Drama

Years ago I went out with a drama Queen 
He was big on gestures and huge of emotion. 
He also had a temper, as have I 
So we fitted badly. And the relationship was full of highs and lows 
And addictive drama.

I’ve hated drama in any form since then.
 
I just don’t want to know it.
The nurse in me abhors drama, 
It’s pointless and helps no one practically, and often just gets in the way of things.
It’s as if the emotion camouflages the reality 
We always watch the noisy child don’t we? 

I turn into my elder sister at times of drama, with a pursed lip and strong quiet I’m not doing this now
statement, which sets a scene.
Sure it’s often more satisfying to join in with the drama as their teeth often fit your wounds but eventually it’s all pointless , and fruitless and as hollow and dead  as an old log in a wood.
Or as Kenneth Williams final words said what’s the bloody point?

No drama , just the Garden Arch Montana blooming this morning



79 comments:

  1. Kenneth William did drama as drama. I remember his brilliance reading a story on Jackanory around 1970.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. He loved to be the centre of attention , something his mother cultivated

      Delete
    2. Oh, yes Tasker...it was brilliant!

      Delete
  2. Anonymous11:28 am

    With age comes ‘I don’t give a flying f*ck’ with me and folks can drown in their own dramas. As you rightly say, it is all a waste of energy that should be better used positively. Jan in Castle Gresley

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Having a blow out argument with someone is different , than dealing with a full blown drama Queen , it’s like herding cats

      Delete
  3. Anonymous11:48 am

    I also hate drama, I just walk away. I don’t garden anymore but every year I buy a white Mandevilla vine for my front porch and today was the day! I like that it keeps blooming until the really cold weather comes. Gigi

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I’ve had to Google that, as I’m not familiar with the name, looks lovely similar to jasmine flower

      Delete
  4. I’ll stick with the Garden Arch Montana.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Anonymous11:59 am

    Drama is part of an abuse cycle.
    Love bombing,
    And aggression , just two extremes .
    It’s exhausting and addictive at the same time, especially as you, as the victim wants to bite back and give your side.
    WRONG!
    that just feeds the drama.
    You trolls seek the same, they are abusers

    Lee

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Absolutely. Emotional dysregulation is such a difficult thing for these folks to recognize and address . . . and in the meantime, they use the rest of us as stimulants or sedatives.

      Delete
    2. Love bombing is a typical behaviour of a narcissist,
      I agree it can be part of an abusive behaviour

      Delete
    3. Lee - I wish you were my therapist x

      Delete
  6. I so agree, drama gets you nowhere. It just makes you angry, upset and exhausted, but doesn't move you any further forward. I try to steer clear of drama queens nowadays. I just haven't got the energy to deal with all the angst! The clematis is blooming well. Janet does a good job on your garden. I wish she lived near me, I could do with some tips! xx

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. She cut it down so much that I feared it would never return, I should have trusted her, she knew what she was doing

      Delete
  7. Drama queens are exhausting. Their shtick gets real old real quick too.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Drama exhausts me these days, I try to avoid it at all costs. If it appears in my life I can swear at it like a trooper, or maybe like the sailor I married ... who unusually for a sailor never swears and is never involved in drama. He has walking away from situations and never looking back or worrying about things, off to a fine art. 🙂

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. When the drama is from a partner, it’s harder to walk away, especially when other emotions like love or infatuation are added to the mix

      Delete
  9. sillygirl12:33 pm

    I would be tempted to do a posting that hit all of troll's hot buttons and see if they would explode.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Anonymous12:35 pm

    I can't stand drama or any form of confrontation. Some folk seem to think it clears the air but I've never found that to be the case. Drama belongs on the telly.
    Alison in Wales x

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Great quote
      “ drama belongs on the telly”
      I will steal that lol

      Delete
    2. Anonymous7:36 pm

      😄😘
      Alison x

      Delete
  11. Anonymous12:36 pm

    He had an ugly nature and that's all I could ever see in him even though he clearly thought he was quite a catch...BA

