True Catastrophizing
You know how I feel about
catastrophizing (here, here and here). It's that terrible term used to belittle the concerns of people
with chronic illness and chronic pain. When you’re in the middle of an intense
flare, it’s a fairly normal response to wonder if it’ll ever end, yet medical
professionals define it as viewing the situation is worse than it really is.
Oh, sure. They’re not the ones in the middle of the pain.
Anyway! To establish a
contrast, I’d like to offer up the following moment between me and The Boy that exemplifies true catastrophizing.
He and I like to daydream
about places we’d like to go. We won’t actually go anywhere — he doesn’t have the travel
bug and I can’t travel. At the moment. I have high hopes for being able to do
so again in the future. This past weekend, we were talking about cabins in the
woods and then he mentioned a hotel in the Grand Canyon that has a suite underground, in a cavern. He explained that you’d be getting down at the end of
the day and spend the night. When I wondered how you’d leave again, he stated
that there was a call button by the elevator so the staff can send the
elevator down for you.
Me: “What?”
The Boy repeats the
information.
Me (somewhat panicked):
“what if there is a nuclear war?”
The Boy: “???”
Me: “or an asteroid
strike?”
The Boy: “um….”
Me: “how would we get
out??”
The Boy: “erm, I think
maybe if there’d been a nuclear war, getting out would not be our biggest worry…”
Me: “so, we'd just stay
there. And starve?”
The Boy: “pretty much.
What with the nuclear war and all.”
Me: “but isn’t there
another way to get out? What if the elevator doesn’t work? Are you just doomed
to stay until someone remembers you’re there? What if you want to leave in the
middle of the night??”
The Boy: “…”
Me: “did I mention I’m
slightly claustrophobic? I need an escape route! We can't go if there's no
escape route!!”
And this is when The
Boy put his head in his hands and whimpered quietly. He does that sometimes. I've no idea why.
Comments