This is so interesting. I never liked to get up in the morning because it was the start of everyone else controlling me. First Mom, then teachers, then coaches, then Dad when I got home, then Mom again...I would stay up late and tell myself stories, so I could create and control something. When I was a teen, I would wait until everyone else was asleep and then grab some snacks and watch late night TV by myself. As an adult, I am totally a night owl due to this and it make sense to me now. It's the only time I don't have pressure on me - job, husband, kids - I can just do what I would like. Wow. Thanks for this.
@KimtheElder3 жыл бұрын
Similar. The night is quiet and safe.
@CJCreativeJuice3 жыл бұрын
I totally relate to this. I’ve always hated getting up in the morning as it’s the start of having to do things I don’t want to do (like get dressed and go to school), the night is free, in particular free from other humans and there’s something so calm about that. I’d love staying up late watching grown up TV or doing something creative.
@leahflower99242 жыл бұрын
@@CJCreativeJuice so many things in life are robotic and with trauma I have trouble being robotic I have times often where I feel like that robot and wanna say F this and just run away but have no where to actually go to lol
@poogissploogis2 жыл бұрын
Man, you put it into words. To this day I still eat dinner after 9 pm because it was never safe for me to cook for myself while my parents were awake. At night I can cook in peace and take all the time I need.
@scrunt622 жыл бұрын
i relate!! as a kid i stayed up super late and made stories by drawing comics. i'm an artist now but it's still just way easier to relax and focus when working at night than during the day. i've got bad insomnia in general and don't get sleep pressure, it's like my brain wants to run free the later it gets in the day.
@davidwhitcher17083 жыл бұрын
My first thought is i want to go back to sleep. It takes a great deal of effort to get out of be and do what is needed for the day.
@nina-mill3 жыл бұрын
Me too. Often times I feel like I haven't slept at all and I just want to start the night all over again.
@ladybaabaa3 жыл бұрын
Me too. I don't even HAVE a morning anymore, as I never fully wake up before 1pm. I try to avoid the earlier hours as much as possible. Being either asleep or half asleep (and thus too sleepy to think or feel much), and in that blissful, cosy in bed state, is just such a relief.
@nina-mill3 жыл бұрын
@@ladybaabaa ❤️Right there with you
@florenceofori79303 жыл бұрын
Omg I feel like someone finally understands me. I also tend to sleep more on bad days.
@libbyrumary49393 жыл бұрын
Holy shit!!! I love yoU. ME TOO. I thought there was something wrong with me.
@valeriegonzalez66293 жыл бұрын
I frequently wake up with a pervasive, physical sense of doom. I used to carry around a sense like that during days as a child. When you were in bed nobody was after you -- yet. Getting up started the miserable scenarios which were often there or you could anticipate they would be if not that exact moment. More or less acute emotional misery was always pending. So I wake up with that feeling to this day in less my life is going really really well. It takes an act of heroism on a small scale to throw the covers aside, hop out of bed and start the day. Being in bed was my "safe place," but you can't stay there forever or bed, also would stop being a safe place. I am now 79 and still have that feeling lately as I am moving through a moderate depression.
@parrotsontheplateau34883 жыл бұрын
Valerie you have put into exact words how I feel!
@heidilynnfalk3 жыл бұрын
Sending love and care 💖💗
@KimtheElder3 жыл бұрын
Valerie, I am 61 and feel similar. Sending you love and peace 🤍
@BeRightBack1313 жыл бұрын
Valerie, exactly how it was. The only safe place I had was sleeping and sometimes reading, which was usually in bed. As I got a little older, even sleeping was no longer safe. Dad started this habit, and I'm not sure why, where he'd wake us up at 2:30 am. I remember a lot of times, he was throwing my brothers outside and ordering them to fight each other right outside of my bedroom window, he'd say beat each other until you can't stand up anymore, I want all the fight out of you (apparently he had heard them arguing at some point, not even sure it was at that time), or he'd wake us up beating mom again, and for about 3 or 4 years there, he'd make us go round up the pigs that escaped the pen - at 2:30 in the morning, middle of winter, snowing, blizzard, school in the morning, it just didn't matter. Back then, and to this day, I always wondered if he was the one letting them out because funny thing, we never found out how the pigs were escaping. The fence was never broken anywhere. That lasted the last few years I lived at home. And to this day (I'm 60), I regularly wake up at 2:30 am and have trouble getting back to sleep. So I guess I'm saying yes, bed was the only safe place, but even that got broken up in latter years. Amazing what some parents act like. When my kids were growing up, I'd often look at them and say, "that's how old I when this happened, or that happened," and I just couldn't fathom what would possess a parent to treat a kid like that. I also hugged my kids a lot when thinking those thoughts. Almost like I hugging my inner child, lol.
@leahflower99242 жыл бұрын
When I was in high school I had to force my legs to move it was all psychological but I always worried one day my legs literally would just stop working
@2rhythms3 жыл бұрын
I never thought that those heavy feelings when I woke up was coming from my childhood. This is very eye opening.
@eaksgeeks86743 жыл бұрын
I know I’ve always had it .
@ashleeskhan3 жыл бұрын
Same here. Hugs.
@RRthee13 жыл бұрын
Same 🤯
@easygii3 жыл бұрын
yeah this was beautiful "let me take care of that now, this is too much for you"
@Theartloyalist3 жыл бұрын
Same!!
@suzymagan757510 ай бұрын
I am 62 years old. My parents, (mother and stepfather), literally fought from the time they woke up until the time they went to bed and it didnt stop until he died in 2013...40+ years of that. The mornings were the worst. Thank you for highlighting this detail. I wake up hours before anyone else. I have to have low lights, quiet and serenity for a couple of hours to not be anxious all day.
@airdnaxela4204 ай бұрын
29 here and both my parents were addicts. I have learned this same routine helps me as well. It's comforting to know there are others who have come to a simular place. ❤
@leeboriack80543 жыл бұрын
Your talks diffuse the isolation of my perceived uniqueness of my family's dysfunction. For me this dissolves some of the loneliness and self doubt.
@lisasloane64563 жыл бұрын
I was just saying the same thing to my therapist. Working on family issues can feel very insular. This channel has opened up a huge sense of connection and helped remove much of the shame!
@Ginabina763 жыл бұрын
Me and my hubby are the only ones on either side of our families in therapy. Our issue is the healthier we get the more we realize just how unhealthy they all are. 💙💙💙
@tess20823 жыл бұрын
That's such a great description, i feel the same way
@SA-lz1vx Жыл бұрын
Exactly!
@TheForgotmeАй бұрын
@@Ginabina76mother strait up discouraged me from going. Now she's talking about how she is going.. covert narc.. all that'll do is help her manipulate me more, no thx!
@nickim2707 ай бұрын
It is the feeling of helplessness that hits me the hardest. Helplessness coming from knowing something is wrong but not being able to do anything about it.
