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Michelle Scott

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  • #104814
    Michelle Scott
    Participant

    Maybe she is homeless, or living in a very bad area, or living with people that would not like it if she had a friend? Maybe she’s so embarrassed to let you know where she lives, and your pressuring was what caused the division? It seems that every time you speak, you are asking her something she does not want to tell you. If you two are so close, and have a good time otherwise, then I would stop asking, because no matter the reason, it is something that you don’t have any right to ask more than once.

    #104330
    Michelle Scott
    Participant

    Many people feel the same way as you do when it comes to social situations. This is not a disorder, you are what we call an “introvert” and your reactions aND feelings are perfectly normal for an introvert. Space is good, and you need quiet personal time to recharge your batteries. Extroverted people draw their energy from social interaction and usually need to be the life of the party and always connected to others. They usually also don’t understand why or how an introvert would need some alone time.

    As for your feelings about anything else: think about whether or not you would be changing yourself just to fit in to what others think the world is and should be like. If that’s the case, it’d be better to stay yourself. There’s over 7.5 billion people in this world, odds are some of them will like you for who you are. And you should accept others for who they are. Just because one does stuff that you would rather not do, that doesn’t mean you need to get involved or interfere or judge them. Just let them know that you don’t do that kind of stuff and would appreciate it if it isn’t brought around you.

    #104118
    Michelle Scott
    Participant

    I had a pretty bad life too. Neglect, abuse, etc. I had a child as a teenager, went through abusive relationships. Even some points in time when I felt that I was dying inside. There was nothing left of me but a kernel under a pile of ash and rubble. I was constantly ill.
    And then I got divorced. I found out that I could support myself, with my own money (in fact, I had more to spend on myself). I could do whatever I wanted to, like walk along the river,or just chill on my balcony with some hot chocolate.
    Do I need to get away from my thoughts and my memories? No.
    I have learned that depression is not an illness, but a way that your body is trying to help you figure out complex social issues. I didn’t have depression, I just had some issues. I also wasn’t getting enough calories sometimes, and other times I was severely dehydrated. There are also many other things that make you down too, like drugs, alcohol, and junk food. Monks don’t abstain from unhealthy eating for moral purposes alone. It really does a lot of good to drink more water, eat more plants (fruits, veggies, grains, nuts), do less drugs, and move around more often. That’s why a lot of athletes or military or people who run a lot aren’t as sick.
    Also, yes, the past can suck. Yes, we can develop bad habits because of it, but we can also let go of it and be a better person. I’m okay with my past, and I am that much more grateful for the awesome present I have now, because I know for a fact it’s been worse.
    So advice about dwelling on the past: a trick some cognitive behavioral people suggest is that you can dissociate your emotions from traumatic memories. You’ll always have the memories, but you can lessen the emotional response. You play the memory in your head, but backwards like you’re rewinding. It slows down, and loses its color, and gets smaller and smaller like you’re walking away from a black and white tv until it diminishes into a speck. Then you replay the memory with full color, but make up a better ending. This can help you with the emotional side.
    Also with dreams, you can make them better when you are just waking up, by making up stuff to finish the dream. And as weird as it sounds, a sleepy brain accepts more unrealistic stuff than realistic. For example, I have many bad dreams about abuse and cheating. But anymore, if I wake up from one of those, I make up that it was an alien body snatcher that’s purple and has six eyes and has to wear an atmospheric suit, but has to feed off of anxieties, so I tell it to go to Wall Street and make numbers go down (way easier than what it was doing impersonating one person). Then I just have to find my boyfriend who is in cryogenic stasis somewhere. It works.

    But I guarantee that if you continue to feel sorry for yourself because of bad decisions someone else made, you won’t change anything.

    #104116
    Michelle Scott
    Participant

    Everyone can’t all be the same, so you will come across people who are going to have different ways of doing and saying things. You can’t expect someone else to say and be exactly what you want. That expectation is what causes issues.
    If you come across someone who is a good fit for you, and they want a relationship too, then it will be a lot easier than this to connect. It should not take so much energy and analysis to just grab a bite to eat.

    #104051
    Michelle Scott
    Participant

    I apologize for saying something that you might not want to hear, but as a woman, I’d be super freaked out by your behavior. Women are threatened with violence on a regular basis, especially if they turn the guy down. Women are killed for that. I can totally understand the reactions. I probably would be the same, and I’d be scared enough to not go back to the gym too.
    I also understand that dating is very hard, and I totally understand the feeling of connection that you wanted to continue. But what I found out is that only one in a thousand would return the connection, let alone want to take it further. My advice is patience. You have a lot to offer, but it’s going to take time to develop the deep relationship that you want.

