. â€
hereâs the thing, if you stop and wonder if you are faking that is proof you arenât.
fakers donât spend time agonizing over if they fit into a community or if their symptoms are real or if they have a right to be disabled and use a certain label â they donât need to!
so if you experience those things then guess what? youâre not a faker. đ·
Filtering:Â You take the negative details and magnify them, while filtering out all positive aspects of a situation. A single detail may be picked out, and the whole event becomes colored by this detail. When you pull negative things out of context, isolated from all the good experiences around you, you make them larger and more awful than they really are.
Polarized Thinking:Â The hallmark of this distortion is an insistence on dichotomous choices. Things are black or white, good or bad. You tend to perceive everything at the extremes, with very little room for a middle ground. The greatest danger in polarized thinking is its impact on how you judge yourself. For example-You have to be perfect or youâre a failure.
Overgeneralization:Â You come to a general conclusion based on a single incident or piece of evidence. If something bad happens once, you expect it to happen over and over again. âAlwaysâ and âneverâ are cues that this style of thinking is being utilized. This distortion can lead to a restricted life, as you avoid future failures based on the single incident or event.
Mind Reading:Â Without their saying so, you know what people are feeling and why they act the way they do. In particular, you are able to divine how people are feeling toward you. Mind reading depends on a process called projection. You imagine that people feel the same way you do and react to things the same way you do. Therefore, you donât watch or listen carefully enough to notice that they are actually different. Mind readers jump to conclusions that are true for them, without checking whether they are true for the other person.
Catastrophizing:Â You expect disaster. You notice or hear about a problem and start âwhat ifâs.â What if that happens to me? What if tragedy strikes? There are no limits to a really fertile catastrophic imagination. An underlying catalyst for this style of thinking is that you do not trust in yourself and your capacity to adapt to change.
Personalization:Â This is the tendency to relate everything around you to yourself. For example, thinking that everything people do or say is some kind of reaction to you. You also compare yourself to others, trying to determine whoâs smarter, better looking, etc. The underlying assumption is that your worth is in question. You are therefore continually forced to test your value as a person by measuring yourself against others. If you come out better, you get a momentâs relief. If you come up short, you feel diminished. The basic thinking error is that you interpret each experience, each conversation, each look as a clue to your worth and value.
Control Fallacies:Â There are two ways you can distort your sense of power and control. If you feel externally controlled, you see yourself as helpless, a victim of fate. The fallacy of internal control has you responsible for the pain and happiness of everyone around you. Feeling externally controlled keeps you stuck. You donât believe you can really affect the basic shape of your life, let alone make any difference in the world. The truth of the matter is that we are constantly making decisions, and that every decision affects our lives. On the other hand, the fallacy of internal control leaves you exhausted as you attempt to fill the needs of everyone around you, and feel responsible in doing so (and guilty when you cannot).
Fallacy of Fairness:Â You feel resentful because you think you know whatâs fair, but other people wonât agree with you. Fairness is so conveniently defined, so temptingly self-serving, that each person gets locked into his or her own point of view. It is tempting to make assumptions about how things would change if people were only fair or really valued you. But the other person hardly ever sees it that way, and you end up causing yourself a lot of pain and an ever-growing resentment.
Blaming:Â You hold other people responsible for your pain, or take the other tack and blame yourself for every problem. Blaming often involves making someone else responsible for choices and decisions that are actually our own responsibility. In blame systems, you deny your right (and responsibility) to assert your needs, say no, or go elsewhere for what you want.
Shoulds:Â You have a list of ironclad rules about how you and other people should act. People who break the rules anger you, and you feel guilty if you violate the rules. The rules are right and indisputable and, as a result, you are often in the position of judging and finding fault (in yourself and in others). Cue words indicating the presence of this distortion are should, ought, and must.
Emotional Reasoning: You believe that what you feel must be true-automatically. If you feel stupid or boring, then you must be stupid and boring. If you feel guilty, then you must have done something wrong. The problem with emotional reasoning is that our emotions interact and correlate with our thinking process. Therefore, if you have distorted thoughts and beliefs, your emotions will reflect these distortions.
Fallacy of Change:Â You expect that other people will change to suit you if you just pressure or cajole them enough. You need to change people because your hopes for happiness seem to depend entirely on them. The truth is the only person you can really control or have much hope of changing is yourself. The underlying assumption of this thinking style is that your happiness depends on the actions of others. Your happiness actually depends on the thousands of large and small choices you make in your life.
Global Labeling:Â You generalize one or two qualities (in yourself or others) into a negative global judgment. Global labeling ignores all contrary evidence, creating a view of the world that can be stereotyped and one-dimensional. Labeling yourself can have a negative and insidious impact upon your self-esteem; while labeling others can lead to snap-judgments, relationship problems, and prejudice.
Being Right:Â You feel continually on trial to prove that your opinions and actions are correct. Being wrong is unthinkable and you will go to any length to demonstrate your rightness. Having to be 'rightâ often makes you hard of hearing. You arenât interested in the possible veracity of a differing opinion, only in defending your own. Being right becomes more important than an honest and caring relationship.
Heavenâs Reward Fallacy:Â You expect all your sacrifice and self-denial to pay off, as if there were someone keeping score. You fell bitter when the reward doesnât come as expected. The problem is that while you are always doing the 'right thing,â if your heart really isnât in it, you are physically and emotionally depleting yourself.
