Our Embrace With Our Powerlessness Stabilizes More Than Our Power

In our growing familiarity with our fears about medication therapies, we are getting to know about control and identity.  Separate those in hopes that will help us bring them together later.

            I don’t want to lose control of my choices to the control of medication.

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Jane had pocks on her face from childhood acne.  Kids had bullied her.  She learned to fight.  Jane’s mother had a boyfriend who victimized Jane.  She fought harder.  Not against her mom or her mother’s boyfriend, but against kids.  Jane left her mother’s home when she was fourteen and lived between friend’s houses.  Her story continued to develop.  Jane learned to really fight.  She bloodied herself to get control and she still had her teeth.

Jane had sold marijuana for five years when I saw her.  She had used one to two bowls a day since she was twelve.  It was one of the first things that had given her a sense of control.  Emotions sparking, nerves peeled back and exposed, dilated eyes, afraid and shaking; Marijuana took the peaks and filled in the valleys.

And what brought Jane in to my clinic?  This scraping, scratching survivor?  Weeping, Jane’s pocks folded as her face scrunched up.  Thirty-one years old and she was not in control.  Jane was suspicious of everyone who crossed her path, she couldn’t concentrate and just suffered an at fault motor-vehicle accident when she was ticketed for carrying marijuana.  Jane awaited her trial.

Reader, you see the push-me pull-me in the room.  Was Jane ever in control?  Are any of us?  Our embrace with our powerlessness stabilizes us more than our power.  This was the time in Jane’s life where she was available for help.  This was one of the best times of her life, even if she didn’t know it.  It is the surrender of all that we are, controlled and uncontrolled, to our Higher Power that stabilizes us.  Control comes from the outside in.

But being a friend to ourself isn’t about control.  It is about putting ourselves immediately and ultimately in the care of Love.   What does Love want for us?  To be good to ourselves.

We offer medication therapy (and sobriety) not to put us in control or to take away control.  Assuredly some of our goals will happen.  But still, we offer medication therapy when the benefits outweigh the risks to “Me.”  When it is friendly.  Not to erode us.  See blog-post, Self-Care Works You, Pushes You, Tires You Out Until You Are Happily Spent On Your Friend – You.

Over the past two days, we have asked a lot of questions and gotten insightful, perceptive, inspired and intuitive answers with power to connect us and point toward healing.  We will continue to explore these questions and these answers, as they will continue to influence our relationship with and ability to befriend “Me.”  For today, however, I will bank these Q & A pages and pause Jane’s story.  I send you into blog-post, Are Your Meds Safe?

 

10 thoughts on “Our Embrace With Our Powerlessness Stabilizes More Than Our Power

  1. This opened my eyes, Doc: because I have always seen that moment of surrender as the lowest point, whereas you – and the lessons of my life – indicate it is the highest because it is that ‘crossroads moment’. If I meet a moment like that again in my life, I’ll look at it differently. Thanks.

  2. Very interesting post… At least, the good thing is that Jane is slowly facing herself and the help she needs. Thank you for stopping by my blog!
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    Have a Happy Summer! 🙂
    Elizabeth

  3. The concept of control has so many complicated dimensions. The 12 Steps tell us the penchant for being in control is a symptom of our illness and we must learn to submit to and flow with the control of the Higher Power. However, I insist on controlling everything I can because I do not want to be blindsided by harmful forces imposed upon me. I understand I cannot control what others do. I am not interested in control in a sense of being governor of the world, just in my territory. The main thing is that I learn control in the sense of self restraint so I am not functioning in “out of control” mode.

  4. Meh. Marijuana is a wonderful thing *ahem* however, like most “things” it’s not the answer. No, I don’t think we are EVER in control. We can feel like we have a good handle on things so to speak. Most of what people use to feel confident/content/control whatever is in the end (I believe) just stuff made up in our own heads to help us get through the day. PS, I am not saying it’s wrong to use that stuff to get through the day/life just that it applies to a lot of states of mind as well. Like happiness…

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