@singinglawnchair3 жыл бұрын
It's interesting you made that roommate analogy. When I was still living at home I'd often tell people "my parents don't really feel like my parents, just the world's worst roommates". Mornings have always been super triggering for me - the family home was in complete chaos, my mom screaming that things weren't getting done, weren't clean enough, etc. My dad would scream at the dog for wanting to go potty or wanting to eat, or at the cats if they were rubbing on him to be pet before he left for work. No one approached dad in the mornings. My sister who was eight years older than me would be out late with her friends, sometimes hungover or just tired from being out too late. We didn't have a whole lot of money for food since my mom was constantly switching jobs, and if she did have a stable job she was blowing it on nice cars for herself or spending hours at the mall on clothes and shoes for herself - later on maxing credit cards trying to start a business flipping houses that inevitably flopped. I remember someone from our church actually giving us clothes at one point because they felt bad for us. I was only able to eat by means of my equally narcissistic grandmother (who would use lunch money, food, clothes, etc. to try and lure me to her side and pit me against my mother) or straight up stealing cash from my dad's wallet or the change jar to buy food at school or at the store. Being into scarcity mode lead me to gain weight because I would binge eat. I struggled in school from all of the drama at home along with ADHD and autism and not feeling like I fit in anywhere. I was picked on pretty bad from first grade to senior year and had some pretty toxic relationships - by the time I finished high school I was so withdrawn that NO ONE signed my yearbook that year (I didn't even want one but my mom ended up buying it for me, I just let her keep it when I moved out). I'm in my 30s and still struggling with that "oh shit" feeling and just overall having this "failure to launch" feeling where I just loaf around on youtube watching cat videos all day wondering where time went... these videos are massive wake-up calls. It makes so much sense now. Thank you Patrick for helping me and so many other folks trying to make sense of all this :)
@itsgabgg67813 жыл бұрын
Dang dude, I'm sorry. Sounds like you lived a nightmare. I'm glad you're free from all of that. Best wishes upon you and your overcoming journey. I believe in you, I know you can do it! 💪🧙♂️
@ashleeskhan3 жыл бұрын
Hugs.
@jolandak85563 жыл бұрын
I think you are brave:)
@BETH..._...3 жыл бұрын
I am glad you found this channel. You are here among others who can relate, sympathize and encourage.
@prisonerohope69703 жыл бұрын
Thank you for that comment. Thank you for sharing. I wish you all the best.😌
@es46663 жыл бұрын
I usually just wake up with that dread/anxious feeling without the actual thoughts yet.
@beadingbelle34863 жыл бұрын
Yes, i do, too. A feeling of pending doom i cant put my finger on, & i shake - it's like my nervous system is stuck on overdrive.
@nicoleowens2318 Жыл бұрын
I have it too. It's because subconsciously we feel unsafe all of the time. We try to tell ourselves we are, but we don't feel it. The thoughts are only a symptom of the subconscious beliefs of unworthiness.
@TheForgotmeАй бұрын
same & the one time I feel relaxed, hubby has a bad day. We can't win over here. ugh
@bettyjean7403 жыл бұрын
When I heard the words, I m going to help you and that's too much for you, it made me cry. I dont recall ever hearing those words growing up. That level of kindness . It's an eye opener
@PanelsWainio Жыл бұрын
Nope. All I recall for help was my grandpa helping my plastic zoo animals stand up.
@deedee46x4 ай бұрын
Find a way to experience that love x
@TheForgotmeАй бұрын
my dad did but I never lived with him as a minor. So it was always on breaks from school.
@poppygroove79743 жыл бұрын
"The inner child is an expert on the past and the adult is an expert on the present" = bingo! Also "You didn't get any help or parenting growing up and I'm going to help you about feeling prepared." - Thanks, this video was so helpful.
@oldcrone2 жыл бұрын
I can remember getting up and quickly leaving the house and coming back late at night. My whole childhood was an anxiety.
@tea-chip-cookies Жыл бұрын
Me too. But things never got better. Some people are impossible to deal with
@user-3L3C12cR5 ай бұрын
Your podcasts hit home with me so much so that I get strong physical reactions like nausea tightness of breath. My poor inner child thanks you for the path to having a responsible adult self. So many ways that my todays are crippled. Ways you have enlightened. Again, thank you.
@jeanniematson62913 жыл бұрын
In recovery when I became aware of the morning anxiety, I handle it by taking a long run or some kind of aerobic exercise. My parents were in survival mode every morning. I was ignored. The No Talking rule was not broken. A heavy silence.....only sound was the radio news. I was so alone. I simply stopped going to school at the ninth grade. No one commented. Now I can be good to myself. I gave myself permission to enjoy life and to like myself. Thank you for these helpful videos.
@BETH..._...3 жыл бұрын
"I gave myself permission to enjoy life and to like myself" ... ♡
@rhondajones6219 Жыл бұрын
I love that...."I gave myself permission to enjoy life and like myself"...thank you for that!
@Moeo9153 жыл бұрын
I often wake up in a panic with a racing heart beat. It feels like a very intense panic attack. I feel confused about where I am, and when I figure it out, I realize like "oh, okay, I'm alive", I then start to panic about how my day will go
@SA-lz1vx Жыл бұрын
I also experience this
@briannawaldorf8485 Жыл бұрын
If it is due to nightmares that is a ptsd symptom
@nicoleowens2318 Жыл бұрын
Yup. Sometimes the "I'm alive" part is the heavy part, like..sigh..I have to keep going. Then quickly mentally download a very long list of all the things I have to do today and all the ways I can fail. I panic constantly in my dreams (often I'm getting attacked or pursued by predatory animals like bears or big cats), wake up panicked, stay awake until I pass out at night, repeat. I'm exhausted to my soul. I feel you on this.
@jaimemelissa Жыл бұрын
It's a horrible cycle every single morning and throughout the day 😢
@laxale Жыл бұрын
This happens to me too.
@KawaiiKandikidPLURR3 жыл бұрын
“Kindergarten sounds luxurious to you as an adult but to them, a 6 year old, it is stressful”🤯
@TheForgotmeАй бұрын
I really loved kindergarten. Mother was visably displeased by how well I was doing. Ppl were nice to me there. The teachers actually liked kids. I always knew mine didn't. I told hubby this recently.
@jennytaylor33243 жыл бұрын
You're a wonderful man, Patrick Teahan.
@BeRightBack1313 жыл бұрын
I second that. You are an absolutely wonderful man, Patrick Teahan! Thank you.
@DoubleRainbows-fp6ih2 жыл бұрын
I agree too. So so relieved I found this channel. You've clearly done "the work" Patrick. Bless you.
@PanelsWainio Жыл бұрын
I agree; after a dozen+ videos, I am so much more aware and less angry 😊
@erinm3567 Жыл бұрын
He really is! A great Dad too, we can all tell. I'm truly happy for his kids.
@m0L3ify3 жыл бұрын
"My family only existed in survival mode." Damn, that really hits home. Thanks, that gives me a lot to reflect on with my recent financial anxieties. Even when we have enough, which thank goodness we do right now, I'm always in survival mode because that's how I grew up. If something comes up short, I always feel like it's my fault somehow because my parents put me in charge of very big financial decisions like whether to move across the country and which house to buy. That's a lot for a 10 year old to bear.