I made up this chart after a CBT session. I thought Iâd post it in case anybody found it useful. I really like this exercise because trying to find 8 alternatives keeps my mind busy when I would normally be caught in a negative thought cycle. I printed types of distorted thoughts on the back, as a reference.
*Edit* I cleaned up the image and added my new watermark
Is it hypothetically possible for being born with aspergers and still develop bpd due to trauma? Or could those two in any way overlap how ever small the amount of each? Or do they rule each other out absolutely? Or would it theoretically be possible for someone with aspergers develop an interest in the patterns of social norms?
Thereâs nothing hypothetical about it, Aspergers/ASD and BPD are very commonly comorbid, especially if the BPD is caused by trauma. They do overlap and have shared symptoms (emotionally charged meltdowns, intense relationships, superficial friendships, miscommunications and incorrectly assumed intentions, black and white thinking, obsessions/special interests) which means that there is a lot of potential for misdiagnosis, but they donât rule each other out because of course there are distinct and separate symptoms too. Someone with Aspergers/ASD can certainly be interested in social norms as you suggested, but they can also have BPD in addition/instead.Â
{ this is a skill iâve been using a lot lately, thought iâd share :) }
   {  Distress Tolerance Skill: Coloring Mandalas
PRE-PREP
   1}  go to www.printmandala.com and print a couple of mandalas that you like. (you can also find some on google images.)    2}   buy set of colored pencils or markers if you donât have them. more colors = better    3}  buy a clipboard if you wanna lie in bed and color.    4}  set these aside and ready to go so they are easily accessible when you are distressed
HOW TO USE DURING DISTRESS
   1}  choose a mandala from your pre-printed stash    2}  set a timer (phone is good) for 30 minutes    3}  color it with ur markers or pencils. i prefer pencils.    4}  optional: play an audiobook or music while coloring. make sure itâs not sad music.    5}  when timer goes off, stop coloring. ask yourself, what level is my distress right now? if still high, set timer for another 30 minutes and keep coloring. if tolerable, stop coloring and do thing you want to do.    6}  repeat as needed until distress is tolerable
WHY IT WORKS
   coloring patterns is distracting enough to pull your attention away from negative thoughts/emotions, but mandalas are also repetitive so you can kind of âzone outâ while coloring. it feels good being able to create something and you feel a sense of competency or confidence. thereâs no competitive aspect to it so you can just do the activity without having to worry about doing it perfect or right or better than anyone else. it can remind you of a simpler time when all that was expected of you was coloring. :) it is easy and almost everyone can do it.
TIPS
   â stick to the timer. even though you want to keep coloring when it goes off, stop once you finish the segment youâre on and put the pencil down. tell yourself you can come back and finish it after you do the thing youâre putting off. this is the difference between distress tolerance and procrastination/distraction. (ofc if you actually have nothing you need to get done or if you want to fully forget the thing thatâs upsetting you, the timer isnât necessary.)
   â practice coloring during times when youâre not distressed, so that when you need to use this skill it will be easier and more âautomaticâ. i canât stress this enough. even though coloring is really simple, itâs much better for the activity to feel familiar so that you can easily use it during distress. so if you can practice it during normal times itâll help u. think of it as homework if you have to â you are building up a memory muscle.
   â if you feel guilty because youâre âwasting timeâ doing a âchildish activityâ, remind urself that ur doing this for your mental health, that this is an established skill recommended by top psychotherapists, and that calming down your distress so you can actually *do* the stuff youâre worried about (rather than procrastinating all day about the thing and not actually doing it) is the opposite of wasting time. remember that practicing this skill even when youâre not distressed is HOMEWORK, not optional time wasting thing. also, taking care of ur mental health is not a frivolous activity. itâs very important and crucial to a happy successful life.
Abusers will never give you the answers or the validation you crave. They will never express the remorse you long for them to feel.Â
Let them go.
This. Is. So. Important.
#StopTheStigma
i decided to make some edits that destroy the terrible stigmas placed on mental illnesses
I remember first learning that you can cry from any emotion, that emotions are chemical levels in your brain and your body is constantly trying to maintain equilibrium. so if one emotion sky rockets, that chemical becomes flagged and signals the tear duct to open as an exit to release that emotion packaged neatly within a tear. Everything made sense after learning that. That sudden stability of your emotions after crying. How crying is often accompanied by the inability to feel any other emotion in that precise moment. And it is especially beautiful knowing that it is even possible to experience so much beauty or love or happiness that your body literally canât hold on to all of it. So what Iâve learned is that crying signifies that you are feeling as much as humanely possible and that is living to the fullest extent. So keep feeling and cry often and as much as needed
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZdjbLFPr5k)
Iâm sorry itâs been so long since I have posted. I havenât been well, but I thought I would leave you all with this.Â
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZdjbLFPr5k)
Iâm sorry itâs been so long since I have posted. I havenât been well, but I thought I would leave you all with this.Â
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5PepofDOd6c)
Oh shit. No. Shit. Thank you
Just gonna reblog this out of gratitude because I actually did forgetâŠ
Fffffffff let me get right on that.Â
and then reblog for the next forgetful son of a bitch
Iâm so great full for everyone that is reblogging this. I totally forgot to take mine
just a little reminder that you deserve nothing but the best and so much more!âĄ