Suffering? Here are 4 Reasons to Share Your Personal Journey with Others
Friends and family are often unable to reach their
loved ones who are struggling with addiction or depression. So what’s the
key to inspiring someone to take control and change the course of their life?
The mutual experience of sharing their journey with others who are
struggling.
If you’ve struggled with alcoholism,
trauma, severe depression or thoughts of suicide, you know too well the
feelings of being utterly alone. Even if you have family and friends who love
you, spiraling into the depths of depression, alcohol abuse, and suicide make
you blind to your own value. It can leave you feeling as though your loved ones
would be better off without you around.
Going through such a journey and emerging
a stronger, more resilient person allows us an opportunity to share that
journey. Sharing your story can be one of the most meaningful things you can
do, not only for your own recovery, but for the benefits of others.
Here’s why.
Sharing your journey helps you connect with your community.
The setup of an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting has been
dramatized on television so many times: One individual is selected to stand up
and speak, beginning their statement with, “Hi, my name is Joe, and I’m an
alcoholic.” The format is very recognizable. The intent behind this is the
first step in the conventional ‘12-step’ program to recovery, which is admitting
that you have an issue (in this case, an addiction) and that you have lost your
power to it.
Whatever you are working through, this
kind of reality-check is an important first step. But it
also serves another critical purpose – introducing yourself to
a community that can support you throughout your recovery. Welcomes
are often warm and encouraging for those who may be attending their first
meeting or are just beginning their journey to recovery. People sharing their
personal journeys can connect attendees with each other, and raise awareness
that they are truly not alone. This mutual sharing of stories cultivates
an atmosphere of trust and acceptance. It’s this effect that often makes
support meetings feel like a safe haven for those suffering with addiction or
mental illness.
Your personal story enables you to support and inspire others.
For those who have been through the process of healing
or recovery, the story that follows often inspires others who are just
beginning their own journeys. For an alcoholic who has suffered from severe
depression or thoughts of suicide, hearing stories from those who have
walked this difficult path and emerged on the other side is often the
inspiration — and reality check — they need to keep going.
Of course, you can share your story
beyond a setting like an AA meeting. Many people who have suffered from mental
illness, suicidal feelings, alcoholism or drug abuse, and their
family members, have started blogs,
some of which have grown to become virtual recovery/support communities.
Whether in an online setting or an in-person meeting or support group, peers in recovery take comfort in knowing that
they will be met with understanding and compassion.
Sharing your personal story could save lives.
Sharing your story through a blog or
a stand-alone article can be as therapeutic for you as it is inspiring for
others going through similar circumstances. An alcoholic or someone
contemplating suicide may read your story and be inspired to seek help,
realizing that recovery is truly possible. When someone is near
rock-bottom, or in the deepest depression, they may be unlikely to venture out
to seek help or even pick up the phone. But because the Internet enables anyone
to connect with and share information with anyone around the world, it’s now
possible to seek out options for help anonymously.
A powerful story of recovery can be a
lifeline for someone about to make a terrible and drastic choice. Your words
could be the single influencing factor that makes them change their mind – even
for one day. That could be the day during which that person decides to reach
out for help. They may decide to call a helpline for immediate assistance, or
admit to a loved one that they are struggling with alcoholism, depression, or
thoughts of suicide. The power to save lives through sharing your personal
journey is immeasurable.
Improving your feelings of self-worth and recognizing your value.
There are many benefits to your peers in recovery
groups and people with whom you share similar struggles, but sharing
your personal journey benefits you, the storyteller as well. The recovery
journey is often a long road as well as a pivotal life period. Sharing this
with others helps to give meaning and context to what you’re going through.
Your journey may have the ability to impact and influence others to make a
change for the better, while also helping you remain grounded and offering
you perspective on the nature and importance of continuing your ongoing recovery.
Telling your recovery story can also help
you find your voice. As Jay Boll, Editor in Chief at Resources to Recover,
explains, “Writing about a difficult period in your life can help you organize
the chaos of past events in the structure of a story with a beginning, middle
and end, and a moral you can learn from. It allows you to think about the
events of your life and express them in a way that makes sense to other people
and ultimately to you yourself.”
Above all, your story is important. Being
able to connect with other people who are experiencing similar
struggles, can inspire and encourage them to take action to change
their lives — a valuable gift. That’s why friends and loved ones are often
unable to reach their loved ones who are struggling with addiction or
depression – the mutual experience is the key to inspire someone to change
course.
It may seem uncomfortable at first to
share your personal recovery journey. However, once you realize the power that
your experience has given you to transform lives, it’s a gift that you cannot
leave untapped.
Source:wakeup world
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