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14 January 8, 2016 Desert Lightning News
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A Puzzle Called “Me”
Commentary by Senior Airman Shane Mitchell tions started zipping through my brain and dissipating almost instanta-
neously, like bugs being zapped by the alluring blue light. My heart rate
366th Fighter Wing Public Affairs increased. My mind was reminding me over and over again of the choices
I made.
MOUNTAIN HOME AIR FORCE BASE, Idaho -- It was early October
when I entered the waiting room, and I wasn’t in the best of moods. The I began to loathe myself. This is called “anger.”
past two months had been the worst of my life; I made some very poor de- The woman across from me sat patiently and listened empathetically.
cisions and my personal, financial and professional stress was unmanage- And when I was done with my story, she looked calmly at me and asked:
able. I put myself between a rock and an even bigger rock; a “hard place” “what do you hope to get out of this?”
would have been a relief. I didn’t know. I half-expected to have her tell me what I needed. After
all, I’m in the Air Force; someone telling me what to do is what I’d become
Hell, at one point, I even considered suicide. accustomed to. My life was in shambles and it felt like there was no shelter
It’s been many years since I’ve shown my emotions to anyone. I tend to from the storm I created - like no matter what I tried to do, I’d spend the
keep them locked or intellectualized away; it’s much easier to view them next several years of my life taking two steps forward and three steps back.
logically and dismiss them than experience them for what they are. I felt powerless.
At this point in my life, I only remember feeling a few distinct emotions: I felt defeated. This is called “despair.”
anger, despair, apathy and anxiety. “Relief ” and “hope” ceased to exist for “I don’t know,” I replied. “I know I have some emotional things to deal
me, almost vacating my vocabulary entirely. with, but I don’t know what they are, exactly.”
The kitchen advice from the cooking show on the waiting room TV
droned on and melted with the rest of “I want you to know that I work for
the background noise. My eyes wandered you,” she told me. “I’m not going to tell
around the room, from faces of other you what you need, but I’m going to help
people waiting, to the TV teaching me you get what you decide you need for
how to make custard, to the clock slowly yourself. And if it isn’t working for you,
ticking down until my appointment. Ev- tell me.”
ery second seemed to linger as I waited.
Tick. Tick. Tick. She listened. She didn’t judge me.
I didn’t care. This is called “apathy.” Neither did my coworkers, or my
“Senior Airman Mitchell?” friends and family.
I shifted my gaze from the clock to the Or the people in the waiting room.
owner of the voice calling my name. It started to occur to me that the judg-
“Are you ready?” ment I was expecting was imagined. They
No. Yes. Should I be? I didn’t know. weren’t judging me - I was.
As I stood up, I noticed a few people Tick. Tick. Tick.
watching me. I imagined what was going For the first time in a long time, I felt at
through their heads. ease. I felt calm, even if for just a moment.
“I wonder what he’s here for.” This is called “relief.”
“That guy must be ‘broken.’” That’s the day I discovered what counseling at the Mountain Home AFB
The judgments I conjured echoed in my head as the “voice” led me down Mental Health clinic was really like.
a hall and into a cozy office that would occupy the next few hours of my life. Since then, I’ve found some focus. I’ve begun to identify what barriers,
I sat on a couch, leaned forward and stared at the floor. difficulties and issues I need to work out. The past few months have given
“What now?” I thought. “What happens next?” me a piece of clarity in the puzzle called “me.”
I wanted to be here, but I didn’t want to be here. This is called “anxiety.” That puzzle would still be in a box on the shelf if I hadn’t walked through
The “voice” sat across from me and went over the list of problems that the door and confronted the fears that made every step difficult to take.
led me here. Between a night of poor decisions, the possibility of my mili- Every session is a chance for me to explore and learn things about myself
tary career ending, and discovering I might be a father after a night with - on both a basic and “deeper” level. Every time I sit in that familiar sofa
a friend, the “list” started to sound more like a bad reality TV show, and I in a small, cozy room, I can vent my frustrations, ask questions and gain
was the main character. insight from somebody who cares mostly about where I go from this point
“That sounds about right,” I confirmed. in my life.
My gaze didn’t meet hers for more than a second or two. Finding pat- It took a life-changing chain of events for me to realize I needed help,
terns in the carpet was more bearable than looking anyone in the eyes. and a of lot humility - something I struggle with - to ask for it. But I’m glad
Several long, arduous seconds of silence passed. I did.
Tick. Tick. Tick. I’m learning that life isn’t about absolutes, and the “grey areas” are what
She spoke again. make it worth living. I’m learning to be comfortable with the things I like
“That’s a lot. How are you dealing with it?” about myself, and I’m trying to change the things I don’t.
I began to recount everything that happened in the past few months. The stage is set, and the past was merely act one. Every act that follows
I told her my stories and concerns; I told her what led me here and what has yet to be written.
went wrong. And as I spoke, the gravity of my situation hit me hard, like an What’s important is today. And today, I get to keep trying to put the
ocean wave hell-bent on making it over a beach of jagged rocks. This wasn’t pieces of that puzzle in place.
a bad reality TV show I could just turn off. This was reality - my reality. Tick. And take life...
I became frustrated at times and confused at others. A plethora of emo- Tick.., one second.., Tick.., at a time.., Tock.
This is called “hope.”