@stealthwarrior57683 жыл бұрын
I had a similar experience in childhood. Always my responsibility to make huge decisions at too young an age. 😭
@BeRightBack1313 жыл бұрын
Omg, I remember my dad used to make us sit on the living room floor ALL THE TIME and help him figure out things like, "should I cheat on my taxes, how much... and explain things like how much money they take, how he thinks he could get away with this or that, " or he'd say "we're not making enough money, how do you think I could earn more?" I actually had a brilliant idea once, and he called me stupid. A few years later, after I moved away, I was walking past a store one day and lo and behold, there was my idea for sale. I researched it and the guy who ended up doing it made a fortune. He'd keep us there for hours, sometimes all day, and a few times, the entire weekend trying to help him figure out ways to save money on expenses, or make more money on a business venture (or how to cheat on taxes or whatever) or how to get a personal loan, etc. We were fcking little kids! How would we possibly know what to do? Yet we weren't allowed to leave until "somebody comes up with a good idea." Of course, nothing we ever said was good enough, and usually ridiculed or called stupid. I remember when I asked a lot of questions about taxes, I finally said I don't think you should try to cheat on taxes, Dad, and explained why. Boy. He did not like that answer, lol. Sigh. How crazy, making your kids sit there all day or all weekend trying to solve adult problems. 🤔
@gracejaklik2617 Жыл бұрын
Why do they do that? Similar for me, they abused and ignored then a big decision comes…..I don’t get it
@TheForgotmeАй бұрын
I got parentified from my mother like that too but she also never listened to me either & it was always maddening.
@m0L3ifyАй бұрын
@ oof. Thankfully mine took my financial advice but never my parenting advice when she’d call about my sister when I was in college. Like why even ask, then?
@lisawanderess3 жыл бұрын
Call me anything, just don’t call me in the morning! I wake up filled with anxious or angry thoughts every day and have been in survival mode all my life. It takes me a couple of hours after waking up before I can handle even dealing with other humans. Really want to work on this!
@chelseajones21123 жыл бұрын
Me too, Lisa.. isn’t it awful? It’s so jarring and then I start out the day feeling like a bad person. Im sorry you have rough mornings, too. Let’s keep trying to be kind to ourselves 💕
@andreabeasley32873 жыл бұрын
I used to wake up in the middle of the night and stay awake to avoid that feeling I'd get when the alarm rang. It helped me bypass that anxiety but I was exhausted and fearful that it would just come in the night
@andreabeasley32873 жыл бұрын
@@chelseajones2112 feeling like a bad person is so useless and wasteful of our energy. Why do we believe we are bad so readily and come back to that as a fact?
@TheForgotmeАй бұрын
i told my hubby that I need 3.
@TheForgotmeАй бұрын
@@andreabeasley3287for me it's bc of my narc mother & all the other abusers in my life, I do believe.
@monongahelacats Жыл бұрын
I felt this on so many levels. I’m always scrambling for clean laundry and to get ready on time. Waking up is actually painful for me. I grew up with a narcissistic mother.
@TheForgotmeАй бұрын
same with the mother except I chose as a kid to be the opposite of her & as far as what I can control, everything is organized & if i have an important day, I will figure out the outfit the night before.
@florenceofori79303 жыл бұрын
I thought I was the only one who had heavy emotions in the morning. It was worse on weekend and holiday mornings since the whole family was at home. Oh and Friday evenings too, it was my brain anticipating the stressful weekend, I realize. I don't get them as often since I started meditating and processing my emotions. I used to search "morning depression" on google and didn't really find anything useful. Thanks, Patrick. I loved the example that you gave about telling your son the things you would do with him after school. I also started doing that with myself, like saying I'd cook a nice meal or phone a friend or relax in my bed and that made me feel better than I had woken up feeling. Your son is lucky to have you :)
@TheForgotmeАй бұрын
omg, this is why i struggle on hubbies days off & when there are holidays! Eureka!
@kristieroybal48883 жыл бұрын
I've had several therapists over the years that I have loved dearly. I've never had anyone truly help me the way you do. You're extraordinary. Your creativity and style of approaching teaching is a carefully honed talent. Thank you. From the bottom of my heart, I truly thank you.
@patrickteahanofficial3 жыл бұрын
You’re so welcome!
@TheForgotmeАй бұрын
Hubby & I really didn't get a childhood. I have been mourning that I think. I don't want to be a responsible adult (subconsciously) bc i never got a safe childhood & it wasn't fair.
@wrngstft2 жыл бұрын
When I wake up in the morning, it's like a huge chandelier is falling on my head two seconds after becoming concious. Just awful. This morning I have, while having panic attacks, mentally shouted at my inner critic to shut the f* up and leave the little one alone with any criticism and overwhelming expectations to perform. That really helped. I wish somebody would have shouted at my parents like this when I was small.
@alisonhilaryco18983 жыл бұрын
‘Reclaim the morning’ yes! I am reclaiming my life. I don’t have to be a misery/chaotic/stress ball. I can be peaceful, mindful, and enjoy my life with calm and ease. My inner loving parent says I love you, let’s stretch and look out the window at the morning.. I can take the time I have always needed and I can discard the desperate gloom and catastrophe that is not mine and never was. 🙏 Thank you
@jenniferm45553 жыл бұрын
I grew up in chaos and stress too. I have those "Oh, Fuck!" mornings every day. Survival mode. Every. Single. Day. Listening to this at 5am. Thank you!!!
@AdorkableHarleyFairy3 жыл бұрын
As an adult, I literally woke up & hit the ground running. Reminiscent of being woken by a pitcher of ice water as a child...thank you for helping me understand my inner child is who wakes from the night terrors and such.
@nina-mill3 жыл бұрын
Wow I'm sorry you had to go through that. I wake like this sometimes as well. My dad used to wake me up in the morning with a spray bottle of cold water to the face.☹️ When I wake up with that panicky feeling I've called it my "good days", when I am flooded with excess adrenaline instead of lethargic...Thank you for sharing❤️Much love
@AdorkableHarleyFairy3 жыл бұрын
@@nina-mill yours doesn't sound much better, but I am just so glad to have found others in this messed up journey. Sending you blessings for wellness
@ebg36243 жыл бұрын
Same!
@ozywomandius22903 жыл бұрын
Love to you both, and anyone reading this who had similar experiences. That’s so hard, I’m very sorry 💙
@CristinaAcosta3 жыл бұрын
My mother threw ice water on my in the morning at least a dozen times. Really hurt my ability to sleep longer if I needed more sleep. Working on my sleep hygiene has awakened me to those memories. Your vid makes it make sense
@pdk99032 жыл бұрын
I wake up with heart palpitation and cortisol spiking through the roof. A lot of what you say rings very true. Mornings were a start to an excruciating day of stress, being bullied, doing things I didn't want to do, being pushed around, being a pawn in others' agendas. Thank you for this! Love your videos, I've been working for a very long time to release childhood PTSD from my body (3 years of therapy) and only now "wordy therapy" resonates
@doublelightangel9 ай бұрын
When you said for the adult to say to the child "let me handle the anxiety and stuff we have to do today that's too much for you" I just burst into tears. I've been feeling so overwhelmed recently and couldn't figure out really why and now I'm starting to get it.
