
As 2022 ends, I feel a sense of gratitude and peace in my heart for how many blessings Iβve had this year. Iβm closing this year off with immense serenity in my life. Thatβs saying a lot for me who used to live in chaos and for adrenaline rushes. Iβm not saying Iβm βhealedβ or βcuredβ of my BPD but I will say that Iβm so much better at managing my emotions. This year has been about recovery from my BPD symptoms that often left me in a constant influx of emotional chaos. While I still feel my emotions intensely, they donβt control me like they used to. Iβm a much happier and content person at the end of this year than I was starting off the year. In fact, this has been one of the best years of my life. I wanted to give you some insight into what helped me:
1.Routine and Consistency pays off-
In the latter half of 2021, I started to pay really close attention to how I was spending my time and learned what was working for me and what wasnβt. When Iβm not working, I incorporate a routine of wellness and creativity that helps me feel balanced in my otherwise super busy life with 2 jobs and 3 kids. I make time for exercise 1 to 2 times a week and write daily. Iβve learned that this combination has helped me so much in bettering my mental health. The endorphins from walking/running always makes me feel better especially after a rough day. Writing every day has been instrumental in helping me manage my emotions. I journal every day and try to write poetry daily even when Iβm not super inspired. Do I like everything I write? No, but I donβt filter out anything Iβm thinking no matter how crazy or dumb it seems like at the time. If itβs a poem, I tell myself, well I can always revise and edit later. This first draft is almost always going to be rough.
Hereβs a poem I wrote about it:
December Poetry Challenge: A Boring Life
2. Find your own Happy Place or Happy Places
This year Iβve felt a sense of overall contentment in my life because Iβve learned how to be happy. Happiness is a hard emotion for me because Iβve been depressed and anxious for the majority of my adult life. However, one of the things I learned this year is to build happiness, and sometimes that looks crazy. Music, writing, nature, exercising, and food are a few of the things out of many that bring me joy. This year, I even made a playlist called βHappy Musicβ with Yung Gravy and Jack Harlow songs that hype me up. Here is that playlist:
3.Take back the Power from the things that have made you feel powerless
I used to live in a world of insecurity and fear about a lot of things. I allowed my fear of failure to keep me from living a full life. Last year, I decided to stop doing this and just started living unapologetically and authentically. I stopped caring about how Iβm perceived to others for the most part. One example is that I was always too afraid to call myself a writer/poet because 1) I wasnβt published 2) I didnβt feel like I was intelligent or eloquent enough in my writing to do so. In fact, when I was posting poetry in 2016/2017 I used to call my writing mediocre and I now think that was a disservice to myself. It was me devaluing myself and my art. This year, Iβve learned not to judge what Iβve written or decide to post. It might resonate with someone or it might not resonate with anyone.What matters to me is that Iβm being brave enough to share it with the world.

4.Whatever you do, donβt suppress your feelings.
This one is one of the healthiest things you can do for yourself. For years on end I had been conditioned that anger and sadness were these negative emotions that I should try my best not to feel and express. Even when I allowed myself to feel them, I still spiral into a loop of shame and guilt about it. I went through a process this year of learning to let go of that shame and guilt and fully feel those emotions, express them (sometimes through exercise or writing), and organically letting go of them. Iβll admit, sometimes I do get hateful when Iβm like this and a hateful poem happens but I tell myself, this is me in this moment and doesnβt define who I am. Itβs like an emotional burp or first thought that needed to be expressed. Yes, sometimes I call my poems emotional burps or first thoughts. Doing this has helped me find more contentment, satisfaction, and gratitude in my life in general.
Here is an example of one of those βemotional burpsβ:
December Poetry Challenge: Everything Annoys the Fuck Out of Me
5.Be Protective of Your Energy
I cannot stress this enough. The only way I was able to really thrive this year is to understand I could not extend my emotional bandwidth. One thing that kind of drained me was men,relationships and sex so in May when βCβ stopped responding to me, I decided to delete his contact info, archived our photos and pretty much ended that relationship on my own terms. I was honestly really proud of myself because I took it in stride and accepted it because well me and him had a good run. I also told any other men I was kind of entertaining that I wasnβt available for anything aside from a platonic friendship. With that, I decided to give myself a year of celibacy from that part of my life. It was rough starting out because aside from a couple of months here and there, I donβt remember a time in my life when I havenβt been romantically involved with someone. 7 Months later, Iβm much better. Iβll admit that celibacy does suck at times but itβs been completely worth it. Itβs the break I needed to really discover who I am without the validation from relationships and men Iβve been dependent on since the age I was teenager. I plan to date sometime in May after my divorce is final provided I feel like I have the energy. Right now, my energy is really happy and thriving and Iβm continuing to build on this.Here is a poem I wrote about missing my white jacket after me and βCβ ended:
Poem of the Day: White Jacket
6.Acknowledge and take accountability for your part in your misery
Iβve been doing this on and off for the past 5 years but if I had to be honest with myself, Iβve also blamed others unfairly for my misery. Itβs not that I donβt acknowledge that the actions of other people have caused me pain or that I condone that pain but at the end of the day I canβt control them. I can only control myself. This means I choose what situations I put myself in, who I allow into my life, what energy I let in, etc,etc. I used to think that life happened to me and I didnβt have much power over it. Thanks to a deep level of self awareness and introspection, Iβm hyper aware of much control and power I have over my life and damn, it’s way more than I expected. It took me a while to get here and it sucked because now I canβt blame my parents, my exes, or that idiot who put a triggering status post on facebook about politics- itβs really me and how I react to it/them. As difficult as it has been to acknowledge this, it has also helped me feel this sense of peace in a lot of ways. I sleep way better at night understanding this concept. I also understand that there are things I wonβt have control over but I always have a choice as to how I react to it. Here is a poem I wrote about it:
https://lifeonthebpd.com/?p=5237
2022 was one of the calmest and best years of my life. This year was my year to rest and recharge because I know 2023 will be chaotic with all the changes Iβm making in my life. These changes will be uncomfortable but like someone once told me, βyou have to go out of your comfort zone in order to growβ. I hope that whatever happens; I continue to grow and learn from the experience. Iβve healed and transformed into the healthiest version of myself but still understand that Iβm a work in progress. I look forward to continuing this journey of self discovery and am excited about whatβs to come.












