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<blockquote data-quote="scent of cedar" data-source="post: 604174" data-attributes="member: 1721"><p>Thank you for sharing to both Skotti and SuZir.</p><p></p><p>Skotti, those are the exact kinds of things that happen to difficult child. When she was staying with the woman before she left to live on the streets with the bad man? The woman told difficult child she had been talking to the canned goods ~ and getting upset with their responses! difficult child then realized that what she had been doing was abnormal.</p><p></p><p>How awful, not to know.</p><p></p><p>I'm so sorry that is happening to you, Skotti. It's just not fair. How can we be expected to make sense of things, or trust ourselves?</p><p></p><p>On the other hand, husband sees patterns and faces in everything. The difference is, I suppose, that others can see the faces created by the shadows too, once he points them out. And they don't move. And they don't talk to him.</p><p></p><p>I'm wondering then, if it's just a matter of degree?</p><p></p><p>SuZir, that your son feels differently about the things he sees or hears, once fear of being abnormal is not so great a component. That has to tell us something about why the things some of us see and hear so clearly get nasty. Didn't Eleanor, the lady in the TED talk about schizophrenia, say something similar?</p><p></p><p>Something to the effect that she learned to talk to the voices quite firmly, from her strong center?</p><p></p><p>Cedar</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="scent of cedar, post: 604174, member: 1721"] Thank you for sharing to both Skotti and SuZir. Skotti, those are the exact kinds of things that happen to difficult child. When she was staying with the woman before she left to live on the streets with the bad man? The woman told difficult child she had been talking to the canned goods ~ and getting upset with their responses! difficult child then realized that what she had been doing was abnormal. How awful, not to know. I'm so sorry that is happening to you, Skotti. It's just not fair. How can we be expected to make sense of things, or trust ourselves? On the other hand, husband sees patterns and faces in everything. The difference is, I suppose, that others can see the faces created by the shadows too, once he points them out. And they don't move. And they don't talk to him. I'm wondering then, if it's just a matter of degree? SuZir, that your son feels differently about the things he sees or hears, once fear of being abnormal is not so great a component. That has to tell us something about why the things some of us see and hear so clearly get nasty. Didn't Eleanor, the lady in the TED talk about schizophrenia, say something similar? Something to the effect that she learned to talk to the voices quite firmly, from her strong center? Cedar [/QUOTE]
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