@Miloscopy3 жыл бұрын
It's a foggy memory, but in maybe grade 2, I began being in charge of making and packing mine and my younger sibling's lunch and walking us to school alone. As a kid, I remember feeling excited and that getting responsibilities was a reward for being "good." But I'm starting to wonder if it really was positive since some of this resonates with me.
@courtneycherry55823 жыл бұрын
Same I remember cooking breakfast and being happy before school only to be yelled at that the house smelled like bacon.
@julietteferrars30973 жыл бұрын
I started packing my own lunches and getting myself ready at an early age too. My mom used to say I was independent and very responsible, but I think I was just too difficult to deal with and she was too busy doing other things and helping my siblings with ADHD. I was considered the “normal” one despite feeling super shy and keeping to myself often. I now know that I have autism and am extremely good at blending into whatever situation I am put in. Thank you for these amazing videos! Though confronting my repressed past scares me, I am slowly improving and healing with your help. ❤️
@eh40743 жыл бұрын
There is probably a big difference between helping out and taking over a parenting duty. If your parents had you help with the task, it would probably have been a way to learn responsibility and bond, but it sounds like you were taking over parental responsibilities at a really young age.
@cardinalgin3 жыл бұрын
Perhaps you felt mixed emotions, depending on the number of occurences or depending if you had to do it without being "told" that you were in charge, or if your parents verbally informed you of that responsibility at such a young age : stress (and neglect) of being in charge of your siblings, pride in having been able to take care of the situation and burden of thinking you would have to do it "from now on".
@andreabeasley32873 жыл бұрын
Your comment about needing lunch money hit me very hard. Everything I needed was a burden and took away from what little money there was. Being reminded of how poor we were made me feel I was a thief and my fault we were poor. As an adult I still have big problems with money. This is so hard to break through. I have lots to work on
@sunshineandflowers4747 ай бұрын
In my case they gave money to their elder son very easily. He was treated like royalty. But even the sight of me was a burden for my parents. Now that I live away from them, they try to snatch money from me so they can serve their son better. 🤮
@TheForgotmeАй бұрын
@@sunshineandflowers474can relate to being the scapegoat
@hugatree73733 жыл бұрын
I woke up and a sister was gone. No explanation. She had died during the night.after 2 years of cancer with no medical or caring attention. It was blamed on her thoughts. A few years later, another sister is gone. My twin. She was in a camping accident and her skull and leg were crushed. My parents asked the OD who delivered us at home to sew her head and set her leg in their bedroom. He insisted she be taken to the hospital. A scary thing to have to choose medical help. This is how i woke up. Thank-you so much for your videos. I feel like that child almost every day. I have such a hard time feeling like an adult. I cherish your ending words on your videos. I am learning so much with your suggestions on how to handle this. The anxiety of rarely feeling safe seems to never go away.
@stevenbrown109010 ай бұрын
This is so triggering. I hope you can find peace now from their actions.
@reginafromrio Жыл бұрын
"you are safe now". That's what I needed!
@TheForgotmeАй бұрын
I said this to myself a few months ago. I don't want to believe it
@TheVaultOfRemembrance3 жыл бұрын
God I've been waiting for morning anxiety videos! I've been suffering with this FOREVERRRRR
@Miss_Lexisaurus2 жыл бұрын
My mornings were super stressful and I absolutely wake up in survival mode. I hadn't realised but actually I've been building calm into my mornings to counteract that for a while now - I give myself 3 hours between waking up and starting work to go slow; walk the dogs, get breakfast, do yoga, check in with myself. Slowing my mornings down so much has been really helpful because then when I start my work day I feel more in control and capable, rather than stressed and overwhelmed.
@TheForgotmeАй бұрын
I've explained to my husband why I need 3 hrs after waking but the issue is I also don't wake up till afternoon if left to my own devices
@MoPoppins3 жыл бұрын
You’re such a comforting & calming presence, Patrick. Thank you for working so hard on your own recovery to become the wonderful healer that you are. May you always be blessed. 🙏✨💕
@comfort-and-joy3 жыл бұрын
So well said
@joyful_tanya Жыл бұрын
I had nightmares for years and years after leaving the narcissist family system that I was unprepared for a test. Or I showed up without clothes on. I am in a panic every morning even 50+ years later. I have found your inner child work videos, VERY helpful. TY!
@witchypoo7353 Жыл бұрын
I really needed this. Sometimes I wake up having a panic attack & this can last several hours. Just getting out of bed can leaving me shaking & sobbing because mornings were so difficult for me growing up. I sometimes fall asleep having a panic attack as well
@Mouse_0078 ай бұрын
I had two physically and emotionally unavailable parents. I had to be "the adult" starting at age 7. This morning, instead of getting out of bed an immediately doing adult things I got a cup of milk (my favorite as a child) and sat with my inner child and we watched bugs bunny together for a few minutes before I made coffee and watched this video. I'm loving your suggestions and experience. Patrick has made such a difference in my thinking about what it means to be healthy.
@hotcarmel127 ай бұрын
Hugs! I make myself a diet coke with Sonic Ice and lemon! Or some tea with lemon! My morning treat! I loved lemon as a child. This really helps my anxiety stop and be present.
@Mouse_0077 ай бұрын
@@hotcarmel12 Hugs !
@rdoodoo20213 жыл бұрын
I wake up most mornings with dread, fear, terror, anxiety. It's just so hard living like this. I'm so glad you made this video. I quit caffeine a few months ago. I'm reading Control Your Anxiety by Albert Ellis. I'm going to try your suggestions in the morning. Thank you ✌️
@jennytaylor33243 жыл бұрын
Ditto. I feel your pain, mate.
@beadingbelle34863 жыл бұрын
Me, too. I'm 62 & wake up shaking in the mornings - no matter how much i tell myself i'm not back there, it sure feels like it. I was bullied at school from day 1 when i was 4yrs old until i left because i had a foreign mother - i felt like an alien who didnt deserve to live here. I never knew what i'd be walking into at school, & there would be girl gangs after me. I also never knew what i'd be going home to either as my father was a very violent man who would always be belting me & my mother, shoving her down the stairs, geabbing her by the throat & raping her. I lived my life on high alert & it seems my nervous system's stuck that way. I started experiencing deep depression age 14 & still battle with it today (i also have ME & fibromyalgia among other things so my energy is depleted, meaning i get ill if i exercise or walk too far). My mother realised the only power she had in the house was over me so started being cruel to me. The youngest of my two brothers' strategy was to become even more violent than our father - my brother was the only one who could make him do things - mother clung to him & made him the golden child as he could protect her better than i could, eventhough i would stand in front of her & take the blows from my father which were meant for her. Unwittingly i married out of one dysfunctional famaily & into another, where the mother was a covert narcissist & ruled with an iron rod -everyone was scared whitless of her except me, she hated me & poisoned her whole family against me because not only did i take her 'little boy' away from her, i went on to have the daughter she always wanted & blamed her husband for not giving her. He was the weak enabler & my husband's brother was the golden child - a real mama's boy who was not allowed a life - she would make up illnesses for him, convincing him he was too ill to go anywhere or have friends, & made sure he knew she was the only woman he needed in his life as no other woman would understand him like her. She always said she has to protect him from women as he cant 'perform'. She wanted to keep him as a baby, bathing him, washing his hair in his teens & 20s, & even sleeping with him. She made him buy the house they were living in so he couldnt get a place of his own & he looked after her until she died in her 90s two yrs ago. Most of the people who caused me such harm have died now, except my father with whom i have minimum contact. It's like they'v all sodded off to eternity & i'm still left to deal with all the fall out & aftermath. I cant talk about it to my husband as he just gets angry -he thinks i should be able to just put it all behind me, like he does, as it all happened so long ago. If only it was that easy. Living with childhood trauma is a bit like living life as an amputee because the body keeps the score - people who have lost a leg still feel their foot itch, even though its not there anymore. The inner hell doesnt just stop because the outer hell has slowly ground to a halt. Some days its all i can do lift my head off the pillow, let alone get out of bed, wash & dress. I'm so glad i found this site & that i can identify with others who have morning anxiety like me. The dread & feeling of pending doom hits me like a brick in the stomach when i wake & i can feel all the excess adrenaline sloshing around in my stomach, arms & legs. I also get burning sensations in my brain as a warning before a depressive attack - probably where my father used to hold me down & punch me in the head from age 3. He used to tell me all his marital problems were my fault, & my mother expected me to be her therapist, telling me stuff no kid should hear. Strange how their marriage never got any better when i moved out - i honestly naively thought it would!
