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KYRA DAVIS

New York Times bestselling author of Just One Night

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KYRA DAVIS

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A Different Perspective

I've mentioned before that I'm the mom of a special needs kid. I'm not sure if I've ever mentioned that one of his challenges is that he's OCD. Anyone who is at all familiar with that disorder knows that OCD goes hand in hand with anxiety issues and anyone who has ever lived with someone else's anxiety knows it can be crazy making. When he gets worked up over what I perceive to be nothing I get incredibly frustrated and befuddled. It's nearly impossible for me to let go of the idea that I should be able to handle the situation with logic. For instance, one of the things he's OCD about is time. He can not be late. He can not be in an establishment after they've made closing announcements (not even for a few minutes) and he can not put aside a homework assignment so he can finish it later when he has more time. It has to be done in one sitting in the originally allotted time, otherwise we have a problem. Now my response to this is that's silly.

"Your teacher said it's not due for two more days," I point out. "You'll have plenty of time to finish this after your dentist appointment." But that scenario is a nightmare for my son. He now has to face walking away from an assignment before it's done or being late for an appointment. For him this is Sophie's Choice all over again. For me it's not even an issue worth a moment of stress.

Last Sunday we had an issue where he wasn't able to do something because he would have had to arrive a few minutes late. Other kids would be arriving late too and the people running the event didn't care but that made no difference to him. He tried but his anxiety overwhelmed him and we had to turn back. I found it devastating that he was unable to deal with the situation. I began to think, if he can't even handle this how is he going to get through the real challenges in life? In fact I was so distraught that I was reduced to making a tearful phone call to my mom. "I don't understand why he can't just deal!" I cried.

My mother paused and asked, "Have you ever felt panicked before?"

On the face of it, this seemed like a basic question, one that any normal person would have to say yes to and I opened my mouth to do just that...and then I stopped and really thought about it. She hadn't asked if I had ever been stressed, anxious or overly emotional. What she asked, what she meant, was had I ever experienced a true sense of utter panic. And the truth is that I haven't. I quickly recounted a few of the times when I had been in very scary situations, both on a physical and emotional level and how I had done what I needed to do to stay safe and then broke down weeping after what needed to be done was, well, done but that wasn't what my mother was talking about at all. She wasn't talking about a feeling that is brought on by an immediate physical threat or anything like that. She was talking about something that, based on her description, sounded like a heartattack. An emotion that was so overpowering, so out of control that it brought on immediate, extreme and very real physical symptoms.

My son was experiencing something I had never felt before and yet I was trying to use my life experience and my personal perspective to help him. That doesn't really work. And it occurred to me that there were probably lots of people who experienced life and processed those experiences in ways that were completely unfamiliar to me. People who I had undoubtedly unfairly judged. Maybe this is part of the reason why people of different races, religions, creeds and socioeconomic groups often have a hard time understanding one another's actions and choices. Our own perspective will always feel like the "right" perspective and contrasting perspectives will feel unreasonable at best and completely false at worst. But if we don't take the time to actually try to understand where the other person is coming from, if we can't attempt to comprehend what that other person is feeling, even if we have never felt that particular feeling or impulse before we will not only be unable to help them but we will make our own lives more frustrating because we'll be stuck banging our heads against a wall wondering "Why can't he/she just see things for how they really are?!?!"

So going forward I'm not going to try to reason with my son when he starts feeling panicky. That's a strategy that works on me but I can't project that on him.  Instead I'm going to focus more on what he's feeling and the physical things we can do to bring the panic down (deep breaths, stretches, running up and down the stairs until he works that tension out). I believe that eventually he'll be able to do those deep breathing exercises while walking swiftly to that appointment he might be a few minutes late for. But we're not there yet.

Likewise when I'm tempted to judge people I'm going to at least try to imagine what they must be feeling.  I'll take a second to consider that they might have a perspective and way of processing information that is dramatically different than mine but nonetheless just as valid. And I'm not just going to do this to be PC. I'm going to do this so that I'm better able to resist the temptation to:

A) Throw things
B) Make tearful phone calls
C) Pull my hair out
D) Scrunch my face into wrinkle producing expressions of anger and frustration

See? Understanding and empathy aren't just a gift you give to others. It's a gift you give to yourself.



Kyra Davis
Bestselling Author of:
The Sophie Katz Murder Mystery Series,
 and 
SO MUCH FOR MY HAPPY ENDING
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4 comments :

  1. Alina AdamsFriday, October 21, 2011 at 3:52:00 PM PDT

    This is truly a thought provoking piece, Kyra. I'm having everyone in my family read it.

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  2. azusmomFriday, October 21, 2011 at 6:03:00 PM PDT

    So profound, and SO TRUE! About 15 years ago I started having panic attacks. It absolutely felt like a heart attack the first time, and I had no idea what was going on. It got to the point where I was having multiple attacks a day and dreading waking up in the morning. Sometimes I wished I could die in my sleep so I wouldn't have to have any more attacks. I was in grad school at the time. My boyfriend couldn't understand and started running out of patience, and none of my professors had any empathy, which made me dread the attacks even more, which caused more anxiety and more attacks.
    Eventually I went to a therapist who prescribed a specific program for me, and that helped immensely. I understood my anxiety, and I also began to understand how to help myself. I haven't had a panic attack in 11 years, but I really understand that level of anxiety, as well as the need to control my environment.
    Sorry for such a long post: I just wanted you to know that there IS help and hope! Good luck, and G-d bless you guys!!!!!!

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  3. azusmomFriday, October 21, 2011 at 9:25:00 PM PDT

    P.S., I finally learned that I CANNOT control my environment, and to cope in the real world. Just wanted to add that.

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  4. Dani GMonday, October 24, 2011 at 5:04:00 PM PDT

    I get it. A million times, I get it. Big hugs to you.

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ABOUT KYRA DAVIS

I'm the internationally published author of the Sophie Katz mystery series, and So Much For My Happy Ending. My first Erotic Fiction Trilogy will be released in January 2013.

Aside from that, I'm a single mom; I'm addicted to coffee and True Blood (the show, not the drink). I'm happy with who I am yet I’m always striving to be better; I have more bad hair days than good ones, I love a challenge but I am not fearless, I’m….well…just me.

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