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Laqwanda Roberts-Buckley, MSSWExecutive Director
Although it seemed like an easy task, my mind which rotates between manic and depressive episode was screaming to me. “You can’t do this! You just want to go to bed. Ask her to choose something else. You are tired.” I know you may be wondering if it was a big deal, but I too had woken up not feeling well.
Unlike my daughter, my illness was mental instead of physical. For some reason that morning, I did not have the getup and go to get up and go. I knew from the moment that I opened my eyes that all I wanted to do that day was stay in bed. Besides, it was one of my rare days off from work. My goal for the day had been to eat a salad then lay in the bed surrounded around adult coloring books, color pencils and puzzles cannot forget about the puzzles. However, that all changed when I saw 7 missed calls from her as I checked my phone. I had to do a quick switch-up and pretend just long enough to check in with her to make sure she was okay. But that check-in became a new task for the day and my mind was not having it at all. When she selected her breakfast of choice, she looked at me and said, “I have to go back to bed.” I smiled and kissed her forehead and that’s when the real work began. Instantly, I began to tell myself, “10 to 15 minutes. You can stand for 10 to 15 minutes.” Although the conversation to myself sounded good, I couldn’t do it. I had to change my approach. “10 to 15 minutes you can sit and wait for 10 to 15 minutes.” While this self-talk was going on, I found myself also fighting negative self-talk regarding my abilities as a mother. Questions of why I couldn’t just complete the task at hand and why I couldn’t be “stronger” when my daughter needed me most. In order to help myself through this moment, I ran downstairs and grabbed a puzzle out of my self-care bag. (Yes, I have a self-care bag.) I sat there patiently working on a puzzle that usually takes 15 minutes for me to complete. At the end of the puzzle, I got up and guess what??? Breakfast was ready! I did it. I made it through the emotional turmoil of cooking rice for breakfast. I felt good about it even though I felt like shit when I started. I know that I can’t be the only one that can find the simplest of tasks difficult to manage at times. I know I am not the only whose heart drops when their mind begins to attack them with little to no reason. Well, if you find yourself in this boat with me, here are some things that I remembered to get through that little task at hand.
Roberts-Buckley, L. (2019). Struggling To Do Life’s Small Sh*t? It’s Okay.. Psych Central. Retrieved on December 31, 2019, from https://blogs.psychcentral.com/self-care/2019/09/struggling-to-do-lifes-small-sht-its-okay/
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