The Escribitionist
No longer a student in a blog class, I am prepared to finally leave the nest and try out this "blogging" thing on my own. Each post is now free of contractual obligations and weekly quotas, so now I can post when I want to! Laziness always wins!
About madhabit


Real Name:
Mark Kelly
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January 22, 2008
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Previous Posts
Vanity Lives -or- The French Bath Blog
words will appear
the past inside the present
Trauma, Victimization, and Victory - Chapter 1
Trauma, Victimization, and Victory - Prologue.
Poverty and Education -or- Write Only What You Know
Lessons learned -or- I'm sleepy and I want to rant !
Testing 1, 2, 3 .... - or - a (very) brief history of my internet life.
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I have a confession to make. When I set out to write a series of essays that dealt with trauma, pain, death, and everything else that’s bad in the world, I thought that the inspiration would come easily. I have my own traumatic story to tell, and I’m sure that anyone reading this does too. None of us are strangers to emotional pain. I imagine that most of us have experienced the pain of violence inflicted upon us, or the overwhelming guilt and shame that often accompanies sexual assault. When I set out to write a series of essays about traumatic experiences and the subsequent thoughts and behaviors that might follow, I didn’t think it was going to be this difficult to start. I am a rape victim, and I have experienced violence that I never knew could even exist, and for the past four years I erroneously felt that I had some kind of expertise in the subject, as if one could practice at suffering and get better at it. I knew that notion was ridiculous even as I still battle with it. The more I thought about writing this treatment, the more pretentious I felt.  How can I possibly tell someone else about what they may have felt? How can I offer advice and suggestions about dealing with trauma when I take anti-depressants and anxiety medications?  The drugs that have been prescribed to me have worked wonders, but not without side-effects that I live with day in and day out -–fatigue, lethargy, malaise; sometimes I wish I could just go back to having panic attacks than to take my meds.
In light of this, in light of the fact that I cannot possibly understand what anyone has gone through and that my own experiences with pain are just as different and unique as anyone elses. Soon after all of this silly guilt that I was feeling about writing a blog, my revelation struck me. It wasn’t expected, as most revelations aren’t. I wasn’t searching for an answer; it’s these times that the answers always seem to come. No, I was merely driving home after picking up my medication, sucking hard on a cigarette and listening to the ambience around me – the squeak of my windshield wipers, the woosh of passing cars, the birth-pangs of a thunderstorm off in the distance. It was a rather drab afternoon with a greyish white sky and some darker gray in the distance; it was a little chilly and rainy. I didn’t notice any of these things as negative though – they were just part of the place where I was at the moment. As my mind cleared, there it hit me. A flood of inspiration poured into my consciousness and for a short time I felt absolutely blissful, as if my car was floating aimlessly, peacefully down the road. Of course reality hit me and I had to come back down to earth. When my metaphorical feet hit the floor, I was deep in thought. If I was going to write a blog about trauma and violence, victimization and recovery, all I could do was marvel at the beauty of being alive and attempt to express that to anyone interested.
For so long have I felt to be the victim of a brutal event that happened to me half a decade ago. Those memories of being brutally assaulted stay with me today as if they happened last week; smells, sounds, and sights are always just around the corner in my head, waiting to spring forth and crash against my rationality as an angry mob throwing rocks and pushing ever closer.
For so long have I been a victim. Or so I thought. That moment of joy that I experienced put a thought into my head that grew into an entirely new concept of what it means to be the victim of violence. “When,” I thought to myself “do I quit being a victim and start being a survivor?” As if a self-help book had suddenly sprug forth into view, I merely caught the thoughts as they swirled around rather than consciously generating them. “Just by being alive, just by existing after going through someone so horrible, that’s what makes anyone a survivor.” Just by living and continuing on with life even when you feel like it’s no worth the effort; just by staying alive are we becoming victorious in our battles with depression, anxiety, post-trauma stress disorder, and any other number of vicious symptoms one gets when traumatized. By simply living, I have won the war. It was then the battles that had to be fought – addictions that had developed, painful memories that surfaced, understanding feelings like anger and shame; those battles had to be fought, but simply because I was alive was the war already won. It seemed to be some backwards kind of logic at first -–how can you win a war before the battles are won? – but then I knew that if I kept living, the opportunities to improve myself would always be there. By giving up and giving in, by skipping out and taking the route of complete self-destruction – that path ensured that I would have no opportunities to improve, grow, and become free of my suffering.
I then knew that all of this time I had been looking for answers as if the solution to all of my problems were like a set of keys misplaced. The answer had been in my hand the whole time; I just hadn’t thought to assume that I already had it. I could see a vision of myself working my way through life. I pictured myself as a sculpture. Everything that was good and beautiful about me was already in place, and as the layers of suffering and shame cut chisled down and cut off, my own image would become clearer and clearer to myself and everyone else.