@IsThisSarah3 жыл бұрын
Crazy, I actually woke up this morning (it’s 11am where I am right now), stomach churning, hot and just feeling all over anxious. Can definitely relate to the ‘survival mode’ family I was brought up with and two high-stress, co-dependant parents with narc traits so this makes a lot of sense. The timing for this popping into my subscriptions is amazing, especially as I’m working through a lot of this at the moment.
@jolandak85563 жыл бұрын
"hot and just feeling all over anxious". Sounds familiar! Have you tried this: How to immediately calm down in 30 seconds | diving reflex dbt tipp skills kzbin.info/www/bejne/gabCpGuef7esr7M It really works, at least for me.
@lindasharp9273 жыл бұрын
@@jolandak8556 0
@hotcarmel127 ай бұрын
Thanks Patrick for this! I have my little me time every day for a week. Even when I don't feel like it. I had panic attacks years ago before getting ready for work. And felt like I was also rushing. Even prepared the night before. I am grateful I no longer work that toxic job. However I dreaded most mornings and have PTSD flashbacks early. Now its chill little me time. Talking and journaling to myself. Telling little me we gotta go look for work and all the grown up things today. I have a set of childhood fun things to reward myself with at the end of my day. Things I didn't get or actually enjoy. Like a princess coloring book, finding objects books, stickers! I love stickers and if weather permits walking in a park. And not rushing the walk. More of a stroll. Zooming out and taking in nature. I loved being outside and unfortunately spent most of my play time alone. But I am at peace with that. I also began seeking out arts and crafts groups. Whatever I enjoy. My family doesn't like the majority of my hobbies. We are all so very different. Which is okay. Thanks again Patrick! I hope to find an PTSD $exual abuse childhood therapist on my insurance soon.
@MRS.H20083 жыл бұрын
My Mom was awful, I would be afraid to say hi in the morning. If I did she would have a nasty face on and say hi in a nasty tone. When I look at child pictures of me, I usually feel sad because I can remember very clearly what that felt like. She also hated our dog and would scream at him. She would tell him to choke on his food and die. Yeah, then I had to go to school with a learning issue that was never helped but got yelled at for by my father because he wouldn’t pay for a tutor.
@IMissMrKitty3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing! It helps me to know that I'm not the only one who gets sad when I look at old pictures of myself. I couldn't pinpoint the exact reason but what you said is it. I remember forcing myself to smile or look happy for the camera when my covert narcissistic mother was the one taking it. I was never happy around her, nor my dad, and most of my extended family on both sides.
@Rain9Quinn3 жыл бұрын
🤗😢
@paulbolton23223 жыл бұрын
Same, madusa mums are us!! All to play for 👍
@rukisar63123 жыл бұрын
poor dog, dogs have feelings too. sounds like she was mean to anyone smaller than her, what an abusive bully.
@jolandak85563 жыл бұрын
@@rukisar6312 I am so sorry for them both, the children and the dog. This is all too familiar for me:(
@gracenroses74719 ай бұрын
30 seconds in and I’m crying listening and I don’t even know why. But before my eyes are open in the morning and I’m fully conscious, I’m feeling heavy anxiety. This is for as long as I can remember. Never connected it my childhood but this is it. “Waking up and immediately feeling overwhelmed and unprepared”…oh my gosh! Yes! This explains so freaking much. My mind is blown and I’m so excited to try this techniques to move through this
@gracenroses74719 ай бұрын
Healthy families have the ability to organize and plan!!! Oh my gosh the two things I STRUGGLE WITH the most being a parent and scared to death I’m scarring them because I can’t get my Sh@t together.
@TheForgotmeАй бұрын
this is why I chose to never have kids. I always knew it was dysfunctional bc of how my dad did things vs. my mother who I was raised with & I didn't trust myself to get it right. Ironically the friction in my marriage is hubby doesn't at all (to my liking) & resists it.
@catherinesinclair77273 жыл бұрын
Thank you. It's good to realise that I'm not alone
@IMissMrKitty3 жыл бұрын
💕 I feel the same way.
@Mushroom321-3 жыл бұрын
Yes!!, 😊😼👏👏
@KaleidoSTAR_PH Жыл бұрын
as someone who rarely wakes up in the morning, there are certain events on that time that triggers my awful childhood memories, like there is one time when my dad bought home a puppy when I was 9 or 10 years old, and then the next day he return it without me knowing it. In my mind, the dog went missing and I was bawling so bad that my mom isn't there to comfort me. Yeah, that one crushing memory hits me so bad to this day... thanks for this vid btw
@maryjanerx3 жыл бұрын
This Morning I Woke Up Afraid I Was Going To Live- is the most relatable chapter title from the book Prozac Nation. Yes,every morning i wake up and go, ugh, not again. Unless my cat wakes me up. Then im reminded that another soul cares about and relies on me. I feel loved and needed. Morning bubble bath is my most important routine. Helps destress before i start my day. Your videos are so helpful, thank you.
@janiceclarfield709411 ай бұрын
Your teaching is wonderful and intelligent wise and I dare say INSPIRING. I have listened to other therapists who are excellent too. You have a way of being pragmatic down to earth and addressing important issues in a very understandable way. I never even related some of my challenges to childhood. May you be blessed in your life and work.
@Uh_Yep3 жыл бұрын
What does one do if they are unable to parent their inner child? Mine is destroying my life more and more the older I get. As long as I can remember there have always been two versions of my mind and they argue constantly. One is calm and rational and self motivated, the other is wild, irrational and lazy (like a toddler). I try to force myself to get things done like dishes, laundry, work etc but I'm rarely successful. Up until last week I didn't know about an inner child from childhood trauma but it fits my background and so far everything you're discussing matches my daily struggles.
