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jamesofventura's avatar

Writing about the loop we choose to keep feeding made sense to me. I've spent years working with a physician and teacher who said essentially the same thing from clinical observation — that most sustained suffering isn't the original wound anymore, it's the story we keep telling about it. He called it the misery pit. The biology resets. We're the ones who climb back in.

His answer to your question — why do we choose the loop — was practical rather than philosophical. He said the first move is simply recognizing the train before it reaches the pit. Not analyzing why you got on it. Not revisiting the original wound. Just — I know where this train goes. I've been there. There is nothing new to find at the bottom. Stop the train now.

The second move was what he called flipping the switch. Not suppressing the feeling but actively redirecting toward something real and present — something you actually have, not something you've lost or fear losing. He was emphatic that this works faster than people expect, but only after it has been rehearsed. You can't flip a switch you've never practiced finding.

The third thing he said — and this is the one that stayed with me — is that some people don't actually want to leave the loop. There is a hidden purpose being served. The illness, the grief, the anger — it is doing something for them. Excusing them from something. Proving something about someone who hurt them. Until that hidden purpose is named and given up, the loop continues regardless of what else you try.

Your 90-second observation is the biology underneath all of that. He was working from the clinical surface down. You're working from the neuroscience up. Good luck on the new addition. Congratulations.

Xian's avatar

A little off topic, but I was in a very similar situation 10 years ago. I gave birth to my daughter at 40 weeks and 7 days, so basically 41 weeks.

Some of my friends gave birth just a little earlier, and their babies made the US school cutoff before August 31. I remember crying because my daughter missed it by just a few days. It meant that when she started Grade 1, many of her friends were already in Grade 2.

Then life surprised us. When we relocated to the UK last year, the different school system meant my daughter was placed in Year 4, the same year group as all those friends again. 🤣

Well, life is like a box of chocolates. You never know what you’re going to get next.

One more funny thing: I gave birth on Labor Day. So I was literally in labor on Labor Day. 🤣🤣

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