    ReplyDelete
  12. The older I get, the more I remind myself.
    Not my circus, not my monkeys. X

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous1:26 pm

      Brilliant comment, love it😉. Jan

      Delete
    2. And keeping and knowing your boundaries is a great lesson in life to learn and to accept

      Delete
    3. Anonymous8:41 am

      Thank you John. Lots of you thoughts today spoke straight to my heart. I am so pleased that life is treating you kindly. You deserve nothing less. I haven't commented in a while as struggling with a new phone but always read x Jo in Coventry

      Delete
  13. I avoid confrontations at all costs.
    I much prefer to look at your Garden Arch Montana.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Another conflict avoider here. If anyone confronts me face-to-face it paralyses, leaving me LITERALLY speechless - and that person as victor while I am crushed and hating myself.

      Delete
    2. No not Raymondo , it’s can be very powerful to say nothing as long as you don’t show your emotion on your face

      Delete
  14. Anonymous12:51 pm

    Wow. Lee's comment - I have never seen it put that way. He is right.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I thought it was powerfully explained too.

      Delete
  15. That Garden Arch Montana is so lovely, John! You should have seen my lilac bush! It's starting to fade now but it was fabulous this year!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Your lilac Bush ! I’m not a lover of it, but it is lovely to look at

      Delete
  16. Anonymous1:15 pm

    As ever, just like Weaver, you have the perfect words here. So glad I found you both. - Jackie

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Weaver is a natural thinker and more more of a diplomat that I xx

      Delete
  17. I have never heard that phrase before about teeth fitting wounds but it is so spot on. Exactly.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It was first used with me by a boyfriend who knew he had some issues. We sparked off each other, hence the comment , which I’ve always kept inside me

      Delete
  18. Tracy1:33 pm

    I don't do drama. I come from a family who don't do drama either and a cloud was cast over my late mother's funeral by a 'friend' over-emoting and upsetting those who were grieving quietly and deeply. It was self-centred and shocking. Being in a relationship with someone like that must have been draining for you, John.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It didn’t last long.

      As for grief, i see it daily. And I can accept its demonstrations in all of its forms
      It’s visceral

      Delete
    2. Jo in Auckland7:37 pm

      As you say there is no one way fits all to grieve... I have lost both parents, and two siblings all grieved over and their loss keenly felt but I grieve more deeply for a young cat I hand raised from 10 days old. She was 2 years and 1 month old when she'd died on the road outside my house; I have never got over it.

      Delete
  19. The only two places I like drama is on the stage or in the garden.

    ReplyDelete
  20. Some people use drama to make themselves feel greater control. Personally, I have no room in my life for such individuals.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It’s hard, but a counsellors job is to allow a person to work out ( if they want to) why they act the way that they do .
      I have learned a great deal about my behaviour and where it originates, and that lesson is a hard one to accept sometimes especially if it doesn’t fit in to the picture you originally make for yourself

      Delete
  21. I must have missed something? Who is a drama queen that set you off? What is a drama queen, really---and what will you do if a client is that? Aren't people nowadays supposed to embrace emotion, no more ''stiff upper lip"?
    Lovely clematis, I always imagine them in blue, the pink is beautiful.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You didn’t miss new news Debby, I was talking about an old partner who was very much the drama Queen,
      I will I am sure meet clients who exhibit similar behaviours and they could trigger similar feelings of upset , irritation, and anger. The important part of counselling is that I have the self awareness to recognise these triggers and where they come from. This is a therapeutic process in itself .
      Supervision by a trained supervisor allows mirrors to be held up and reflections to be made
      Person centred counselling allows the client to be heard however not all relationships CAN be therapeutic and recognising that is important too

      Delete
    2. Anonymous5:01 pm

      I so admire your honesty and ability to grow emotionally and professionally. Lizzy (not Debby)