There is nothing more I can write at this point. I’ve already repeated myself about a hundred times and I apologize to any readers who suffered through that. Thank you for reading; this is very personal stuff for me but it capitalizes on my passion for understanding through mutual communication, something I’ll touch on in a later post in this series.
Tags: life, love, trauma, rape, victory, survivor
posted by madhabit on Saturday, March 8, 2008 at 01:30 AM
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Yesterday as I was driving to pick up my dose of
anxiety medication, I had one of those moments in
life that I like to call "revelations." It's one of
those moments that I have a thought that seems so
profound that I will never forget it. It's not
something I really need to write down; it's a thought
or a fundamental belief that stays with me forever.
Through my studies of psychology, I have been
presented with many different ideologies, ethics -
standpoints - of many different psychologists. I
consider the science of psychology to be one of great
division and differences; many of the core theories
that surround the various schools of thought are
accompanied by some pretty fundamental beliefs that
must be accepted fully or in part. For example, there
are today two very different fundamental cornerstones
that will cause somebody to think of psychology in
two very different ways. One is called "dualism"
which is, for the sake of simplicity, the belief in
the existence of something separate than our physical
bodies. Basically dualism is the belief in the
existence of a mind. The other end of the spectrum is
called "monism." As you may have guessed, this school
of thought essentially rests on the notion that there
is no such thing as a mind and continues forth from
there into various psychological theories. I took a
course on the history of psychology and I was met
with so many different ways of thinking about the
science that I left the class more confused than
ever. What is psychology? What are the intentions of
psychology?
I can shoot off answers to those two questions
without any trouble - Psychology is the study of
behavior. The intention or the goal of psychology is
to learn what causes certain behaviors with the hope
of one day predicting what people (or animals) will
behave and understanding the influences of genetics
and environmental factors. This goal to predict human
behavior with the intention of putting an end to
destructive things that we do is pretty grandiose in
my opinion, but then all of science exists to
observe, understand, and predict. So that was a bit
more than just a textbook answer to what psychology
is all about, but this is my general understanding of
it as of right now. To really grasp what psychology
has set out to do is really to grasp the very nature
of humanity.
These big questions - questions like "What does it
mean to be Human?" - are extremely provocative from
my perspective and they are a big reason why I've
chosen to spend my life studying human behavior. For
right now, I'm not going to pick a side as so many
people tend to do. I can't step onto this podium I've
rendered just to tell you that there is no such thing
as a mind, or to tell you that all of reality is
created by your mind and that things don't really
exist unless we see them. Both claims are remarkably
crass and feed upon the frenzied superstitions of the
overly zealous or the staunch skeptic who has closed
his perspective to a precious few beliefs. I believe
that if I am ever to become a scientist, if I am ever
to really say "I am a psychologist" , I am going to
have to keep all of my beliefs neutral with the
possibility that anything that I think of as being
true can be drastically changed with the light of any
new evidence that might cast even a slight shadow of
doubt. Thus, as a student I strive to keep this
perspective fresh in my mind as I enter a new class
and learn material regarding a very unique and
dynamic science, with every plausible theory
scattered like a puzzle piece amongst a thousand more
plausible theories. These pieces, these constructs,
are just waiting to be all put together into a
unified field.
As I was sitting in my ex-therapists' office (I have
had about as many therapists as I have had
girlfriends. And yes it's more than one ;) ) I
presented him with a question that I felt was
appropriate as a student asking an old, wizened
veteran of the field. "When will I know what
psychology really is?" I asked him. "Furthermore,
what beliefs should I choose when none of them can
really be proven with hard facts?" He looked at me
and smiled as one does when they have rediscovered a
memory long forgotten. "One day," he said, "it will
all make sense. All of the puzzle pieces will fall
together and you will then understand what psychology
is all about."
I knew then that some kind of revelation must occur
before I would really grasp psychology. I knew that
one day, I would have that kind of catharsis that
hits you like a brick and switches a light on inside
of your brain that makes you want to yell it out to
the world. I started this blog with that kind of
feeling, as I indeed did recently have one of these
revelations. Unfortunately it wasn't about
psychology, and I stand before you today empty handed
still; I am a student and a very new one at that. I
am not a psychologist, and perhaps I may never be,
but I know I will always be a student.
It's all about the attitude, and that is what I am
going to write about in the subsequent blogs. The
subject matter is trauma, pain, victimization,
anxiety - everything horrible and disgusting and
negative that you can even imagine.
The subject matter is about victory, life, birth,
laughter, and everything good in life that curves
your lips upward and fixes your gaze into a blissful
and heavenly realm of fulfilled promises and undying
love and potential.
All of this, the extremes in life, are married by a
single fundamental aspect of each and every one of
us. That aspect is the freedom to choose how to react
to any given situation, whether it be good or bad.
That marriage is what I want to delve into
head-first; perhaps I will become that much closer to
my coveted Eureka! when I reach that magical place my
therapist describes... or maybe it won't. It's the
process that makes the journey worthwhile, not the
end.
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posted by madhabit on Tuesday, March 4, 2008 at 12:21 PM
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