Hello Gettingthere,
I'm sorry you are having to endure this, and if there were a way to escape it I would wish that for you too.
Perhaps you could use some stress management training. During the Vietnam War, a stress training class went like this. They gave me a list of work assignments. It was explained to me that I must complete the work assignments to graduate the class. Then it was explained there were going to be three people in the room with me, and their job was to do everything possible to prevent me from doing the job. The adversaries were not permitted to restrain me, but they could do anything external to slow my progress. I would graduate, when I could complete the exercise in spite of the interference.
I tried this a couple of times and failed. The adversaries were quite good. One of them got a bucket of water and poured it right on to my head. I wasn't expecting it, and nearly drowned. They threw paper wads at me, pulled the plug on my electrical tools etc... .
The third try, I completed the work list in the allotted time. To do this, I had to adopt the mindset that I could expect the worst from the adversaries. I also had to learn to work fast, and not allow distractions to cost much time. So after getting the bucket of water over the head, I just wiped my eyes and continued.
There are some training courses online. Most are academic in nature, and in practical application academic training doesn't really cut it. The stress-management learning needs to take place inside you, involving your ability to focus your mind in spite of interference.
Here is a link for an academic study
www.studygs.net/stress.htmThe lesson is mind over matter. Practice keeping your mind focused in spite of the interference, and tune out the emotion. Imagine how the test would have gone if the bucket of water made me angry enough to fight?
cheers,