Hey Alison! I replied to your post about the cottage/lake (on the original post called "CAITLIN", but they changed the title to something like "how are you?" and now I can't find it at all, not sure if you ever saw my reply about the lake, and about how I get along with my step-son...
I know exactly what you mean about feeling hopeless in terms of coming to the realization that, when there isn't an internal physical symptom, we find external ones to fret about. I don't know what causes us to do this - maybe for some it is drama. I think for many it's something that gets mistaken for "drama" - it's the need to be in crisis mode. This is less about being dramatic or having people focus on you the way "drama" implies, and more about how we cope with life and how we know to survive and get through things. The problem of course is that living in crisis mode takes it's toll -for us it seems to have taken it's toll in the form of contant and unmanageable anxiety.
I've been doing research on the impact of a parent's mental illness on their children as they grow up, and one of the main effects that I found fascinating and that really hit home for me, was that children who have to cope with their parent's mental or emotional issues grow up living in crisis mode as a matter of survival.
My mother has a mental illness, whether it's paranoia caused by the pessimistic and isolated life she has led for over 20 years, or whether it's actual chemical imbalance like schizophrenia, I don't know. The doctor's don't really know either, but she refuses to see them anymore anyways. Growing up as an only child of a single mother (my parents split when I was 7 - my mom went downhill after that) is intense enough, but when your mom has issues like mine does, life is WAY TOO intense most of the time. When I was in my late teens, I came to fully recognize the extent of her problems and I totally took over the parenting role - my mother wanted and continues to want it this way, she as the dependent, me as the provider. She had been unable to financially support us for many years, and once I was old enough, I took this on, as well as being her only emotional support (she literally hasn't had a friend or other relationship besides me for almost 20 years). Even when I was a child, I