Wednesday, May 23, 2018

Want To Know What Acute Anxiety Looks Like? Step Inside The Panic Room, And Watch Your Step

My daughter's dance demonstration was tonight. It's a once a year event that is a big deal for little girls. I left work and drove an hour in rush hour traffic and made it with ten minutes to spare before it started.

It seemed to me like organized chaos. My wife was one of the "helper moms" for a pack of little girls and was there already. I sat down and took over feeding the baby and tried to keep track of my other son. A bunch of stranger girls took the stage and were doing their choreography. It was four sets or so until my daughter had her time on stage. I tried to relax. But something wasn't right; I could feel it.

When you have an experience of acute anxiety and the corresponding physiological reaction--shortness of breath, muscle tenseness, panic, and a feeling of the world closing in on you--it leaves a psychic impression, I think, one that lodges itself in your subconscious as a kind of minor trauma that your body and mind can recall. I recognized the beginnings of it, because it wasn't the first time.

A few years ago we were visiting my brother and sister in law for Fourth of July in State College. As we crested the hill to meet them at Beaver Stadium and I saw the massive wave of cars and crowds, I tensed up, and words started coming out of my mouth that weren't making sense, kind of like turrets. I knew if I drove into the sea of cars into the parking lot, we would be stuck and not be able to get out, and that was an irrational nightmare for me. I had to pull over and do a U-turn straight back to our hotel and apologize later for leaving them without an explanation besides, "I'm sorry...it was too much." I was mortified and embarrassed, since I seemed to be the only one with this problem. I went to the hotel and didn't say a word and went straight to bed.

My family understood, because they know me. I don't like crowds--I loath the Big Apple, I don't go to concerts or festivals, and even large family gatherings, graduations, banquets, and weddings are sources of stress because of this involuntary reaction. I suppose it is a kind of claustrophobia that feels like you are being electrocuted with low-voltage wires.

But that was a few years ago, and I had kind of forgotten about it, though I still am aware of the triggers. I didn't expect to experience the same thing tonight at the dance demonstration. A psychologist friend of mine told me once, "Rob, your brain doesn't work like other people's brains." I started to tense up. There was too much going on around me--crowds of parents, little girls in tiaras everywhere, trying to keep track of my own kids, stimulation everywhere I turned. I had left my anxiety medicine at home--I hadn't needed it in so long.

This afternoon at work, right before leaving for the recital, I was giving a campus tour to a young man with autism and his parents. Like me (in some ways), his brain didn't seem to work like other people's brains. Over the course of the tour he would notice inconsequential things and bring up the most random questions (like the flow of traffic at certain intersections and if the shuttle bus came at certain intervals) and act inappropriately at other times. His parents were very sweet and you could tell they loved him and were tired in their 70's. In all honesty, I was tired myself and a little short on patience and understanding and was glad when the uncomfortable tour was over. I felt guilty--I got the feeling he did not have many friends as a result of his autism--a long loneliness. I've gone through it with my friends at my lowest times--you can taste the alienating character in depression and anxiety, because no one seems to have the right words to say, and it's self-isolating. You want to be loved, but make it hard. This is the fallen human condition, in many ways--desiring love and sabotaging it so it can't be given a chance. You know patience wears thin, and people can only do so much. It's just a matter of time, really.

Back to the recital. My muscles were clenching, and my hands were trembling. There was too much going on, much too much, and I was breathing heavy. I hated my wife for making me come. I managed to catch my little girl's first act and was a proud of dad, but the feeling degenerated quickly into panic--I had to get out, and had four more sets after intermission until she was on again. It was like trying to breath through a straw. I had no idea where my son was, though he was just walking around with his cousins. Everything was amplified in flight or fight response and I knew the turrets speech would come soon enough if I didn't address the situation. Anxiety, like many other mental disorders, is a hard thing for people who don't experience it to understand. My wife encouraged me, with great understanding, to just leave with the baby, that it was no big deal.

I didn't know what else to do, I felt like I was about to be buried alive. I paced back and forth from the auditorium to the lobby and back again three or four times, and then took the baby and left, telling my wife I would see her at home. She understood, no blame at all. But as I left the parking lot pushing the stroller to my car, salt burned my eyes. I could taste the shame--my mind had gotten the best of me, much to my embarrassment. "Your brain doesn't work like other people's, Rob." I missed the last part of the recital. My daughter was fine with it, she was very laissez-faire about her performance. But I knew my anxiety had gotten the best of my this time with this defection of duty. I hated every minute of being there, and I was free now, but steeped in shame for not being able to handle what normal people handle without even thinking about it.