      Delete
    3. I’ve done the lizzy Debby thing again lol apologies

      Delete
  22. Nelliegrace2:41 pm

    In our fire lectures we were told not to waste time on the drama queen but to rescue the quiet ones. The DQ would get you killed, then get out by their own effort, trampling over everyone.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, the quiet patients, casualties , are the poorly ones. The vocal screamers are breathing well

      Delete
    2. I liked the comment by Nelliegrace and your answer John
      Wendy (Wales)

      Delete
  23. My grandmother was a drama queen of the first order, she could do drama spectacularly, and frequently did!
    She'd go into full drama queen mode, waving her arms about, shrieking, pretending to sob (always dry eyed), the whole shebang!
    She attempted one of her 'me, me, me, I'm the centre of attention' acts on my wedding day.
    For just once in my life, I wanted, and felt I deserved to be, the centre of attention, and told her that, somewhat forcefully. She looked thoroughly shocked, but shut up, and we had a wonderful day!
    She did, of course, have a good moan to anyone who would listen, that I had told her off, and she didn't ever expect that her granddaughter would speak to her in such a way.
    However, she never, ever, did the drama queen thing in my presence again! X

    ReplyDelete
  24. Traveller3:26 pm

    “ Sure it’s often more satisfying to join in with the drama as their teeth often fit your wounds but eventually it’s all pointless , and fruitless and as hollow and dead as an old log in a wood.”

    Brilliant piece of writing.

    ReplyDelete
  25. Barbara Anne3:34 pm

    I'm with you and others on this: drama solves nothing and only incites chaos which is seldom needed or helpful. I steer clear of those folks.

    Beautiful blossoms!

    Hugs!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. There is a sadness to someone who has to act like a child in order to illicit a response that somehow satisfies them

      Delete
  26. I've known various types of that nature - they seem to be attracted to me - Eventually I distance myself from them as they sap my energy x

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Perhaps you need to explore why they are attracted to you Flis ?
      What it is in you that makes the drama happen?

      Delete
    2. Too polite - I tried to sort it out why they were so disturbed ,be understanding , kind ,ignore , put up with ,let them have their own way - My fault only for allowing the narcissist and flying monkeys to attack me ( they choose an easy target ) x

      Delete
  27. I have got to learn to turn and walk away, walk away...keep walking.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It harder for some in relationships to walk away ,

      Delete
    2. Especially since it is family for me.

      Delete
  28. Drama queens are a complete waste of time & energy.

    ReplyDelete
  29. Anonymous4:43 pm

    Beautiful clematis, mine here on the US east coast are blooming too. This is the time of year I wonder if I have a good place for a few more?

    And yes, there is enough drama in life without anyone manufacturing it. I have some of that in my family of origin and am so glad not to have it in my marriage/children.

    Ceci

    ReplyDelete
  30. {STAMPS FOOT & BLOWS A RAZZER}

    ReplyDelete
  31. Jo in Auckland7:44 pm

    Drama queens upset the energy by in a room by blasting all of their own in. I hate to be in their presence it upsets my equilibrium terribly; they walk in one door I leave by another if I'm lucky.
    That Montana is magnificent! Screams of spring... in a pretty way!

    ReplyDelete
  32. Whereas some people thrive on drama, I hate it. It's funny how people can be so different.

    ReplyDelete
  33. Acting drama like that is very controlling behaviour..and unpleasant to be on the receiving end

    ReplyDelete
  34. You deserve some comedy relief.

    ReplyDelete
  35. Anonymous3:17 am

    I used to love the drama….from about age 14 to maybe around 20ish. I grew out of it! Kathy

    ReplyDelete
  36. I can't stand drama queens either. I've only ever known one real exponent and she got the boot pretty quick.

    ReplyDelete
  37. weaver8:28 am

    Don't think I have ever known a drama queen but have certainly met quite a few canine ones. Poor Roger- shivering always raises sympathy.

    ReplyDelete

I love all comments Except abusive ones from arseholes