MUSIC IS THE OPPOSITE OF NIHILISM........Guest Blogger

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Music is the opposite of nihilism.

This is a sentiment I discovered when working through my PTSD. In order to explain it, I have to first characterize trauma. To be clear, the exact nature of trauma is entirely unlike other emotional states—it operates on a plane of the emotional spectrum all its own. It is not the lethargy and disengagement of depression, or the persistent itch of anxiety, although it might contain those things; it is something altogether other. So describing what it feels like is something like describing color or sound. There is a strong sensory and experiential nature to trauma that can only be pointed at, not captured by, language. But it isn’t true that trying to translate it is futile, since it’s based on (or, rather, attacks) something fundamental to the human condition. In fact, it might be the thing that comprises the human condition itself.

That thing is storytelling. People do not respond well to meaninglessness and chaos. The human mind craves order, sequence, sense—and we do this against our will. The part of the brain that recognizes faces (it is a miracle of evolution we see anything other than assorted body parts, much less that we can ascribe consciousness and emotion to people around us based on expressions) works overtime, and we see them in clouds or paintings. We view objects in the world in terms of how they might serve or impede us. We have a conception of our own selves, a reflexive narrative of how we got here and why, and this unexamined set of beliefs guides our actions. Storytelling is the essential function of language—beginning, middle, end, a plot arc, more than just the transfer of raw information—and it might well be one of the oldest traditions we still do as human beings.

 Trauma, essentially, is the upending of meaning. It is the enemy of storytelling. When I was having flashbacks, they weren’t just a confusion of senses and a hurricane of feelings; they were the breakdown of the fabric of reality. In this state, words like ‘sad’ and ‘angry’ do not apply; these feelings might come afterward, when you can process the event, when you return to the realm of meaning. It took me months to fully realize I was enraged about what I had witnessed during my bus accident, because I simply hadn’t yet come down to Earth enough to possess the reflective tools to make sense of it. Without sense, there is no rage. Trauma operates in this world of senselessness, or rather in no world at all; it is the utter tearing up of the systems of the soul that relate in any meaningful way to the events around it. I can best describe it as terror, bewilderment, panic, and a feeling of profound vulnerability. It is a storm.

Many people, especially Jews who received a religious education, are taught that the basic dichotomy of the Bible, Judaism’s Yin and Yang, is “something” and “nothing.” But the substance of creation does not, in the text itself, emerge from nothingness. It comes from chaos. The insertion of nothingness into the biblical account is a much later interpretation. The struggle between order and chaos is a much more primal account of the nature of humanity and the history of the human soul, and in this account, trauma is the ultimate assault on the human capacity to construct order and meaning out of the world. That’s why so many war veterans abandon religion—it isn’t because of a methodical, intellectual conclusion that a divine power can’t explain what they’ve seen and done. It’s much deeper, much more intuitive than that. It’s because their encounter with the profound chaos at the heart of reality just doesn’t square with humanity’s attempt to make meaning, to make the world out to be more than it appears. 

But music is something different. Music can’t be ignored. It’s like a face—you have to perceive it in its totality; you’re literally incapable of breaking it down to its constituent parts and disregarding the whole. When it comes to math, you can study the terms of a formula one at a time, but music is about narrative. It’s about relationships—about meaning. Music is a kind of applied math, but it’s also impossibly more complicated. My guitar students frequently make errors in basic arithmetic because of how involved the math becomes when it’s being used to calculate the relationships between notes in a chord. Imagine doing a basic equation, but every number has a color, and its color changes every time you compare it to another term in the equation, and its color changes even more profoundly and evocatively when you compare three terms at a time. It’s easy to see—impossible not to see, in fact—the emergent color created by the blend of all of the terms. But it’s incredibly difficult, not to mention boring and senseless, to isolate each term. That’s what storytelling is all about—emergent experiences, sequences, relationships. Meaning.

Another thing about music is that it hits your body, not your mind. And your body is the locus of trauma. Some people, especially those who experienced abuse during childhood, lose memories of their trauma, but they continue to engage in behaviors, and often exhibit physical symptoms, as if the trauma were present consciously. The body knows when the mind doesn’t. And that’s where music goes. Nothing is uglier than me dancing, but when you put on a Latin groove, I don’t have a choice. Music demands something of you. It demands movement, demands attention. It demands that you make meaning out of it—and if it’s really good, it demands you make meaning out of yourself.