I made it home 45 minutes later, fed and changed the baby, and just kind of stared out the window for a while. The hardest thing is the triggers, the things I know that set me off, are ridiculous: parking garages, crowds, too much stimulation, the fear of losing my children in public on my watch, sporting events or concerts. I was out of the danger zone back at home, but what does that mean for me as a man when called to face those things in the future, when it's time to step up and enter into the fray?

"Always real, and never true," the artist Antonin Artaud wrote to describe depression, which could just as easily be used to describe the experience of anxiety and panic attacks. It lives in the mind wearing a ridiculous oversized coat. It is embarrassing and cuts checks in the currency of shame. It threatens friendships, because people don't know how to respond, because, hey, parking garages and baseball games and crowded beaches are things to be enjoyed, not terrified of. It's not normal (that ubiquitous word that is the bane of anyone suffering from mental disorders).

We all have our crosses, the things that make us sweet blood under duress. I have hithchiked across continents by myself, made friends with ex-cons straight out of prison and stayed with their families, bungy jumped off the highest vertical drop in the world form a gondolar suspended over a canyon in New Zealand, and biked over and down the Rocky Mountains cross-country, descending for forty minutes at forty miles an hour on a bicycle without thinking twice about it.

But I'm scared to death of the most innocuous things at the same time, like a crowed dance recital, or the Lincoln Tunnel, or the beach on Memorial Day weekend. It makes no sense.  I missed my little girls' second act because I couldn't keep it together. I know she understands, but I'm still ashamed. The tranquilizer I took when I got home is starting to take effect, and I'm getting sleepy and my central nervous system is slowing down. I'm feeling calmer now that I am removed from the situation. I will make some tea and settle down for the night.

Just when you think you're living a normal life, every now and then you get the rug pulled from under you. A good place to be for finding God and remembering the words of St Pio: Pray, Hope, and Don't Worry."

Sunday, May 6, 2018

#marriageworks

Every now and then in a marriage you reach a periodic "boiling point." By definition, the boiling point of a substance is the temperature at which the vapor pressure of the liquid equals the pressure surrounding the liquid and the liquid changes into a vapor. It could be called, in less scientific language, a turning point--the point at which something turns into something else.

That 'something,' in our particular circumstance today, seemed to be external. "Can you put away the junk from the car that I brought inside to the front room," I asked Deb earlier this week, "I don't know where it goes." "Sure, I will." Three days later it was still there. It seemed like a simple request that would have taken all of five minutes. I know we are different in that regard; mess bothers me...a lot. My wife isn't as affected by it. When I come home from a trip, the first thing I do is unpack my bag and put everything away. My wife is the opposite (in fact, the suitcase from our trip last week is still sitting, full of clothes). It bothered me that it, as well the stuff by the door, was still there, but I kept it to myself.

Later in the evening, I asked if she would like to watch a movie together later. "Yes!" she said. She had been working overnight shifts the past couple nights, but had gotten some good rest at her dad's this afternoon, so I was hopeful. There's nothing I like more than just sitting on the couch with her and hanging out. But before I could even start watching something after the kids were asleep, she was too, and again chalked up another feeling of slight internally. I'm used to her falling asleep, which I don't mind. I just wish she hadn't promised to watch a movie with me at all, as I had been looking forward to it most of the evening.

After I carried the kids up to bed, I tried to get her to come upstairs, since she still had her contacts in (another pet peeve) and that she would be more comfortable in our bed rather than the couch. She promised she would be up in five minutes. I waited in bed for her (I had slept alone the past three nights and thought she would want to come up) but five minutes turned into half an hour. When I came down, she was asleep. That's when the cumulative effect of all the little things from the past couple weeks started to weigh and tip the scales.

When she finally came up (I rudely woke her), I was angry, and I told her so. It wasn't about the junk by the door, or the falling asleep, or the contacts, or the ten other things that weren't followed through on. When I translated it, for myself, it came down to feeling like I could not count on her. Which translated to what I was asking was not important enough to take care of. Which translated to a lack of respect. And for men (at least for me) respect carried a lot of weight. It is one of the 'big ones,' just like love is for wives.

When I made a point of all this, the liquid started to turn into vapor. Deb had her own things she was holding on to. She hated working. She loved being home on maternity leave. Even though it was only three nights a week, she hated not having energy for the kids, being short-tempered with them, feeling like a failure for not wanting to clean up a house that would only get tornadoed again. We figured that going down from full time manager work to part time shift work (where she could leave work at work) and not having to do childcare would be a better step. But the same difficulties remained. Every time she looked at a calendar and thought "when am I going to sleep? When am I going to be able to homeschool?" and every time she was in the midst of being with the kids and thought "how can I do anything with them hanging on my every move?" the feelings intensified, she felt like she was letting me down, and she had no energy to do the things she so enjoyed while on leave--spending all day with the kids, cooking dinner for the family, having the energy to do what needed to be done around the house. She wasn't divided then, and she was divided now.