@vivvy_03 жыл бұрын
I know i wouldn't be a good parent, how should i be able to be good to my inner child? Either it pushes me around or i want to choke it
@jadelinny3 жыл бұрын
I know this is really late, but I think the first step is to find a time when your inner child is starting to feel "wild and irrational", and just sit with that feeling and validate how your child feels. That's what we needed as kids and didn't get from our parents. From their perspective and experience, what they are doing is justified, and indeed necessary for survival. Acknowledge that they had to be that way when they were little, but that you are an adult now, and you are safe--they aren't in that situation anymore. An example would be: "I know you grew up in chaos, and you're starting to feel really overwhelmed right now. You were so little and you shouldn't have had to deal with that. But I am an adult now, and I don't live there anymore. I'm going to take care of this so you don't have to." No shame, no blame. Start small. There is no quick fix, and I myself am still working on this (actually having a pretty horrible day today), but when we validate people's feelings (including our own), it really does help to diffuse a situation.
@Seeker0fTruth2 жыл бұрын
Check out IFS or Internal Family Systems to begin to understand the role that those parts play and have played in helping you manage your life. Oftentimes our “parts” crave authentic validation…being seen heard and understood…which is something we can now give to those parts as we are now adults. It’s been a beautiful process and the best part is, the investment is in ourselves always yields a return…and over time, the compounding interest is not only evident but also a huge encouragement. Be well!
@barbs12983 жыл бұрын
In listening to this, I feel like having the adult take control over the inner child is like splitting myself into 2 people. I get where many of my issues come from having grown up w/a rageaholic, alcoholic dad w/6 siblings in a very small house & many, many traumas occurring. I only realized nearly 5 years ago that I even suffered from trauma when I was taking a course to help the students I worked w/as an elementary counselor. Funny how we can help others & yet ignore or have no clue about our own trauma...we just learn to live with our issues somehow. So finally, 2 years ago, I began working on my trauma issues at the age of 59. I have never in my life shed so many tears. Anyway, anxiety is still a big issue for me & I'm not sure talking to my inner child will work for me, but I definitely have to get a grip when the tremendous feeling of overwhelm hits me. And taking care of my mom who is in a nursing home really compounds the issue at the start of my day. I can get calls at any time of night or day about her feeding tube issues among other things. Last Monday was so bad, I just came unglued & could not stop crying to pull myself together to get to the nursing home. It was awful. You would think I would be over all of this at my age, but when you have let issues lay buried for most of your life & have pushed yourself to achieve, at some point it all surfaces when triggers hit.
@grassgeese39163 жыл бұрын
i thought i was having intense nightmares, without remembering them.. somehow. This is so helpful. I'm no longer thinking abt "how to get rid of nightmares" and now i'm thinking abt myself and my past and things are feeling clearer. Thank u Dr Teahan so much for all you do. Everyone reading pls support his Patreon!!! Healing can change the world and the more tools out there the better.
@prisonerohope69703 жыл бұрын
Thank you, sir. It's so important for people like us to learn to parent ourselves. You're helping people!
@StaceyBing Жыл бұрын
Sometimes, because mornings were so stressful when I was a young child, I'd get up in the middle of the night, have a wash in complete silence, put on my school uniform, pack my school bag, then get back into bed and go back to sleep, so I'd be ready for school in the morning regardless of the chaos.
@wendywilliams39623 жыл бұрын
This is so fantastic. The dodgeball thing that was total trauma.
@singinglawnchair3 жыл бұрын
Yes! Dodgeball and "red rover" was the absolute worst! lol
@rdoodoo20213 жыл бұрын
A lot of my 70s and 80s gym memories are vaguely traumatizing. I don't think about it. Strange times.
@annahowland63463 жыл бұрын
Anybody remember “towel hockey”? 😬🥵
@Mushroom321-3 жыл бұрын
Yes!!, 😾 I see im not alone..
@Leonardoalvarez9883 жыл бұрын
Who would of thought this was a real thing, as a child I always felt I was on my own and that’s exactly how I feel when I woke up very vulnerable and unprotected. But why do nights for me feel so different? I love the quietness and stillness of the night, I feel like I can do more during the night. Thank you for your video! I need really need to have a talk with my inner child tomorrow morning.
@KimtheElder3 жыл бұрын
Nights are like a balm.
@lostcoast25653 жыл бұрын
This!.. My frame of reference all my life has been ,"I'm just a night owl"..I'm late for work already today. I have "no clothes to wear." (life mantra, literally 5 shirts) no good food in fridge, glasses are all f'd up need replaced. My fav time of day is 10 pm, when no one wants anything from me. Blessings to u , and to u as well Patrick, lots to process. 🙃🙂
@Seeker0fTruth2 жыл бұрын
@@lostcoast2565 You are my people. Welcome home!
@lonefaolan60423 жыл бұрын
Yep, I grew up in stress, chaos and domestic violence. Early mornings were met with anxiety and depression. Consistently overwhelmed
@hayliecassidy7113 жыл бұрын
My biggest emotional caretaker in high school was a school administrator who was ten years older than me and basically became my older sister/aunt. We are still good friends.
@MonaJaneArtLovesAllcom3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for sharing your experiences and healing words. I appreciate your time and energy creating these videos to cast all over the world.
@susie85573 жыл бұрын
Every clip, including this one, is like finding someone who's lived my life besides me, but who is able to explain the thoughts in my head and help me acknowledge it and take steps to heal. I wish I'd discovered you years ago but, hey, better late than never! Thank you from England, UK.
@earthwomanforever3 жыл бұрын
a good coffee made by the local barista who starts making my coffee as I walk in and serves it with a smile is my happy moment every single time.
@katedhotman92823 жыл бұрын
I never realized this before! I get panicky every single morning after I shower, because it feels like "Oh God, now I have to start my day." There's this huge burden of expectation on me - I was expected to be an extremely high achiever, and to walk on eggshells in the morning (hungover mom), God forbid I make us 1 minute late for leaving the house, I was screamed at in the car all the way to school. Told I was a mistake, a child from Satan, told she'd send me away. I was terrified most mornings. I just never connected how I feel today, to how it was then. Thank you for the practical tools, I'm going to try that.
@TheSilverVixen3 жыл бұрын
I grew up with two very conflicting parents: my mom was always working to support us so she was only ever home in the evening and was sheltering. My dad (who I've realized now as an adult is a narcissist) wanted to be my friend rather than an authority figure so there were no rules with him.
@brightphoebesays2 жыл бұрын
Often what gets me out of bed in the morning is that I get to have a cup of tea. "Oh! Tea! Yes!"
@TheForgotmeАй бұрын
I was soo depressed on the 1st that i couldn't even bring myself to finish the coffee.
@brightphoebesaysАй бұрын
@TheForgotme well, you can reheat it. I often reheat my tea and coffee. The trick is not to forget it's in the pot! If you have a microwave , then you won't burn it. I'm sorry you were feeling bad. You don't have to drink the coffee. If you don't want to. Put it aside and have it later. On the 31st I was so anxious I couldn't eat my soup. So I put it back in the pot and I called the Mental Health crisis line, I had a shower and went for a walk and then I felt regulated again and was able to eat my soup. I hope you find ways to feel better.
