by threadbear » Thu 17 Jan 2008, 22:17:29
Great thread. Wonderful advice. I think mild agitation and arousal are the features of a creative mind, that will always be running potential future scenarios through it's imagination. We just have to watch the extremes, like gut wrenching fear, in reaction to the improbable, or fretting, when there is truly nothing we can do about the reality of a situation.
My worst brush with worry, gut wrenching fear was when I was 7 years old, and through a series of unintentional screw-ups, on the part of my parents, I was left in a strange town, alone at night, locked outside of my motel, in the dark, for hours.
I'd never been left alone before, ever, and became completely hysterical--as in babbling incoherently with worry and fear.... Fear of being alone and worry that my family hadn't returned because they'd all died in a car crash. I can remember thinking that there was absolutely nothing I could do, and that I simply couldn't stand the intense worry, so I'd have to think about it in such a way that I wouldn't go mad. So I began to think of how lucky I was to have avoided such a fate, and everytime I started to worry about them all dead, I'd stop myself and think...but I'm alive.
When they finally arrived home at about 10 pm. They'd left at about 4 pm, I was as cool as a cucumber. They had no idea what I'd gone through.
I recovered, somewhat, but can revert to this state, if need be. It's actually kind of creepy. It makes me seem remarkably cold, at times, but it's a true protective mechanism.