talithacumi
  
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Gender: 
What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Relationship status: Stopped living together in August 2010
Posts: 251
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« Reply #2 on: September 10, 2014, 06:05:27 PM » |
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I actually did this as a regular part of my therapy. Not just thought about it. Wrote it down. Every three months. Then every six.
I've found it very interesting/informative, actually, to go back and read what my story was at different points in my recovery process - and to see what kind of progress I've actually made in terms of how I see myself, my ex, the disorder, our relationship/life together, the way that ended, and what happened/what I went through after.
My first version was 26+ pages long! I read it and realize how good it obviously felt/how much I actually needed at the time to have someone ask me to tell the whole story from my point of view without even trying to be objective.
My last version was less than a page long - no real questions or doubts - a lot of radical acceptance - more sad than anything else really - which is pretty much how I've come to feel about the whole thing at this point.
So - yes! Definitely! Write your story. Save it. Write it again later. Save that.
Some people are going to say it's just another way of obsessing/keeping you stuck in the past. Having been there, I'm going to say, if you're thinking about it, you're already obsessing/stuck. Write your way through it and back to the present again, rather than lose hours/days/weeks of your life trying to ignore, deny, dismiss, or otherwise fight that urge.
It might help in the immediate - and, for me anyway, it's definitely helped in the long term.
Just my two cents.
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