Friday, 29 October 2010
TBI Recovery and a Higher Power
Recently, I’ve had many chats with a close friend recovering from a compulsive disorder. While I won’t claim to understand everything he talks about, I am more than happy to chat through things with him and hope that my thoughts are in some way helpful. Among the things I myself take from all our discussions are the parallels between recovery from his disorder and TBI recovery.
A major part of recovery for my friend is accepting a higher power can help us recover, but also learning to give up control to that power. (Recovering alcoholics may know these as Steps Two and Three of the Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous.) This may seem difficult to believe, but recoverers from compulsive disorders experience more control over their compulsions by wilfully giving up on having control! That idea’s not a simple one –I think it took me some proper thinking to even start to get it – but please bear with me while I talk through what I think it shows for TBI recovery.
With this idea in mind, I thought through my TBI recovery and realised I’d touched on it in my post, Having Faith I Will Figure It Out. In the post, I describe how I keep myself going by having faith that, sooner or later, I’ll work out a way of solving, or at least of significantly reducing, any problem I run into. Sometimes I think me working it out comes from getting a sign – in the post, Listening to Your Body: Sweating and Cravings for Salt, I wrote about how I (eventually) realised one sign: my body was showing it was lacking salt by giving me cravings for salty foods. Maybe my giving it up to a higher power is accepting that, whatever issue comes along, I’ll be given a sign about how best to deal with it.
On the question of fatalism versus freewill, I fall very much on the side of free-will: while I believe a greater power might give me a sign as to the right way, I believe it is entirely up to me to follow it. Please let me know if you agree or have any thoughts about my attempting to reconcile fatalism and freewill for TBI recovery.
Furthermore, this is not a simple subject: like I said, I still think I’m figuring it out. I also think it’s critical to the daily decisions we make in our recoveries. Please feel free to comment on here if you any further questions on it. If you’re wondering about something, no doubt others are, too.
Cheers,
Mike
Posted by Mike at 29.10.10
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7 comments:
Hi, Mike, I am not a TBI recoverer, I am a MA Psychotherapy student from the UK. I found your blog as I was doing some research in TBI and could not stop reading it until, I think, I read it all from beginning to end. You are amazing and the advice you give from your own experience and insights is extremely valuable and applicable to many other physical or mental challenges we all face. It is a huge philosophical question how we reconcile the faith in the higher power with the free will. I suppose it is like drowning: sometimes it helps just to stop fighting with the water and let go, you'll still have to swim to reach the shore...
Well, this is what I was trying to describe, but you put it much better. It looks like when you have faith, you channel you energy in a more efficient way (like when swimmers stop worrying about staying afloat they can think about where and how they are going to swim).
Anyway, I am glad you are writing in your blog again. Looking forward to new posts.
Mike, my son is recovering from TBI,we found your blog really inspirational.Thank you for share your recovery process
sincerely
Sergio
Thanks, Sergio. Wishing your son all the best for further recovering.
Cheers,
Mike
Hi Mike,
My husband has made a tremendous recovery from a TBI resulting from a car accident that left him in a coma. I share his tremendous story on the page "My Husband has a Traumatic Brain Injury." I thought I would share it with you and your readers. I hope you enjoy it as much as I have enjoyed your blog. Thanks!
Thanks, Tamara. Looking over your website, you guys have quite the story. This blog is focused on lessons about recovery from TBI. Can I invite you and your husband to help the readers of this blog by sharing the lessons you learned? The question we all face is, How to Recover? What might you say to others facing up to it?
Cheers,
Mike
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