Editors Choice

Reluctantly Healed By Barbie šŸ˜…

Iā€™ll start by saying that I was prepared to hate the Barbie movie. I thought it would be a giant advertisement for a toy that perpetuates the objectification of women and impossible, Eurocentric beauty standards while trying to re-brand the doll as a symbol of liberationā€¦ and watching the movie didnā€™t change my mind about that.

But it also made me cryā€¦ and as a vehicle for getting in touch with my emotions, it helped me step out of an intensity spiral šŸŒ€ that had been brewing in me for a few days ā€” the kind of spiral that, if left unchecked, can often result in a headache for me.

Hereā€™s a step-by-step of how I was reluctantly healed by Barbie šŸ˜…. Regardless of what you think of the doll or the movie, you might relate to parts of this storyā€¦

It started with stressā€¦ and escalated into the stress cycle

When we experience a flare-up of anxiety or any of the physical symptoms that can come with it (like pain), we often want to trace the steps back to how and why the flare-up started. ā€œWhat caused it? What could I have done to avoid it?ā€ Weā€™re often looking for one singular thing that we did ā€œwrongā€ so that we can course-correct for the future.

But most of the time, itā€™s not one singular thing. Stress is cumulative. And in my case on this particular occasion, Iā€™d recently heard several heavy stories of sad news, I was (and still am) undertaking a number of home improvement projects with my partner, and a week Iā€™d taken off for vacation wound up being subsumed in to-doā€™s.

These normal, everyday stresses that come with life then kicked my stress cycle into gear. For me, it looks like this: I start fixating on stress-induced thoughts. Thoughts like, ā€œIā€™m not doing enough. My partner is working harder than me, so I should be doing more. I shouldnā€™t relax because heā€™s not relaxingā€¦ā€

These thoughts, of course, perpetuate more stress. It becomes a cycle that escalates.

I recognized the symptoms of the stress cycle starting to brew

In the old days, I used to think self-critical thoughts were true. And I thought that I just needed to do more and be better in order to quiet those thoughts down. I still get caught up in that kind of thinkingā€¦ when Iā€™m stressed.

What I recognize now is that those thoughts themselves are a symptom of stress. And they seem very true when Iā€™m stressed! Itā€™s an act of will to notice them and name them as a stress symptom so that I can start making choices that will help me unwind from the stress cycle.

Another stress symptom I noticed was that it was getting harder to concentrate on work. I felt like I was pushing myself instead of feeling led by inspiration or energy. Work started to feel like a drag and I began to feel resentment towards it.

In the days before I ever experienced a migraine, I would ignore these signals that are telling me to slow down. And I still do, sometimes. But what my recovery from chronic pain has taught me is that ignoring the signals can have very unpleasant consequences ā€” and that as hard as it is to step off the stress merry-go-round, there are immeasurable benefits to doing so before my nervous system pulls the emergency break in the form of a pain flare-up.

I didnā€™t do it ā€œperfectlyā€

Yes, Iā€™ve gotten much better at listening to my nervous systemā€™s signals. But Iā€™m not ā€œperfectā€ at it! I donā€™t always catch the stress before it manifests in physical pain. And I did wake up with a mild headache before fully tending to the stress.

The headache ā€” along with increasing levels of feeling jittery throughout the morning ā€” were my nervous systemā€™s way of sending a louder signal. One that I decided to heed.

Iā€™d planned to spend most of the day working on my podcast. But I made an executive decision to step away from my desk, play hooky for the rest of the dayā€¦ and go see the Barbie movie. I figured two hours of sparkly pink Hollywood entertainment would get my mind out of productivity overdrive and overwhelm.

Then came the guilt!

I tiptoed out of the house, feeling tremendously guilty that my husband was still glued to endless Zoom meetings for work.

I debated whether to even tell him that I was going to the movies.

I finally sent a text message to let him knowā€¦ and then sat with the waves of guilt mixed with waves of relief all the way to the theater.

Lights, camera, tears

The lights went down in the movie theater, and just as Iā€™d hoped, the magic of Hollywood glitter took my preoccupied mind into another dimension. But much to my surprise, it wasnā€™t just a trip to the land of distraction and fluff.

Despite my misgivings about Barbieā€¦ that dang movie got to me. And I cried! I literally wept in the theater. Funny enough, the movie touches into a lot of the themes that we talk about in chronic pain recovery: Breaking out of numbness and feeling your full range of emotions, taking off the mask of perfectionism and revealing your authentic selfā€¦

I was reluctant to be swept up in the story ā€” but it was exactly the emotional release that I needed. And my whole mind and body felt like they were re-set and re-energized by the time the lights came up again.

Laughter and perspective

By the time I got home, all the feelings of guilt that my stress-cycle churned up had subsided. My partner was still working away when I turned the key in the door, and when he got up to greet me he said, ā€œWhereā€™d you go? I didnā€™t know you were out!ā€

I had to laugh at all the angst and worry I put myself through debating whether it was okay to take time for myself while he was working.

It felt good to give him a hug and tell him about my movie escapade ā€” and I could tell he enjoyed seeing me in such a good mood.

My takeaways from this vignette? While I might not have time to run away to the movies every day, feeling guilty about slowing down to unwind is always a signal thatā€¦ itā€™s time to slow down and unwind. In whatever way, shape or form is available to you. Even if it starts off as a guilty pleasure, making time for pleasure will guide you back home.

āž”ļø If you need support with chronic pain and anxiety, take myĀ FREE QUIZĀ called ā€œWhy the *bleep* am I still in pain?!ā€ so I can help you get some clarity.

Anna Holtzman

Anna Holtzman is a chronic pain recovery therapist and coach based in New York City.

Recent Posts

Promise and Peril of Instant Health Information Access for Consumers

Apps and AI Help Patients Access in a Blink Their Diagnostic Data: But Lacking Physician…

2 days ago

COP29 Opening Ceremony: Leaders Call for Bold Action Amid Global Climate Crisis

A central issue at COP29 is the need for increased climate finance to support developing…

2 days ago

Nonstick Pans: The Truth About Safety and How to Use Them Right

Weā€™ve all heard the rumors: nonstick coatings degrade over time, releasing harmful chemicals into our…

2 days ago

Teeth, Implants, and Potential Issues of Profit Against Health and Ethics

Patients may have healthy, salvable teeth replaced with implants without fully understanding the implications.

2 days ago

The Diabetes Epidemic: A Pressing Public Health Catastrophe

The economic impact of Type 2 diabetes is staggering. The time for half-measures and incremental…

1 week ago

Corundum Convergence Institute Launches to Catalyze Funding for Research and Innovation in Neuroscience and Systems Biology

New Non-Profit Organization Focuses on Early-Stage Sponsored Research and Venture Philanthropy to Advance Human Health…

1 week ago

This website uses cookies. Your continued use of the site is subject to the acceptance of these cookies. Please refer to our Privacy Policy for more information.

Read More