I, for my part, have felt guilty that I didn't make more money so that she didn't have to work at all. I wasn't fulfilling my vocation as a provider, at least how I imagined it should be. I had my own feelings of failure, but was trying to keep a perspective that many people are struggling much harder, and that we actually have it pretty good. Plus a nursing job that pays well is a hard thing to give up. But it became clear tonight that what I thought was working, and what she thought would work, in fact, wasn't. What we were in seemed like it should work, but it just wasn't. Otherwise she wouldn't be crying and saying how much she hated having to leave the kids, even for a couple nights a week, and how she just wishes she could be home. She was sacrificing time for money. That is my job, and like it or not, I felt like less of a man for putting her in this situation. The boiling point is when one thing changes to something else entirely. What started as petty grievances had in fact given way to deeper-root things--about our marriage, about how we raise our kids, about work and responsibilities. It was overdue, but I still didn't see a way out of it. So I did what I always do when my back feels like it is against a wall--I went into the other room, and prayed.

It wasn't formalized, wasn't desperate. I had full confidence, after years of seeing God come through for us in ways only He could pull off, that He could do it again, something, anything. I began my prayer as I often do when I need to hear His voice: "Speak, Lord, for your servant is listening" (1 Sam 3:10). With full confidence, again, that God speaks and makes Himself known in the Word, I trusted him to lead me. And so, quite randomly, I opened my Bible to Proverbs 22, and read:

"A good name is more desirable than great riches,
and high esteem, than gold and silver.
Rich and poor have a common bond:
the Lord is maker of them all.
The astute see an evil and hide,
while the naive continue on and pay the penalty.
The result of humility and fear of the LORD
is riches, honor and life.
Thorns and snares are on the path of the crooked;
those who would safeguard their lives will avoid them.
Train the young in the way they should go;
even when old, they will not swerve from it.
The rich rule over the poor,
and the borrower is the slave of the lender.
Those who sow iniquity reap calamity,
and the rod used in anger will fall.
The generous will be blessed,
for they share their food with the poor.
Expel the arrogant and discord goes too;
strife and insult cease.
The LORD loves the pure of heart;
the person of winning speech has a king for a friend.
The eyes of the LORD watch over the knowledgable,
but he defeats the projects of the faithless.
The sluggard says, "A lion is outside,
I might be slain in the street."
The mouth of the foreign woman is a deep pit;
whoever incurs the LORD's anger will fall into it.
Folly is bound to the heart of a youth,
but the rod of discipline will drive it out.
Oppressing the poor for enrichment, giving to the rich:
both are sheer loss."


Every word I read felt as if the Lord was the one speaking them to our particular situation; that is how the Word works:

A good name is more desirable than great riches. 

[Was I idolizing money at the expense of our children's legacy and my family's well being?] 


The result of humility and fear of the Lord is riches, honor, and life.

[I came to him in humility...would he provide?]


Train the young in the way they should go; even when old, they will not swerve from it.

[The energy needed to discipline our children often went to work for Deb. Would we pay the price for nice things later at the expense of our children?]


The borrower is the slave of the lender.

[Was I putting my wife in a position in which she was paying her time to someone else (work), when it was more needed at home?]


The generous will be blessed, for they share their food with the poor.

[Were we trusting enough in God's providence, or being tight-fisted in building up grain silos to store everything?]


Expel the arrogant and discord goes too; strife and insult cease.

[Were we both arrogant in our own ways towards each other, feeling slighted, clutching our hurts and throwing them back in one another's faces?]


The Lord loves the pure of heart.

[I trusted in my motives for coming to Him. Can he make a way?]


The rod of discipline will drive it out.

[We have been struggling so much with our son...has the lack of energy due to Deb working more than needed and laxity towards discipline brought it on?]


Oppressing the poor for enrichment, giving to the rich: both are sheer loss.

[In the end, our time is worth more to our kids and family than our wages. One of us needs to work, but do we both need to? Can it work some other way so that my wife doesn't have to? Or are we giving our time away, resulting in sheer loss?]



I closed by imploring St. Joseph's help again to make a way for me, present an opportunity, something to alleviate my wife's inner-strain. It felt reckless to consider Deb giving up such a good job, or at least cutting way back on hours. 

But in some ways it felt subtly like the contraceptive and abortive mentalities, "Do the right thing. Be responsible. You can't do this." Seemingly sound advice couched in fear and a lack of trust that God will provide. But we live by faith, and so I have assurance that He will make a way for us somehow, some way. Close doors, open doors, Lord I don't care. We trust in you. We are stepping out in faith

I closed my bible, finished my prayer to St. Joseph, and went to bed, thankfully to even have such options to consider to make things better for our family. Give us this day our daily bread, and forgive us our trespasses...as we forgive those who trespass against us.