Recovery Through Love. No Anesthesia. No Bullshit. 🥰
This week, I finally stopped arguing with permanence. Not the things I can change—I know that dance well—but the things I can’t. Chronic conditions. Lifelong diagnoses. Bodies and brains that don’t magically “turn around” if I just try harder. In IFS terms, I hit a trailhead where perfection, fear, shame, and denial were all standing guard. Acceptance isn’t giving up. It’s making peace. Before I can walk forward and live meaningfully with what’s permanent, I have to befriend the parts that are terrified of imperfection and rejection. When those parts feel safe, they don’t block the path anymore—they offer wisdom,…
One of the cruelest parts of bipolar disorder is never fully trusting good feelings. Is this joy—or the start of hypomania? Is it real, or is it a glitter-bomb that’s about to explode into consequences? Right now, I can see that some recent “good” feelings were actually mild destabilization during a medication change. Not a crisis. Not euphoria. Just enough hypomania to make a mess. Awareness doesn’t erase the frustration, but it gives me a chance to course-correct, repair, and keep moving forward. This is the work: learning to hold joy carefully without letting fear—or denial—run the show.
On paper, I’m “stable.” My mood is steady. No swings. No spirals. But underneath that stability is a brutal reality: crushed energy, flat dopamine, and relentless akathisia. For years, one side effect quietly dictated my life and drove me to self-medicate with alcohol and kratom just to function. I finally named it for what it was—and chose a different path. This med change isn’t about chasing perfection; it’s about survival. I’ll take a few hard months of transition over another cycle of substance use, crisis, and hospitalization. Stability that destroys your body isn’t stability. It’s a trap.
Jessica isn’t a bully. She’s a protector with a sharp tongue and outdated intel. For years, she roasted me in the mirror, commented on everything, and called it “help.” Ignoring her only made her louder. What changed wasn’t silencing the voice—it was listening to it. Jessica was frozen in time, using criticism as armor. Once I showed her I was grown, safe, and capable, the tone shifted. Less attack. More collaboration. Turns out the inner critic isn’t the enemy. It’s a scared part that never got the memo that we survived.
Five days ago, I began a different kind of climb — not up a mountain, but through a medication change that could finally free me from akathisia. Years of medication-induced restlessness pushed my nervous system to the edge and drove me toward substances just to survive daily life. Now, with careful medical support, I’m starting a slower, steadier transition toward relief. It’s early, and I’m cautious, but so far the ground feels solid. This weekend alone at a lookout has given me the quiet space to listen to my body, trust the process, and hope for a future with fewer…
40mm abstract photography accountability alcohol sobriety anxiety anxious attachment attachment wounds autonomy avoidance bellingham washington bellingham waterfront bipolar disorder black and white photography boundaries breakups broken heart cannabis sobriety chaos compassion consequences control courage CPTSD crying dance downtown bellingham drugs ego death emotional sobriety emotions exposure therapy fear fear of abandonment fear of loss of love fear of rejection Fixed Zoom freedom friendship full color photography gratitude grief happiness healing healing journey heartbreak identity death identity transformation inner work integrity internal family systems kratom sobriety letting go little squalicum pier lived experience loss love major life changes mental health mindfulness mindful photography music nervous system regulation ownership Pacific Northwest parental wounding parts work patterns performing personal growth photography photography as memory platonic relationships PNW problems psych meds radical acceptance recovery relationship damage relationships resilience Ricoh GRIIIX romance safety secure attachment self-love selfies shadow work shame slow photography sobriety sovereignty starting over transformation trauma trauma responses truth unconditional acceptance unconditional love urban photography vulnerability
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email