@joshuataylor60873 жыл бұрын
Wonderful video Patrick... or grew up with a chronically depressed parent.. complete energy vampire parent..
@cainanneedham9022 Жыл бұрын
The sincerity I perceived in your closing well-wishes to your audience made me tear up a little. I would have rolled my eyes internally at the sentiment a decade ago, but here, at 31 years of age, I’ve come to learn just how potent and impactful simplistic human compassion and decency can be when you’re struggling internally. I’m fortunate enough to have an incredible wife who cheers me on every second of the day, but so many people aren’t as lucky.
@reginafromrio Жыл бұрын
Thank you Patrick and everyone sharing your stories. My mom woke me up by kicking the door and shouting, "wake up!" One time, the door wouldn't open and she persisted kicking a hole in it. Someone was always in trouble so mornings were scary...
@alicerose80573 жыл бұрын
I have anxiety every morning. Once I get out of the house I’m fine, but when I first wake it’s so awful. Then I also just have this feeling of I didn’t sleep well and I was anxious all night. My early childhood was tumultuous and I had an addict in the house. But my teenage years were better. I essentially just feel general anxiety but there’s no thoughts really. It’s very hard to describe. It’s just an underlying anxiety.
@rhondajones6219 Жыл бұрын
I'm so sorry about that. I feel the same way. Just wondering if things got better for you in taking Patrick's advice from the video above?
@alicerose8057 Жыл бұрын
@@rhondajones6219 I still have a lot of anxiety and I take buspar now. It helps to an extent, but another thing that’s helping is exposure therapy for some anxiety that I didn’t realize until recently are ocd issues.
@tiptopdadddy2 жыл бұрын
For years I’ve had “the morning blues” but never connected it to the sub conscious/inner child
@totalwomanja9105 Жыл бұрын
Thanks as always Patrick. You have a way of speaking to my inner child and remind me of her. Wheew! Your work is so relevant and powerful. You have a gift of healing indeed.
@juniper5272 Жыл бұрын
I'd like to thank you for this short course about getting to know your inner child and becoming a good, loving parent for them. I was always interested in the concept of the inner child, but never knew how to cope with mine. She (well, this layer of my psycho, with awful memories and experience from the time I lived with my parents) was always so demanding, so needy, and made my adult life miserable in so many ways that I never wanted to get close to her. After I started doing exercises from your videos and reading the book by John Bradshaw that you recommended, I quickly found out she is not that scary. I keep on watching your videos on childhood trauma and sometimes when I try to apply the ideas you share to myself, I have this warm feeling that can have nothing in common with my actual childhood experience. I do believe it originates from the time I have spent with my inner child for the last weeks listening to her and trying to help with her needs. I am amazed how it works considering there was no caring supportive adult next to me throughout my childhood. Thank you very much for your work; it's been a great help.
@Amberella293 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this. I've just recently realised how much my childhood could be responsible for my anxiety. I finally feel like I might be able to improve now working through these excersices
@prisonerohope69703 жыл бұрын
It is only now in my 40s that I dont wake in survival mode.
@rdoodoo20213 жыл бұрын
I'm glad you have some relief. Mine's getting worse with age as I care for and worry about aging parents in their 80s, one with dementia and in 2 different parts of the country and no other family to help. Ugh. 😕😓
@prisonerohope69703 жыл бұрын
@@rdoodoo2021 That's a lot of responsibility. I hope you are doing a lot to care for yourself. Keep learning to cope. Please take advantage of every opportunity for self care and help. I will pray for you if you want.💛💛💛 Sincerely, Shandalay
@houseplantnerd28722 жыл бұрын
Mornings are the worst. I consider myself a morning person but I feel such intense anxiety in the morning. It's also not uncommon for me to wake up at 3-4am and ruminate, like the thought just came out of the blue and it won't leave me alone. I used to call it, waking up to my mother. I'm now better understanding what's going on within myself and this has allowed me to recognize this unnecessary anxiety. I struggled at first with the concept of inner child work but I get it now.
@rudegirl13smith282 жыл бұрын
I've struggled with overwhelming anxiety before I even open my eyes in the morning, an avalanche of fear, worry, dread. The alien in me is releaved to know I'm not alone. I couldn't have found this channel at a better time as my inner child has the reigns and she doesn't know how to drive. I'm so grateful.
@tiffanycolson3358 Жыл бұрын
My mornings are dreadful. Every single day I have to remind myself that we are ok. It's like my brain forgets I'm grown and he's been dead since 1991. I'm aware of it now. It explains a lot about how I felt and the crazy moods. Just imagine that every day when you wake up, you have to remind yourself that it's ok. He's dead and I'm grown. Every night I forget.
@winniecash1654 Жыл бұрын
😢
@airdnaxela4204 ай бұрын
Wow wow wow. I have been dealing with this for a while now and this makes so much sense.
@saramichael38372 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this! I now try to ease myself into the day and treat myself like a child resisting to go to school in the morning, instead of yelling at myself and get disappointed in me I just take it easy. Like a manual car that needs to go on first gear before the next.
@NehaSharma-777 Жыл бұрын
Love this ❤
@martavillanueva10623 жыл бұрын
Thanks for being delightful discussing opening our eyes that now in adulthood is the perfect time to take baby steps to not imitate the morning drama modeled by the toxic adult(s) that raised us.
@ЮлияГуторова-и4ъ11 ай бұрын
Patrick, you're genius!
@TheLadydevere Жыл бұрын
Your voice is so gentle and soothing. Thank you for giving your time and compassion to share your experiences and wisdom.
@mrstoner2udude799 Жыл бұрын
Recently I was experiencing anxiety at night. I used to have bad anxiety at night. I used Patrick's teaching to backtrack to my childhood and eliminate the night- time anxiety. I realized that at night, the only supportive person in my family, my Mom, went away with my Dad. My Dad was not nice to me, was jealous of my closeness with my Mom. So at night I felt abandoned, alone and lonely. Realizing this allowed me to be supportive of myself (my inner child?) and reassure myself that I was okay. It worked so well I was surprised. At this same time ( a few weeks ago) I was also having anxiety over an important interview. I could not figure out why, until again I used Patrick's teaching, backtracking to my childhood. I was the youngest and I hated ppl questioning me or insinuating I did not know what I was doing. I was equating the interview with this child-ish interpretation of the interview. Again, it worked like magic. Anxiety disappearing in minutes. And I did well in the interview. I'm freguently reassuring my inner child that I'm taking care of us. I hope this helps others. We CAN heal.
@NehaSharma-777 Жыл бұрын
Wowwww love this
@cindyarnold81653 жыл бұрын
I started doing self care a couple of years ago, and got a routine down so there isn't confusion in the morning. I give myself an hour head start to wake up, feed my pets, do coffee, start a load of laundry, take my dog out, write my gratitude list or pay bills. I started feeding myself a good breakfast and taking vitamins. I still feel overwhelmed sometimes, but when I come home from work I'm able to relax now and sleep at night. Your videos are super helpful! You rock!
