avatarVanessa Torre

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ges-1.readmedium.com/v2/resize:fit:800/1*_aZttq6ZTru5-Y8hHoioyQ.jpeg"><figcaption></figcaption></figure><p id="d0fd">Eventually, as things always do, everything came to a head. It was brought to my attention that I had to get my collective shit together. It had gotten that bad. I was asked, “Why aren’t you asking for help?”</p><p id="7751">The answer is simple and it’s the same as my friend’s: I can’t.</p><p id="58bd">What you have to understand about people who need help is this: We <b>know</b> we need it. But, there is just no way humanly possible that we can ask for it. It’s too much. The reality was that I had no idea what help I needed and figuring that out required energy I just didn’t have in me any more.</p><p id="d91f">Every day for me was an exercise in consciously making the decision to put my feet on the floor once I got up. Breathing felt like a choice to be made.</p><p id="c050" type="7">While all the “normal” people were choosing what creamer to put in their coffee, I was trying to figure out if I wanted to show up for life.</p><p id="9d3c">The worst part of this was the shame I felt in not being able to ask for help. People around me knew I was a mess. I was open about it. Shaming someone for not asking for help when they can’t is like asking a person overboard why they didn’t just swim back to the boat. They can’t and they need you to throw them a life preserver.</p><p id="12e0">It made me angry, which in turn made me volatile, which I am sure made me a pleasure to be around.</p><p id="ddca">Eventually, I just ran out of steam. Even steamless, asking for help was too much. So I compromised. I decided to be honest with people.</p><p id="1ab8" type=

Options

"7">If I was going to be a hot mess, the least I could do was be an honest one.</p><p id="3943">I told people I was in over my head. I told them I needed the life preserver. I needed space. I needed care. I needed love. I needed people to notice I was on the edge and pull me back.</p><p id="bbe6">I told them they would need to figure out how to help me. Admitting all of this was the was the best I could do. What happened was amazing. They figured it out. Everyone has their own way they give and allowing them the space to give to me in a way that was easy for them allowed me to accept what they had.</p><p id="d958">I didn’t stay in that dark place for much longer after that. Clouds eventually parted. I still have a hard time asking for help. But, I’ve gotten good as explaining that to people.</p><p id="18f4"><i>Navigating that midlife awakening and trying to figure out what to do with it. I got you. <a href="https://lp.constantcontactpages.com/su/S8rU24J/midlife"><b>Get on my mailing list now</b></a>! I have exciting things coming up! You don’t want to miss it.</i></p><p id="614a"><i>Vanessa Torre is a writer and a midlife coach for women looking to make remarkable changes so they can live a creative, fulfilling, and profitable life. Learn more at <a href="http://www.vanessatorre.com/"><b>www.vanessatorre.com</b></a><b>.</b></i></p><p id="f892"><i>Follow Vanessa on <a href="https://www.instagram.com/vanessaltorre/"><b>Instagram</b></a>, <a href="https://www.facebook.com/vanessaltorre"><b>Facebook</b></a>, <a href="https://twitter.com/VanessaLTorre"><b>Twitter</b></a>, and <a href="https://tiktok.com/@vanessaltorre"><b>TikTok</b></a><b>.</b></i></p></article></body>

I Needed Help. I Didn’t Ask For It. Don’t Shame Me.

When you’re overboard and can’t swim.

I had lunch yesterday with a friend that is going through a rough time. She just needed to vent. She’s frustrated. Lots of people know she’s had a rough go and she’s tired. Just tired. She needs some help and no one is offering. Every time she breaks down a little she feels incredibly judged with the same question: Why don’t you just ask for help?

She can’t.

I’ve been there. It is a lonely, horrible place. This time last year was about the darkest my life has been. I was in the middle of a divorce. The contract for my work had gone out to bid. I had no idea what was going to happen to my life in the next six months.

Everything felt out of control. Everything was on the line. Everything could be lost.

I didn’t handle it well. I tried really hard to fake it and pretend I was okay. I wasn’t. I couldn’t find okay if I had a GPS tracking device made by NASA. My life was falling apart. I was a ball of rage and fear and destruction. I cried for no reason and sometimes for good, solid reason. Sometimes for hours.

My work, obviously, suffered. Not in huge ways but in small ways that added up to a lot. A deadline missed here. An email unanswered there. No one was going to die from my mistakes but with a contract on the line, everything mattered.

Eventually, as things always do, everything came to a head. It was brought to my attention that I had to get my collective shit together. It had gotten that bad. I was asked, “Why aren’t you asking for help?”

The answer is simple and it’s the same as my friend’s: I can’t.

What you have to understand about people who need help is this: We know we need it. But, there is just no way humanly possible that we can ask for it. It’s too much. The reality was that I had no idea what help I needed and figuring that out required energy I just didn’t have in me any more.

Every day for me was an exercise in consciously making the decision to put my feet on the floor once I got up. Breathing felt like a choice to be made.

While all the “normal” people were choosing what creamer to put in their coffee, I was trying to figure out if I wanted to show up for life.

The worst part of this was the shame I felt in not being able to ask for help. People around me knew I was a mess. I was open about it. Shaming someone for not asking for help when they can’t is like asking a person overboard why they didn’t just swim back to the boat. They can’t and they need you to throw them a life preserver.

It made me angry, which in turn made me volatile, which I am sure made me a pleasure to be around.

Eventually, I just ran out of steam. Even steamless, asking for help was too much. So I compromised. I decided to be honest with people.

If I was going to be a hot mess, the least I could do was be an honest one.

I told people I was in over my head. I told them I needed the life preserver. I needed space. I needed care. I needed love. I needed people to notice I was on the edge and pull me back.

I told them they would need to figure out how to help me. Admitting all of this was the was the best I could do. What happened was amazing. They figured it out. Everyone has their own way they give and allowing them the space to give to me in a way that was easy for them allowed me to accept what they had.

I didn’t stay in that dark place for much longer after that. Clouds eventually parted. I still have a hard time asking for help. But, I’ve gotten good as explaining that to people.

Navigating that midlife awakening and trying to figure out what to do with it. I got you. Get on my mailing list now! I have exciting things coming up! You don’t want to miss it.

Vanessa Torre is a writer and a midlife coach for women looking to make remarkable changes so they can live a creative, fulfilling, and profitable life. Learn more at www.vanessatorre.com.

Follow Vanessa on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, and TikTok.

Life
Mental Health
Self
Relationships
Divorce
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