Emotions

I Can Slow Down

Does anxiety count as anxiety if you can get yourself to a better place without having the meltdown first? Is a depressive low still depression if you can function? These are questions I’ve always asked myself and were the reason that for years I didn’t seek any help when my mind spun out of control. When I found myself curled up in bed, crying for no reason I could clearly explain or so numb I could barely move, I “got over it” too fast to believe it was serious.

I always told myself to “get over myself” and “buck up” and the million other things I heard in my head, about not being whiny or ridiculous or so damn selfish. Other people have worse problems. It’s not that bad. What do I have to complain about?

Those voices still live in my head, but I’m able to ignore them a little better now. I know, on an intellectual level, that they aren’t good, kind voices. They’re the mean girl voices (that sound like my father, which I refuse to think too closely about) that want me to believe the worst about myself.

So when I hit a low that still lets me function or anxiety that doesn’t suck all the oxygen out of my lungs, I slow down instead of stop. I get quiet instead of going numb – or freaking out. Proving I can never win against my own brain, though, I still berate myself even for my quietness.

You didn’t tweet all day.

Shouldn’t you post to Instagram?

When was the last time you checked Facebook?

Did you answer that person’s question?

You’re not responding to comments or emails fast enough.

Why did you let that annoy you?

Why aren’t you working on this? That? The other thing?

God-fucking-damn, sometimes I wish I could shut that damn voice up. Nothing is ever good enough, unless I’m going full-tilt, balls to the wall, no thinking just action until I collapse.

The nice thing, if there is a nice thing, is that when my brain does this, a certain calm voice centers me. Part of me wishes it was my own voice, but it isn’t. I’ll take John Brownstone and his calm, soothing ways any day, though. When I’m not too far gone, while I’m still functioning, I can let his Dominance overpower me, center me, give me someone and something to follow for a while. Maybe it’s part of my own unique crazy, but when things are only a little bad, letting him lead calms the storm while it’s still just a drizzle.

That calm gives me time to find my center, think through the swirling thoughts, and sometimes just rest a little. I know that the more worn down I am and the worse I sleep at night, the harder it gets to stay in a good mental space. Now that we’ve added the new stress of only one steady(ish) income – mine, while re-adjusting our life, relationships, and D/s all at the same time, I know my anxiety lives just below the surface, waiting to bubble forth.

I don’t have fucking time to be paralyzed by my own fears and worries. There’s too much to do. Too many people to talk to. Too many things to try. Too much. (Too much of the world to conquer, she only half jokes.) I don’t want to stop, but, if I have to, I can slow down.

Sometimes I do it on my own. Sometimes he makes me. Sometimes I don’t have a choice. I’m learning that first option is usually best…even if it means I have to ignore the mean-girl whispers in my head.

About the author

Kayla Lords

I am a sex blogger, podcaster, freelance writer, international speaker, kink educator, and all-around kinky woman. You can find me online sharing my innermost sexual thoughts and experiences, teaching other bloggers how to make money writing about sex, and helping kinksters have happy healthy BDSM relationships. I'm also a masochistic babygirl submissive with an amazing and sadistic Daddy Dom and business partner, John Brownstone. Welcome to my kinky corner of the internet!

7 Comments

  • What an amazingly “real” post. Thank you. I call them My Demons. My demons come into my head and play. They tell me what a bad mother, wife, daughter, friend so on and so on I am. They know exactly what to say to bring me down. I am learning how to keep them away but still sometimes they find ways inside. That is why it is so important that I find other voices to listen to. My Sir, good friends who understand, and people like yourself who share there own stories so I don’t feel alone.

    • I hate those voices…they’re awful. I’m glad you’ve found ways to cope. And I share these stories for exactly that reason (and also to exorcise the voices temporarily).

  • Do you ever get to the point where Whatever JB says or does it doesn’t matter? That’s where we are stuck. Any ideas??

    • It did – and that was when I went to therapy. For me (and it’s completely personal) when I was unable to come out of my head to follow him, love him, or be what I wanted to be for him, that’s (partly) when I knew I needed help. Now, if that feeling hits, I talk it out with him. He doesn’t take it personally, and he eases up on what he expects to help me get through it – whatever the moment might be.

  • It’s called high functioning depression https://www.theodysseyonline.com/exploring-high-functioning-depression. I had it starting in high school, maybe sooner. We scramble to do all the things so we can be good enough, feel good enough, but it doesn’t really get us there. I’m very lucky to have found my husband/Sir; sometimes he can calm the storm, mostly he’s a safe harbor while the storm rages. It’s only recently that I was willing to consider therapy; he holds my hand while I’m there and sometimes all of me when it gets emotionally tough. Thank you for posting about this. It helps to know I’m not alone in these types of struggles.

    • I think there are many more of us out there with similar problems. The more we talk about it – in therapy and in public – the quicker we can decrease the stigma, especially the one we have for ourselves of not being “enough” – good enough, smart enough, whatever enough. 🙂

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.