Think happier thoughts

Moving on from cbt, we can take control of our own thoughts with practice.

If you think of a series of thoughts in terms of making a candle by the dipping method, then each time you think a particular series of thoughts, you dip your string in wax and let it dry. It becomes thicker each time and if your thoughts follow common routes, then what was once a narrow path can become a main road and one you use most often.

 You need to turn off and find a pleasant back road and make that your chosen route instead.

When you feel down, your mouth turns down, and you see yourself as a sad person, literally if you look in a mirror. So step 1 can be to smile whenever you see your reflection. You may not want to, but put yourself in personal boot camp and make it compulsory, it will change the way you see yourself eventually.

Step 2 is to lift your head when out and look at/watch the world around you. I play games everywhere I go. When outside I look at buildings and pick the ones I like and the "carbuncles", everywhere has good and bad architecture. Look up the ones you like, acquire some knowledge.

My other favourite game is the "buy a gift for someone" game. You don't buy it, just choose something, in every shop. So  pick a person you know, not necessarily someone you like and choose a suitable gift. You can choose with love or hate in mind. So if you like a person select a nice piece of furnature  or a food item etc. I have a great time in touristy gift shops on holiday looking at all those plaques with messages on and thinking who I would present them to. Some are quite pithy.

You may think this sounds a bit odd, but it will take you off the negative highway onto the happier distracting back road. You can get other people to join in. My husband and I go round National Trust houses picking something to take home from every room.

The key thing , is to force yourself to do it when your head is full of poison, and find the game that amuses you. It works for me.

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  • Hi Lomgman, The training I recieved was for the depression and anxiety etc that I was diagnosed with at the time. I am not diagnosed wth autism and I don't think that was even considered by them at the time.

    Mental illness affect up to a quarter of the population. It is a product of modern life. People on the spectrum are perhaps more susseptible than most because of the complex problems they face. I would say that neural pathways can change from back lanes to motorways in any human being, and the same treatment can help anyone.

    Perhaps the extra problem faced by asd people is their reluctance to change and inability to ask for help. I reached a point where I knew I had to do both and act on any advice I was given. It is maybe, the one big downside of diagnosis, that it can leave the person on the spectrum thinking "I am not like them, this won't work for me , I cannot change how I think."

    I would say, we are still human and have more common features than differences, we can and do change and we should ask for help and even if that help is not what we imagined it would be, we should try for our own sakes to make use of it. We are above average intelligence on the whole and can adapt the advice we are given to suit our own personality. The stategies I described were invented by me to fit the way I am. I used their ideas to start me off and they morphed into my own personal mental games for distraction and learning. My games may not fit anyone else, but you bend them to what suits your own interests and personality.

    This is self help for mental illness. Autism has advantages and disadvantages. We need to use the advantage of creative thinking and innovation, to extract what we need from treatments available and adapt it. The one thing that I have learned about mental illness is that we cure ourselves. Use drugs when they help, but seek happiness, it is our birth right. I have had an awful lot go wrong in my life, yet I am now happy quite often. My health is my responsibility and I use the resources out there, it's self preservation. There are no quick fixes, only hard learned stategies for survival.

    It is a matter of priorities when you become ill. You are firstly human, secondly ill and thirdly on the spectrum.

  • Sorry the human element comes first other humans need to treat us equally not sub human; other humans need to celebrate neurodiversity and not find "cures" for it.  the Autism comes second; because this is our disability; this needs to be accepted by neurotypicals it's the first step in helping the people on the Autism Spectrum and preventing; mental illness from developing in people on the Autism Spectrum in the first place.  We have enough on our plates coping with the disability and the social difficulties that come with it; we don't need toxic neurotypicals inducing mental illness;  in us through their poor attitudes towards our disability.  This then puts mental illness third and last on the list of priorities.  It is only put first or encouraged to be put first by Mental Health professionals struggling to keep their jobs.

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  • Sorry the human element comes first other humans need to treat us equally not sub human; other humans need to celebrate neurodiversity and not find "cures" for it.  the Autism comes second; because this is our disability; this needs to be accepted by neurotypicals it's the first step in helping the people on the Autism Spectrum and preventing; mental illness from developing in people on the Autism Spectrum in the first place.  We have enough on our plates coping with the disability and the social difficulties that come with it; we don't need toxic neurotypicals inducing mental illness;  in us through their poor attitudes towards our disability.  This then puts mental illness third and last on the list of priorities.  It is only put first or encouraged to be put first by Mental Health professionals struggling to keep their jobs.

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