It’s especially this last trait that rendered music an indispensible tool for my trauma processing. It took weeks before I understood what I had been through—precisely because trauma is all about subverting understanding—and the only feelings I was capable of having about the accident were those trauma-sensations, feelings of stormy collapse. It was only in listening to music that I found myself capable of sadness and rage and loss and grief. Trauma had robbed me of my humanity, and music returned it to me. Maybe in a much broader sense, too, music is an antidote to the nihilism of trauma. 

Gavi Kutliroff lives in New York City, where he works as a case manager for child welfare. A recent graduate of Brandeis University, he's also a musician, a poet, a Wikipedia enthusiast, and an avid fan of indie coming-of-age films. He believes in the value of a public, open discourse about mental health and in the power of writing and communication to help people understand each other and themselves.

STRESS AND SUNSCREEN: WHICH IS EASIER?

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Stress and Suncreen: Which Is Easier?

I woke up one morning this week to an email from work that we have a new health plan that can help in various ways. Not only will it offer a credit towards our deductible, but it will also provide helpful tips for living a healthier lifestyle.

The first step to earning the benefits and a place in a potential workshop for improving one’s life is completing a health assessment. I took a while to contemplate the questions, answering them seriously and honestly (yes, I sometimes forget to wear sunscreen; no, I haven’t cut sugary foods from my diet entirely). When the report was compiled, I was surprised to see that my overall score was considered “borderline,” especially since my efforts to curb my emotional eating has led to some weight loss and healthier habits.

I downloaded the report from the website and found the key: an answer highlighted in green was considered correct or good, and an answer highlighted red was incorrect or bad, with some shades of yellow and orange in the middle. Most of the answers for my physical health were closer to the green range, which I was very proud of, but I was shocked to see how many of the answers in the mental health section were red.

The first I noticed is a common question on a depression questionnaire I’ve answered before. Usually, these questionnaires ask questions like “How often have you felt down or hopeless in [time period]?” and there is some sort of scale to indicate the degree of severity. On this survey, it asked me to indicate if I have felt any symptoms of depression “at times,” and there was one that applied to me during the pandemic: I have felt down and hopeless at times. Specifically, I’ve occasionally felt hopeless about life going back to normal as my state spirals out of control, and down about things I’ve missed out on.

This answer merited a pure red highlight even though it’s far from the actual depression symptoms I experienced years ago, and is probably normal for many people right now. My answer was marked wrong, and the correct answer of “none of the above” was written underneath.

The next question covered sources of stress, and asked me to indicate which factors in my life have stressed me out recently. Out of a list of half a dozen, I selected only one, but the system again marked that pure red - incorrect. Once again, I was supposed to pick “none of the above,” indicating that I am not supposed to be stressed by anything at all. I was proud to be able to eliminate all of the factors but one, but apparently, that’s not good enough.

The following questions continued in the same vein: for example, the correct answer for the frequency of stress is supposed to be “rarely, if ever.” And worst of all, I was penalized for indicating that “I find it difficult to stop thinking about my problems.”

The fact that that answer was in red enraged me. I spend so much time and effort fighting back against negative thoughts and ANTs, trying to force myself out of my comfort zone, and moving on from things that have traumatized me in fundamental ways. I know that I’m not “normal” for being affected by obsessive thoughts, but I work with doctors and medication to live the best life I can with my diagnosis.

My life is not “wrong,” even if the survey indicates that I have a lot of room to grow. But this survey can’t see where I’ve come from, and where I might have been if I wasn’t so determined to fight against my head from the time I was little and my young nerdy self saw my OCD as a dragon to slay. I’ve never given up, even through many hardships, and to see the red splashed across the section seemed like a slap in the face of my efforts.

I don’t see why the fact that I sometimes experience stress should be the same as the fact that I sometimes forget sunscreen. One is within my control, and the other is not. I can control how I manage my stress, but living with my thoughts coming into my head is not optional. My medicine helps me, but especially at a time like this - and honestly, even when there’s not a global pandemic - it’s not fair to expect me (or anyone) to be able to live a completely stress-free life.

