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Needing courage to start over but super anxious

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  • #106841
    Aim
    Participant

    It’s 2 am and I hope I can make this somewhat understandable. It’s rather long and jarbled. I apologize beforehand.

    I’m 27 and I’m at a crossroads in my life. I have constantly run away from opportunities in my life because they caused so much anxiety and scared the living daylights out of me. I have also caused those anxieties in a way because in the past I procrastinated so often and usually relied on rote memory for tests. However, that type of thinking never really served me for tests like the SAT and I never forced myself to sit down and properly study. I also did this when I had to practice for something and only waited about 3 weeks before a recital to actually start practicing.

    I have also had stomach issues that had stemmed back 14 years to when I was taking doxycycline for Lyme’s Disease. The medicine completely burned out my digestive tract and I felt like I couldn’t swallow for a couple months. Before that time, I felt like I was a pretty out-going person that loved life. I was pretty chubby and then when I got sick, I lost the weight in a couple of months. I felt slightly better from taking proton pump inhibitors for the first round, but I never felt like my old self before I got Lyme’s Disease. I’m constantly thinking about moving back to Japan to start over again, but I’m also thinking about what I’m meant to do in the US. For the passed three years, I have had to stay home with my parents due to my health issues that started to get unbearable in Japan. I came home very ill from living in Japan for a little over a year. I did not want to come home, and I wanted to push to stay there, but I knew it was for the best to come home because my body problems were progressively becoming worse. I am doing part-time jobs with no motivation to save money. When I came back to the US, I started to do part-time jobs with the hopes of getting into arts administration. Because the economy was tanked and my lack of connections in the city, I couldn’t find anyone who would hire me full-time. Around 2 years ago, I threw up at work and proceeded to throw up an hour-and-a-half on the train all the way home. Then I threw up for a couple more hours when I came home, and proceeded to be in horrible back pain for the rest of the week. I went to the GI doctor who was of no help, and told me to just stay away from possible trigger foods. My stomach issues settled for a while but I knew I wasn’t getting the answer that actually helped to put me back into optimal health. It wasn’t until last August that I took antibiotics for a chest cold that I realized nothing I ate settled in my digestive tract properly. While foods like soy used to take a few weeks to bother me, one bite sent me to the bathroom immediately. I was also taking proton pump inhibitors (acid reducing medicine) for 7 years when any patient is only supposed to be on them for 1 month. I decided that I had enough and contacted a naturopathic doctor and I had a breath test and was diagnosed with a severe case of Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth that got so bad that my back was constantly aching and I could never sleep properly. I also found out that my adrenal glands were shot from all the constant stress that lingered from college and staying in a bad relationship with my ex-boyfriend.

    I’m feeling a lot better now after being on herbal antimicrobial and fungicide for a month and drastically changing my diet. The ex-boyfriend did me a favor and dumped me and I’m a lot happier without him. I feel ready to take the next step in my life but I’m finding all of a sudden I’m terrified of all the pressure. I was a good student and worked really hard in college. I majored in piano, but it never seemed like I could get passed a point where I felt comfortable with the performance anxieties and facing harsh criticism from my professors/ other students just about all the time. I admit that I wasn’t practicing that hard when I was a freshman, and it took me some time to grow up and enhance my piano skills. I also avoided talking to a lot of my classmates because I think at that time I didn’t want people to think that I wasn’t good enough. As my playing got better and better, I started becoming really depressed. I was really controlling with my best friend at the time and I was hitting this glass ceiling with my performance anxiety feeling like I’ll never make it passed the next level of my playing. I never accepted to accompany people because I didn’t have a lot of practice with it and my perfectionism would make me super anxious on stage. After I graduated, I felt like I was used and tossed out by a lot of my professors because I could never meet their expectations. I then went to live in Japan by myself and learn enough Japanese to enter into the Japanese work force. I originally wanted to stay for 2 years, but my health, ex-boyfriend coming to the US, and family issues forced me to finally throw in the towel to come home.

    After I came home, things seemed to completely fall apart. I couldn’t find a full-time job. I wasn’t interested in playing piano for ANYBODY because I was so terrified of messing things up all the time. My dog died and then my first cat that I had since I was six had died a year ago from April 2 years after my dog died. I took on a part-time job about a year after my dog died as a pet-sitter/ dog walker so I could be around dogs since I couldn’t see mine anymore. While I love walking and taking care of the pets, I don’t love the job. All of my clients love the work that I do for their pets. However, I feel like my mental capacities need something a lot more exciting.

    For now, I’ve been thinking about entering into a Japanese company here in the US for a few months to a year so I can improve my Japanese and hopefully save some money so I can either go back to Japan or figure out the next step in my life. I started looking into taking a huge exam called the JLPT and I’m actually taking the time to study properly this time, but I can’t seem to let go of the anxiety of studying. The test isn’t until December! But, I can’t help thinking of how many answers I don’t know or what I’ll mess up. How do I let go of these toxic patterns?! I know a little stress can be motivating, but I don’t want to have to go on stomach pain medications again every time I feel anxiety for something as silly as this. I also don’t want to keep avoiding things that are challenging because they’re uncomfortable for the rest of my life. The thought of living with my parents for the rest of my life makes me even more uncomfortable.

