Surviving the coronavirus lockdown.

This is the first time I’ve put my coronavirus thoughts into written words for a week. What is happening?

Well the government measures have strengthened, with the British public only being allowed to leave home for; one exercise session a day, essential shopping for us or a vulnerable person and key workers to go to work and back. 

For our family the release of the financial support (in particular the 80% wages paid through companies but by the government) gave us some much needed relief from my original gut wrenching panic, of ‘ how are we going to pay the rent’. Combined with this and some clever budgeting we shouldn’t be made homeless by the crisis.

But I feel that for a lot of us this was just the most pressing worry rather than the only problem, I found out from the robust information released a week later, than in fact I was a person at higher risk of complications due to my lifelong asthma condition.

The government have issued the advice that on top of everyone being instructed to follow social distances measures that a high risk person, needs to self isolate for a 12 week period with the people I live with ‘shielding’ me further with strict measures themselves. This for us has caused a severe upward spike in our anxiety and related mental health conditions in the household plus our extended family.

Primarily I panicked, phoned husband insisting he speaks to his manager, putting himself forward for the furlough straight away. I didn’t feel that he was quite understanding that for me, the coronavirus could well mean a spell in an understaffed hospital that doesn’t have enough equipment. This was what the headlines and news channels were bombarding the public with at this time. Having rectified this my husband was home by the end of the day, but we had more to consider with our children’s welfare…

My three children live with us full time, the eldest an 18 year old has fairly severe mental health issues (Borderline Personality Disorder, stages more severe than my own) combined with being higher functioning ASD. (Asperger’s Syndrome) Then I have a nearly 13 year old son and a six year old daughter, both of which are listened under the SENCO teams at their respective schools. Autistic traits and memory problems meaning they need a little more support than the neurotypical children with their lessons.

In addition to this my husbands two daughters, aged 14 and 8, have two different mothers that are support workers (therefore key workers) caught right in the middle of our country’s crisis. He had to make the serious decision of either having his daughters to live here, adjusting to a completely different family set up or having a period of separation where we would only be able to video message each other. Neither case is without stress, I might add and these stresses are typical of the blended family unit.

The younger daughter we share 50/50 custody with Mum and the eldest we have had a trial period of her living with us, but it didn’t work out. So we have her to stay alternative weekends. 

The girls at first decided to stay with their respective Mums.  After a few days, Mum of the younger one realised there was just no way she could fulfil both the expectations of her job in a psychiatric hospital and keeping her daughter safe, stimulated and happy so with a lot of distress; Mum has decided that the little one with come to live with us until the schools go back to normal arrangements.

My eldest daughter who had seemed to be coming out of her last crisis state, although not resorting to her coping mechanism of self harm thank heavens, has had a deterioration in her overall mental health.

Trying to work with the changes to her routine as well as not seeing her favourite person (her boyfriend) because of my health and her boyfriends job (key worker) is really demanding for her and us around her. Restrictions to being able to see her usual understanding doctor, and another doctor not agreeing with the medication she is on currently, has been very stressful just this afternoon.

Personally I am currently dealing with immense amounts of guilt, partly due possibly to my own mental health problems but in no small way because of the implications of covorvirus. It is because of my health problems that my husband is not able to see his eldest daughter, my youngest step daughter’s mother cannot share care of her daughter, and my eldest daughter has to make these extra sacrifices. On top of this I’m trying to educate my two other children who are at very different stages in education. No mean feat I assure you!

I had a couple of days where my sleep was non existent, and my anxiety sky high, this resulted in a serious panic attack on waking up. I do already take citalopram to support my mental health, so I considered an increase of medication but after considerable thought I don’t want the side effects of adjusting to a new dose and I’m also feeling the ‘we’re all in this together’ vibe over social media.

So what I am using to support my mental health amidst corona panic?

• Planning.

– I’ve organised for my children to spend next week with their father, step mother and little sister, so I can enjoy the postive side to self isolation. I’m an avid reader and I also like to write creatively, which is difficult with so many people around.
– I’ve worked out a lesson schedule, also adding my children’s learning platforms ‘Microsoft teams and Google classrooms’ to my phone/tablet.
– I’ve also ordered easier versions of books that I enjoy and that relate to the childrens learning, so I can share them with my little one who is exploring Victorian England (Alice in Wonderland/Oliver Twist) and my middle one who is studying Shakespeare (Much Ado about Nothing)

•Spirituality

I have less time to myself so I’ve started to explore my pagan roots with the younger children, this week we’ve attempted a therapeutic drum circle and I’ve explained how they work. 

• Time out for activities that are just fun!

I take time out in another room to play dragon vale (a game on my phone). No stress, no expectations…simple and achievable. Download on Google Play or I player.

• Connection

Staying connected even now when it is a virtual connection rather than a physical one. My husband is video messaging his daughter, my children their father and I stay in regular contact with my mother and sister by this means too.

• Self Care

Having the extra time as a family has meant I can cook without the same haste as normal. This extra time means I can focus on cooking from scratch and showing the children how meals are made. We are also sticking to a routine of getting up, washed, and dressed with periods of study as well as activity and fun. But we now get to change back into our pyjamas if we feel like it as well 😂!

All in all I feel the coronavirus is bound to bring up difficult emotions, for us all. So knowing that these emotions are normal, we all need to deal with them the best way we can. This is essential.

We’re also making history!

I personally believe that good can come out of this situation too. Less fuel emissions as we cut down travel, personally focusing on family life not just work, realising who in our society are actually essential to the infrastructure (clue – it’s not people with the big bucks that we can’t do without right now! ), less discrimination for people needing to use the welfare system (as lots more of us will need that lifeline). Hopefully a new awareness of supporting the vulnerable as a society not just as individuals will emerge?

Dark Night Of the Soul

Written Feb 2016 – Added to Blog Feb 2020

‘Your job is to take care not to interfere with the work being done by bringing your dayworld biases to it. Let night be night’

Reading more of ‘The Dark Night of The Soul’ today, I’m finding the book is talking to me.

I have been having a darker period with my moods, with my life… I’m trying to not worry and hurt those around me while I explore these feelings but this has become really tough.

I’ve always been connected to my emotions, although when the darker ones surface I’ve always banished them eventually with exercise or distractions.
Since the period of breavement after my brothers loss and the subsequent break down of my marriage though, I’ve explored just being with my emotions instead. Letting them come, listening and letting them leave naturally.

I feel a need to withdraw from the world especially the love and light side of paganism. I withdraw from my friends, from surface chat. From everything…

I need to explore the darker elements, absorb into myself. I like to be completely alone, although I do have a bad tendency to post obscure dark memes on facebook (must crack down on that one ) While feeling this way I read into psychology, lucifernanism; become more selfish and i explore the dream world.

I find this is probably the aspect of me that I have found is met with the least understanding. But it is part of me as much as the positive side is; my life work seems to be encouraging and supporting people in her life so the flip side is the exact flip side. If I make myself just snap out of it, it reappears again, so I’ve felt in the last few years, I should just work with it when it appears. No pretence or false smiles. Just the exploration and acceptance of self.

I’m wondering how my followers feel about themselves, do you have a dark and light side? Is it healthy? Do you suppress it, hide it? And if so why?