Although mental health is part of medicine, I can’t help but feel that the objectivity of medicine is misplaced here. The numbers of what blood pressure or cholesterol are “supposed to be” does not equate to mental health. Yes, it would be ideal for someone to have no stress, but that’s a completely unachievable goal, especially now. The assessment reminded me of why some of my friends think health is unachievable - the goals are too unrealistic.

I hope that as organizations like No Shame On U do more to move the country away from mental health stigma, surveys will be more accepting of individuals no matter where they are. I hope that there will be more gray areas in terms of what’s “right,” and for the people who indicate “wrong” answers, I hope for more support than advice to get more sleep and exercise. Especially after the pandemic, when many people I know are confronting thoughts and fears they’ve never experienced before, I hope there will be more room for conversations to expand this gray space and find a better way to assess mental health.

Ellie, a writer new to the Chicago area, was diagnosed with OCD at age 3. She hopes to educate others about her condition and end the stigma against mental illness.

WHERE DO I BELONG?

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Where Do I Belong?

The vast majority of the time, I feel like I know where I need to be. But now, as summer waxes, I feel unsure about what to do about potentially coming back to Chicago.

Even just typing the words makes me anxious, and my natural reaction to things that make me that anxious is to shy away. I’ve shied away for months now - I’ve been living with my family for almost four months - but the more time goes by, the more the idea impresses itself upon me that I need to go back to Chicago.

The feelings of cowardice from the beginning of the pandemic are starting to come back, not to mention I miss my friends, potential love interest, and the few activities that are starting to reappear. People have mentioned that they miss me, and my parents feel that I need to go back to my life even if it’s not the same life it was when I left.

As for me, I remember how lonely it can feel to be by myself, and due to the pandemic, I will need to do a hard quarantine for two weeks when I come back from my current location. I’m in a state that has more of the virus than many others, so staying away from people could protect them - but it would also place me in the precarious position of being both bored and lonely, two major triggers of negative thoughts.

I can’t help but picture disaster scenarios where I wander my small apartment for hours on end, feeling desperate and helpless. I can’t help but think that I’ll feel trapped in my apartment and in my head, and that the transition from having family around me whenever I want them to being completely alone will be extremely difficult to handle.

Most of all, these thoughts scare me because they remind me of other times when I’ve been bored and alone. At those times, I feel particularly precarious, like the smallest thing can send me into a spiral. I think of the time I did a summer program at a faraway college while I was still in high school, and the two weeks felt like a year when I got sick to my stomach a few days in. I think of my junior year of college, when I was so far gone I had no hope I could come back.

These are extreme cases, but the fact that there’s a global pandemic making me overthink simple things even when I’m here at home makes me question going back. It’s not that I don’t miss the friends I’ve made, the activities I’ve started, or the independence of living alone. It’s that I am afraid to let go of my comfort in the storm of the pandemic when things are getting worse rather than better.

 I consulted with my psychiatrist who has known me since childhood, and she offered me advice in her very practical style: make a calendar for the first two weeks and fill the days with activities I enjoy, making sure to keep myself busy and definitely not bored. When she said that, I could already think of how I could paint miniatures for D&D and other tabletop games, play Animal Crossing and a brand-new remake of a game I loved as a kid, and watch shows on Disney+, Hulu, and Netflix.

I also dared to venture into my cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) archives to find some of the techniques that helped me at another time when I was having huge trouble with transitions. I read through my old thought journal and saw how I categorized the different automatic negative thoughts (ANTs) and taught myself to fight back against them. I found a document filled with best- and worst-case scenarios I wrote to try to get the fear of the unknown out of my head. I found a painful document where I wrote in painstaking detail the moment I knew I was in a crisis situation. I found a recording of a therapy session that I haven’t been brave enough to listen to yet, but I must have kept it to inspire myself at another difficult time.

In the next few weeks, I’m going to try my best to use these tools to fight back against my automatic rejection of the idea of going back. I’ll try to talk things out with family and friends, write down my thoughts and feelings, and remember the motto of one of my CBT books - “thoughts are thoughts, not threats.” Just because I am so afraid of going back and spiraling out of control doesn’t mean that will actually happen. I am strong, and I have been through much worse before. It’s just a matter of reminding myself over and over, each time the thought cycles, until it stops appearing in the first place.