    I want to motivate myself to study for it so I can prove to myself that I can pass it.
    After all of this crap years later I’m starting to feel like my old self. I want to do something crazy since I felt like I’ve lost 3 years and then some to this illness that was never diagnosed properly. I still love music, but I also want to have a life outside of music. I’m also constantly thinking about going back to Japan. I’m really tempted to try commercial modelling even though I’m already 27. I also want to learn how to play the shamisen. I also want to do a job that actually gives back to people. I have always wanted to be a performer when I was a kid. I was always playing violin or piano or singing in recitals and I loved it. Ever since I had to go on proton pump inhibitors, it actually made it so I couldn’t absorb vitamins and nutrients from food properly which caused a lot of anxiety. I also never learned how to cope properly. I’m on the mend, but I still have a long ways to go to overcoming my over-whelming and performance anxieties. I felt like I have been held back and missed out on so many things because these anxieties and uncomfortable feelings that I haven’t been able to get over yet. I feel so close and yet so far away still to being my best self.

    #106845
    Inky
    Participant

    Hi Aim,

    It sounds like you are in a vicious cycle. Every time you feel anxious it activates health problems and vice versa.

    The things I’m getting intuitively are for you to become a piano teacher and teach small children. Then join a community orchestra or play the piano at a church. These are low pressure environments. If you mess up a note, people will think “OMG she’s amazing!” rather than the botched B flat.

    Conservatories put a lot (A LOT!!) of pressure on their students. My grandfather turned down a conservatory to go to an Ivy League school because he knew the Ivy would be less stressful. Think of that! Very few emerge from the pressure cooker to become professionals.

    Please don’t view yourself as having wasted years of your life. You traveled! You had work experience! You (at one point) fell in love!

    Health wise, may I recommend Vitamin D. When we have a deficiency our anxiety can go through the roof. (Believe me, I know!!)

    Blessings,

    Inky

    #106849
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Hi there,

    I actually think you are doing really well. You are overcoming your health issues and you have a plan. I think you need to breathe and write a plan. Try to focus on one thing at once. I think you suffer from anxiety, a good vitamin b complex can help that. Or some therapy/self help books. Good luck!

    #106854
    Aim
    Participant

    Inky and Kat. Thank you for your responses. My naturopath has me covered on the vitamin front. I have been taking Pantothenic Acid (Vitamin B5), a food-grade multi-vitamin, zinc carnosine, and zinc. For Vitamin D, it’s actually better to absorb it from the sun. My naturopath wants me to go out before my sunblock takes effect and make sure I get some color. I’m super pale, by the way so it’s a completely new way of thinking for me. Eventually, the plan is for me to keep adding new foods back into my diet so that I don’t need as much help with the vitamin supplementation. For vitamin B-complex, I found that Nutritional Yeast from the brand Barg’s to be really helpful. I am really relaxed whenever I eat it over soup. Overall, I have gotten to be a lot more energetic and I even tried out a muay thai kickboxing class that I’m thinking of joining that gym.

    The only thing I have trouble with now is learning how to overcome my anxiety triggers. For example, that exam that I want to attempt but the thought of being conquered by it yet again sends my heart racing.

    Inky, I’ve been told that I would be a good teacher by a couple of people. There were a couple times when I failed miserably at teaching in college and when I took a CELTA course, but I learned from those times and realized not everyone is going to have the same expectations of me. I did pass my CELTA, by the way but I was so scarred for a couple years after I took that course. I don’t feel like I’m ready for teaching piano yet. I felt like I ended up learning piano really fast that I didn’t focus on the basics. I’m currently taking lessons to try and get myself in playing mode. However, I’m willing to just take on casual students and see where that goes. Actually, I’m not sure I even want to teach piano, but I really want to see if I can start over in Japan while I’m still in my 20’s. In my heart and gut, I feel like I’m meant to go back to Japan for a while. My mother felt my going to Japan was a terrible idea and it set me back a few years in terms of job, but in a way I felt like it was meant to happen that way so I would be forced to look at all the unhealthy issues in my life at the time. Of course living there wasn’t perfect, but I felt like I was starting to come into my own felt my introverted personality fit in really well there. I have a lot of friends who have told me that they’re waiting for me to come back. I am finally having a social life after months of being at home and going on dates. I’m not saying that I want to give up the piano but I feel a call to try other things besides staying at home hours a day practicing. I think I want to try my hand at teaching English to little kids in Japan for a while and then maybe go back to school for piano pedagogy certification. I am toying with the idea to eventually get my teaching certification in piano pedagogy in Japan eventually but I’m not a 100% sure yet. I also need to think about if or when I come back to the US and what I would do for work then.
    I think for right now I just need to learn how to deal with my triggers first so I’m not a total mess when I get these anxiety attacks.

    #106878
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Aim:

    I am sorry you are suffering from these digestive problems. Calming yourself is extremely important, I believe, in helping your digestion and anxiety: guided meditation, calming yoga, Tai Chi are some ways to get calm; deep breathing, mindfulness, all through your waking hours; calming music, hot baths, hot tea… again and again attend to your anxiety, your stress level and return to calm. Perhaps short term therapy for this purpose can help, a therapist specializing in treating anxiety in non pharmaceutical ways.

    anita

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