@cardinalgin3 жыл бұрын
This morning was so much better from watching this particular video. It made me realise why I feel so anxious in the morning, when I have an early appointment (and when I go to bed the night before). As far as I can remember my childhood, I was a slow "waker-up" and I found out (in therapy) that I needed silence and calm to gather my energy and thoughts for the day to come. The dread came from my mother bullying me into rush mode and invading my space and mind in the morning, with constant reproach about the things she had to do for me and my siblings. Now that I am a happy retiree, I can see how it felt so violent to me to have to wake up early and get ready to go to work and interact with people so early in the morning, even though my coworkers were amicable. Thank you again Patrick for this enlightening and reassuring message.
@brittbee35842 жыл бұрын
Well wow, I feel called out on this video but im thankful because being aware of it means i can work on it. I've never enjoyed the mornings and always wake up in a rush. Even if im awake hours before needing to be somewhere i somehow end up cleaning or something until the very last minute and throw myself into that rushing frenzy. My mom used to always scream at us in the mornings. I do not want to make mornings chaotic for my own kids. Thank you Patrick.
@humanabeel440 Жыл бұрын
Never had I thought I’d get this problem validated. I’ve always woken up with dread and chaos, and this is the first time I feel seen. Patrick Teahan you have done some revolutionary stuff here, thankyou!
@maddytunbridge47983 жыл бұрын
Thankyou for this. My mother always slept till lunchtime so i had to get myself and my little brother ready for school. My severe morning anxiety as an adult led to me needing valium after waking up just to get myself and my child out the door. I didnt know it had to do with my childhood.
@jenessavalitalo99603 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this. I always thought I was an oddball being anxious in the morning. In a weird way I'm relieved to know I'm not alone. Sometimes I read comments and my heart breaks for the others here and I invalidate myself because my problems & childhood "weren't that bad." Then suddenly an answer for why I feel this way in the mornings hit me like a ton of bricks and I started crying. Tomorrow I will do better. For myself and my children.
@misstumbleweed4426 Жыл бұрын
That time I clicked on KZbin first thing in the morning telling myself "Time to hush the morning anxiety" and this video pops up....
@sciencegeek463 жыл бұрын
I go to bed and fall asleep fine. But at some point in the morning before I wake up I just get tense, and busy in my head, and churned and balled up and my face all scrunched up. I don't wake up peacefully, I chaotically surface through a wall of busy thoughts and inner noise. I wake up tense, I roll out of bed and dry heave into the sink, I feel tied in nots and instead of looking forward to anything in the day, I just feel like "what is expected of me today." Lovely reflection of mornings in my adolescence when I was completely overrun with too high of expectations, and waaaay too much on my plate, but not feeling like I had any choice after my mother told me on no uncertain terms who she wanted me to be. Expectations were high, and everytime I succeeded or did well, got good grades, signed up for another extracurricular, it felt like the bar was just raised higher, and if I fell below it I was a disappointment. I thought those days were behind me, but maybe I'm still waking up to that pattern of my first thought being "what pleasing mask will I have to wear today? What responsibilities do I have to buckle down and be perfect at, shoving away the any feelings of "I don't want to" because that means I'm "lazy and have no ambition" like my mom said." *sigh*. The hardest part is that she has a completely different version of events than I do, and no memory of the moments when she made me ashamed for not being perfect, or for not getting things right the first time. And if I bring any of it up, it breaks her because she's "always loved me so much and wanted to protect me from pain." And cannot handle hearing anything different. Both of my parents will flat out say that things I remember didn't happen. Makes me feel fragmented and crazy.
@kariccio3 жыл бұрын
Because for them, it was just another tuesday. ❤️sending a hug
@NehaSharma-777 Жыл бұрын
Wowww
@Bella_Obscura3 жыл бұрын
Wow. I’m not sure how I even stumbled upon this video or why the algorithms led me here, but I really needed to see this. I’ve never related my anxiety and panic attacks in the mornings to my childhood. You hit the nail on the head though. I grew up in a “survival mode” family. Thank you so much for making this video. It’s good to know that I’m not the only one with this issue.
@NehaSharma-777 Жыл бұрын
Thank you. I thought I was the only one.
@tamara07073 жыл бұрын
This is really good. I’ve awoken with fear and dread all my life. I jump out of bed to avoid the feelings. I’m excited about trying this. Also love your role playing videos. I’ve understood the concepts of narcissism, but when it’s played out in familiar scenarios, validation of my knowing things were wrong and emotionally abusive clicks in.
@Lyrielonwind2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the tips; I have the feeling my inner child doesn't trust me enough or can't count on me.
@motorheadable3 жыл бұрын
It is so awesome that what you say at the very end that you hope for all of us; "May you be...", is actually happening more and more each day from watching your videos. You are a marksman with these topics, and your videos are changing my life. I can see the end of the tunnel and there is light!! THANK YOU!!
@angeladennis51593 жыл бұрын
I have really bad morning anxiety. So bad it starts the night before. Love the coffee tip, I do this. It seems so ridiculous but because I struggle so much it makes a huge difference!
@KimtheElder3 жыл бұрын
I did something similar. when I I was raising my children on my own and working long hours (being the savior at work too, because I’m codependent as F. ) Anyway, back when we used to think it was safe to leave a slow cooker going during the day I would set it in the morning and when I came home (feeling like a walking nerve ending) it would be as if someone cared about me when I smelled dinner ….it makes me cry now just thinking back on that and I’m 61. Complete survival mode Sending you peace and healing 🤍
@m.maclellan71473 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for these videos. They are SO helpful. You are so wise, empathic & calm. I am so happy I have found your videos.
@G2thesecondpower3 жыл бұрын
I don't always wake up like this but when I do, it's a feeling of dread that I am either not properly organized for my day, or that I've forgotten something I was supposed to do etc. Sometimes I wake up and I just don't feel like being an adult because it just feels overwhelming. I can definitely trace this back to school years, especially high school. My way of trying to cope with this so far has been to write a list of things I need to do the next day every night and put it on the fridge where I can see it. I just keep trying to reassure myself that I can handle my responsibilities, and if I forget something, probably no one is going to die. Missed appointments can be rescheduled, late bills can be paid, and as long as I communicate with my teachers (college) assignments can be handed in late. Early morning catastrophizing is just no way to wake up!
@Lilly-ss7rp2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! Morning anxiety has always been a huge issue for me. I did not realize the connection to my traumatic ,chaotic childhood. Lack of “safe home base”. Thank you!!!
@anikalee90122 жыл бұрын
Yes, until know I feel anxiety raise in the morning and feel more relaxed when the evening come. This cycle come every day. I now realize it's because my NPD parents. Before this after I learned what is NPD I did know I need to study about my childhood trauma. Many bad feeling keep appear every day eos anxiety it effects my routine. So here I'm learn about my past. Thanks you so much this channel exists.
@emzzhura3 жыл бұрын
I had the physical symptoms of morning anxiety especially just starting now, acid reflux and easy gag reflex. I used to always feel unsafe when I was younger in the morning having to protect myself and knowing my parents were not there for me, when I was afraid of predators. I think that could be the connection?
@Rain9Quinn3 жыл бұрын
Ive tried to make morning & eve routines to reduce the energy drain of having to think about them & make choices, and create habits, but have had real trouble. I think this video helps me understand why its so hard & gives me some selfcare ideas to be more successful with this goal!