Sure, here's an end-to-end use case example using the try/catch/finally exception handling approach for your seasonal affective disorder (SAD) flare ups combined with the stress of purchasing a house:
Try Block:
It's early fall and you're going through the process of buying a new home, which is exciting but also stressful. You're operating in your regular daily routines and feeling generally regulated. However, you know this is a high risk period for potential SAD symptoms emerging.
Catch Block:
As the days get shorter in late fall, you start noticing the early warning signs - feeling more lethargic, anxious, sleep disruptions. You recognize these somatic cues as red flags that a SAD dysregulation cycle could be triggered, especially with the added house purchase stressors. This kicks you into "catch" mode.
You immediately implement your preventative disruption plan:
- -Increase light exposure with a SAD lamp
- -Adjust your medication/supplements
- -Ramp up exercise and cold showers for grounding
- -Temporarily scale back other commitments
- -Spend more time outdoors when possible
- -Enlist support from your partner/friends
If these "catch" strategies successfully disrupt the SAD/stress cycle before it escalates further, you can remain in or return to the "try" block.
Finally Block:
Analyze what interventions worked best to short-circuit the pattern this time. Reinforce and update your "catch" toolkit accordingly.
However, if the "catch" measures fail:
Despite your preemptive efforts, the SAD symptoms continue worsening - you become significantly more depressed, anxious, and dysregulated due to the combined seasonal/stress factors. The house purchase feels overwhelming.
You now enter a new "try" block for acute dysregulation management:
- -Adjust medications again under medical supervision
- -Prioritize self-care, reduce all non-essential obligations
- -Ask loved ones for additional support/check-ins
- -Practice intense self-regulation strategies (breathwork, yoga, etc.)
- -Consider a light therapy or other treatment if symptoms are severe
-The goal of this new "try" mode is to implement whatever coping strategies help you safely get through the acute episode until it begins resolving, since the initial "catch" disruptions failed.
Once the acute SAD/stress cycle starts lifting, you can re-establish the original "try" block of regulated routines and functioning. But this cyclical process illustrates implementing the preventative "catch" plan, adjusting to acute "try" management if needed, and updating your toolkit in the "finally" phase.
The key is having distinct protocols for each stage, rather than a generalized hyper-vigilance. Let me know if this end-to-end example makes the try/catch/finally process more clear!
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