Professional Documents
Culture Documents
blurtitout.org/2021/05/06/what-i-mean-when-i-say-i-dont-know-how-i-am/
“How are you?” is a question many of us are familiar with. It’s probably the question we
get asked more often than any other. Many of us automatically respond with ‘fine thanks,
you?’, because that’s the response we’ve learned to give. It’s the response we heard the
adults around us trot out each time they were asked how they were; they probably
learned it from the adults around them.
People are becoming increasingly aware of this. Various campaigns encourage us to ‘ask
twice‘ or to ask ‘how are you, really?’.
The problem is, we don’t always have an answer. We don’t always know how we are.
Too much information has come in. Too many thoughts are whizzing around. We’re totally
overloaded. Layers of thoughts, words, text, interactions and messages stack on top of
one another, jumbling themselves up in the process.
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We can’t think, because ‘it’ is too loud. We’re overwhelmed, overloaded, and before we
can properly engage in any conversation, we need time to wind down.
We can’t catch them. We can’t pull them down, or bring them close enough to us that
we’re able to read them. It’s so frustrating.
We know that our thoughts are there, and we know that if we could just grab them and
read them, then we could communicate far more effectively, and tell you how we are. But
no matter how hard we try, they stay out of reach.
We can’t tell you how we are, because the fog smothers the answer. It’s so thick that it
doesn’t allow anything in or out. Our thoughts have slowed right down.
Giving you a decent response would involve wading through this fog; digging down to
uncover our thoughts and feelings. We don’t have the energy to do that. So we can’t tell
you how we are.
Physically, we may not notice when we’re hungry, thirsty, in pain, too hot, or too cold.
Sometimes it can be dangerous because we forget to see to our basic needs.
Psychologically, we stop connecting with our thoughts and feelings. Sometimes this is a
trauma response; when we experience awful things, our brain can shut down to protect
us. We ‘switch off’ to survive. Sometimes we squash and squish everything down
because we’re not in a space where we feel able to work through it. The more we squash,
squish and ignore, the more disconnected we become.
Disconnection can mean that we start to live a weird spacey existence. We have no idea
how we are, physically or mentally, and feel slightly detached from ourselves at all times.
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Life is rarely smooth. If we stop to analyse how we feel, it can sometimes be difficult to
narrow it down to one ‘thing’.
Every day, we go through many different emotions. So, coming up with a concise answer
to the ‘how are you’ question can be tricky. We might have felt both great, and rubbish, so
does that mean that we balance out as ‘fine’? Can we average our emotions? Not really.
Being ‘okay’ doesn’t accurately explain how we are. It glosses over too many things.
Maybe we could give you a less concise answer? But then how much should we tell you?
How much detail should we give? Figuring this out can cause our brain to jam. We get
stuck. We don’t know what to say – so we default to ‘fine’ or ‘okay’, and the conversation
moves on.
Are we supposed to be talking about ‘how we are’ physically or mentally? Should we talk
about ‘how we are’ at work, home, school or uni? Are we meant to discuss our
relationship with our family? Should we be talking about our sleep routine? Do you want
to know how well we’re eating? Are you asking whether we’re managing to leave the
house regularly? What is it that you want to know?
All of these thoughts and questions can flood our mind as we try to put together an
answer. It’s overwhelming and become distressing. We might not be able to answer
because we can’t figure out the question we’re being asked. No answer seems ‘right’, so
we don’t know what to tell you.
Sometimes, when we’re constantly running from one thing to another, we don’t have a
chance to stop (or even pause) and check-in with ourselves. We don’t know how we feel
because we don’t have the time or space to think about it. From the moment we wake up,
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to the minute we go to bed, our time is accounted for. Our brain is running a million miles
an hour to try and stay on top of everything.
We don’t have the time, energy, or brain space to work out how we feel, nevermind
communicate those feelings.
It’s really confusing. All these different people have different opinions on our life, mood,
feelings and general wellbeing. It can create conflict in our mind as we try to navigate the
question of how we are, making it difficult to figure out an answer.
Turning our focus inward, figuring out our feelings and communicating them, is absolutely
exhausting. It’s draining and can leave us feeling wrung out. We know that an honest
response might result in follow-up questions, too, and that’s something that we definitely
don’t have the energy for.
Often, it’s far easier (and a lot less effort) to say that we don’t know how we feel, and
hope the conversation moves on.
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Some people are really open and will happily discuss their thoughts and feelings with
anyone and everyone. Others are more private and have a small group of people who we
chat to, instead.
Some of us process our thoughts and feelings by talking to others. Others like to figure it
all out before having a conversation.
We’re all different, and it might be that we’re in a place where we simply don’t want to talk
about how we are.
We’re not usually being intentionally manipulative, difficult or evasive. There are lots of
reasons for not knowing how we are – ranging from genuinely not knowing, to not wanting
to discuss it at that time.
Whether we can figure out our feelings or not, we’re not alone. We’re not the only person
who’s felt the way we do.
Please help us to help others and share this post, you never know who might need
it.
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