It’s been a while since I’ve tried such a regimented approach to CBT, but I feel like it’s my best bet for this. I can’t do exposure therapy since the change will be big and all at once, and I can’t know for sure how things will go, but if I take the time to prepare myself as best as I can ahead of time, I hope I will be able to have a relatively smooth transition when the time comes.

 

Ellie, a writer new to the Chicago area, was diagnosed with OCD at age 3. She hopes to educate others about her condition and end the stigma against mental illness.

TRAUMA AND SWEATSHIRTS.....Guest Blogger

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Trauma and Sweatshirts
Trigger Warning: PTSD, Accident, Violence

I got a sweatshirt in the mail today.

It was delivered in a suitcase packed with a bunch of other clothing—about half my wardrobe. I’d left it all in Jerusalem when I came hastily back to America in March; I only brought the other half with me because I expected to return in a month. The pandemic stymied those plans, so for the past four months I’ve been missing half my belongings. I got them back today after using a special delivery service to send them back home to Chicago. 

It was a relief to have the rest of my clothes back so I could stop cycling through the same seven T-shirts every week, but the sweatshirt I had to think about. I’d already been nervous for the previous week about what my reaction to seeing it would be. When I took a look in my suitcase today, it filled me with a sense of dread. Of foreboding. There was a feeling of gravity that occupied the room, weird and dark, that slipped in from what felt like another world, another time.

On December 22nd, 2019—the first night of Hanukkah—I was taking a bus to an engagement party of two friends that left from Jerusalem at about 6 PM. Near Ben Gurion airport, it crashed into a bus stop, whose concrete ceiling detached and smashed into the front-right of the bus, killing four people. I spent the next several minutes with two women at the front of the bus, and I took off both of the shirts I was wearing (a T-shirt and a button-down) to stop their bleeding. When I got off the bus, I grabbed the sweatshirt I had left at my seat in the back to cover myself. Because it was the only piece of clothing I wore that night that wasn’t covered in blood, it was also the only piece of clothing I kept. It was and is my only link to the accident. 

Let me explain. Memory is the key element of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. Trauma is an inability to process a memory or series of memories because it is too horrific, grotesque, violent, or simply big for the brain to fully apprehend. So instead of the memory becoming, precisely, a memory—a flowing river of images and sensations that you can observe safely from a distance, like a movie—it becomes a relived episode, an event that will not rest in the past and that will continually replay itself. The severity of these moments of replay—flashbacks—can vary depending on the prior sensitivities of the person and of the nature of the trauma. Some people have flashbacks as they’re typically and dramatically depicted in mainstream media, where they genuinely believe they’re back in Afghanistan, or their abusive childhood home. Others have sensory flashbacks, where they don’t lose their sense of time and place but they re-experience sounds and smells from the event. As for me, when I get them, I get emotional flashbacks: My emotional state mirrors what it was the night of the accident and I relive the very same (or, after certain forms of therapy, decreased level of) unprocessed horror, bewilderment, panic. 

All of that is a pretty scientific understanding of memory’s relationship with trauma, but here’s what it feelslike. To me, it feels like the realm of the accident was literally not of this world. Because my brain was, until undergoing a special form of therapy, incapable of integrating my memories of the bus into my normal stream of memory, it felt like the place of the accident itself wasn’t integrated with the rest of reality. Like it was its own Place, with a capital ‘P,’ alien, outside, governed by different laws of reality or more probably by none at all. In that sense my experience of the trauma was almost mystical. In fact, I have seen people use the same term to describe their experience in EMDR therapy—stands for eye movement desensitization and reprocessing, and it uses physiological processes and conversational tactics to help people integrate traumatic memories. The reintegration of memories neurologically actually feels like a reintegration of another reality into this one, like the darkness of a netherworld gets little by little cast away and enters the world we’re in everyday. 

 This way of thinking about trauma also helps explain why I find writing about it so cathartic (as well as challenging), and why I welcomed the opportunity to write about my experience here on this blog. What happened to me feels like it occurred in an Outside Place, with no law or meaning, but language is governed by meaning, sequence, grammar, storytelling. Writing in a very real way is a kind of therapy, one that creates a space for the chaotic to enter the everyday world, even a little bit. 

 As for my sweatshirt, it’s become a kind of mystical object. Like a child’s blankie kept into adulthood, it’s a relic from an otherworldly moment, and despite the nature of profound suffering and disintegration of this particular moment, it’s also defining and essential. On the one hand I want to forget and on the other I want nothing less. That’s the weird thing about memory. It gets tied up with questions of identity (in a very real way who we are might be nothing more than the conglomerate of our memories and how we feel about them), and when it comes to a topic so intense people will have a whole slew of responses. Some people are filled with regret and want nothing more than to eliminate memory, and some people cling to it toxically. As for me, I believe memory should be integrated—the past should stay in the past, and when it’s infiltrating the present, something’s wrong; but it should also stay in the past. It shouldn’t be ignored or swept away, it should take its seat as a meaningful determinant of who you are.

 So I kept the sweatshirt. 

Gavi Kutliroff lives in New York City, where he's looking for jobs in social work (he'll update this bio as soon as he's hired). A recent graduate of Brandeis University, he's also a musician, a poet, a Wikipedia enthusiast, and an avid fan of indie coming-of-age films. He believes in the value of a public, open discourse about mental health and in the power of writing and communication to help people understand each other and themselves.

NOT MISSING EVERYTHING

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Not Missing Everything

I have to admit that, at this point in the pandemic, I was relieved to hear that DragonCon was canceled, even though it’s taking place in a state where most things aren’t getting canceled.

In the grand scheme of things, it’s not too important. There are far more crucial things to consider, including staying healthy (hooray for my dad’s negative COVID result, even if it took way too long to come back) and planning for the future both with and without the virus.

But still, even within this crisis, I find it very important to stay connected to my favorite people, places, and things, even if I can’t go in person. I was therefore very excited to hear that AnimeNEXT, a convention I was planning to go to last month that got canceled, was holding a virtual LARP event.

LARP, or live-action roleplay, is something I discovered at that con a few years ago, and was looking forward greatly to picking up again. During the event, everyone gets a character sheet of a character from one of their favorite movies, TV shows, animes, or video games, and the whole time you’re in that room, you have to be in character. Everything that comes out of your mouth contributes to an overarching story that everyone plays a part in.

I was thrilled to hear that there might be a chance to join in virtually, and I quickly applied, even though there were a lot of people trying and I wasn’t sure if I’d be able to make it in. I was even more thrilled when a friend of mine who I met at that con many years ago wrote to me, excitedly letting me know that both she and I made it into the LARP.

Even though it’s not the same as going to AnimeNEXT and walking into the big room full of people in cosplay, I was thrilled to join the Discord group of everyone preparing, introduce myself in character, and have been eagerly awaiting Friday (the start of the LARP) ever since. As soon as I got my character sheet - a character from one of my favorite games of all time that I discovered and binged shortly after getting out of the hospital eight years ago - I wanted to practice, and my friend and I have been on the phone every night this week working on our skills from far away.

Part of me will still miss the experience that COVID has taken away, the opportunity to actually go to a con and have the LARP be just one part of a weekend full of other activities like cosplay, shopping, and spending the weekend with my best friend from college and their family.

But at the same time, I realized that there was so much I would be able to do that I couldn’t do at a regular con. Usually, the LARP takes a back seat to the many interesting things going on around me, and I never end up doing as much as I want to because I lose track of time. This time, since I don’t have other activities, I’ll be able to participate in every session and make myself a more important part of the story. The groups will be smaller, which means there will be more time to get to know people and make new friends. And I’m still managing to get time with my old friends over Discord.

I was initially upset because the LARP this weekend won’t be exactly the same. But I will be able to sit at my computer in my elf dress, hold the character sheet of a character I’ve loved for years, and play the weekend away. That’s what has to matter at times like these, when there are so many more important things going on. Modifications don’t completely ruin everything, and as someone who is usually rigid to the point that I have trouble modifying even the smallest things, it’s hard to accept that. But if it’s that or nothing, I will choose to throw myself into this LARP completely and enjoy it as much as I can. That’s one thing that can’t be taken away!

Ellie, a writer new to the Chicago area, was diagnosed with OCD at age 3. She hopes to educate others about her condition and end the stigma against mental illness.