    #104045
    Michelle Scott
    Participant

    There is a fine line between getting worked up about something because of past hurts, and knowing how a situation is heading because of past experiences. I thought the same thing about my ex husband and his coworker, and I tried my best to let it go. But in the end, I was right and I knew it all along.
    It is in their actions that proves to you whether you are just imagining situations, or if you truly know what’s going to happen next.
    Deep down, you probably already know the answer.

    #104044
    Michelle Scott
    Participant

    I have found that the best way to move to a new area is to find a job there. Search for jobs you can get wherever you want to go, and the rest you can work out later. I used to have a phone book which lists restaurants in the new city I moved to, and I would randomly pick a restaurant and find how to get there on a map. It helped me to learn about the city. And if you have a job, you will start to meet people right away, and you can learn about local areas for socializing.
    It is not as hard as it seems, and I actually find it exciting and fairly easy to move somewhere new.

    As for the family, my ex husbands family was almost the same. I was afraid to do anything because they might be upset and it would be a big issue. But after my divorce, I realized that they cannot force me to do anything.
    If you don’t want them to know where you live, then that is your decision. If you don’t want to move back in with them, that is your decision.
    Yes, your mom raised you, and she probably sacrificed a lot, but that was her decision. If you want to leave, then you can leave. You don’t owe them anything else. Not an explanation, not an address, nothing. You don’t have to stay. There is no legal action they can take against you, so in all reality, they only want you to stay so they can keep controlling you.

    #104042
    Michelle Scott
    Participant

    I’ve been on both sides. Being a single woman, it appeared that I was a total player, having sex with more than a few guys. But the truth is that every time I had sex with a guy I was dating, he would stop dating me. It was super frustrating because I had to start all over and waste another couple of weeks or months only to repeat the process. But hopefully you can see where it looks like I just slept around with whomever without caring. I wasn’t like that at all, I was just forced to look like that.
    Once I met my current boyfriend, I have not even looked at another guy. I’m completely happy with the one I have, and I have no intention on leaving.
    I sometimes feel the same thing, asking if his past relationships are going to affect our present. But there are a few things that help me with the jealousy issue:

    1) I do not know all of the story.
    2) I was not in his life at that time.
    3) I was probably worse, and what I did prior to meeting him does not impact my feelings for him now, so I will assume the same applies to him.

    #103039
    Michelle Scott
    Participant

    I’m not sure if I agree with some other comments, but sometimes you just have to make an effort to listen. I talk about a lot of things, and to be honest, I don’t care too much that my partner is truly listening and joining the conversation, as much as I care that he’s pretending to listen and being respectful. I feel so much better than when I had a partner who would interrupt and shut down the conversation because he was not interested or not comfortable with the topic, or whatever excuses I was given. It was rude and made me feel like I was not respected at all. I felt like less of a person in the relationship and more just an object that he wished I were something other than me.
    So my advice is that if you want to respect him and you appreciate him for who he is, just listen. You can let him know that sometimes you won’t be able to contribute much, but you will be a good listener.

    #101719
    Michelle Scott
    Participant

    I didn’t have friends growing up, and it’s pretty hard for me to make friends because I’m not a “normal” person. Most people don’t know what to do with me. But after a few years in college, I made a few really good friends. They all went their way, as did I, but we can still consider each other as a good friend still.
    I think it all matters on what you do and what you are expecting of others. Maybe you are looking at the wrong kind of people? Maybe you are expecting too much? Maybe you aren’t appreciating the people you are around for who they really are? Maybe you are putting too much pressure on others and yourself?
    Also, this generation seems to be less willing to commit to hanging out because of the fear of missing out factor.
    As for the girl, quite a lot are going to be like that. Not everyone can take things slow and wait forever, and not everyone has the same ideas for a relationship. Maybe you can look at what kinds of things you do while in a relationship. Are you rude sometimes? Make a lot of jokes that might be considered rude? Try to take over and control things? Maybe there was something that pushed others away.
    Try to realize that what you do and how you think about it makes all the difference.

    #101412
    Michelle Scott
    Participant

    In addition to the above: most guys you will come across are definitely not as they appear at first glance/first kiss. Just because they show an interest in you right now does not mean that they are going to be interested in you the next day, and the majority will not stay and treat you how you would like to be treated. The proverbial green grass on the other side is an illusion.

    #101411
    Michelle Scott
    Participant

    The feelings you’re describing have less to do about what he is or isn’t like, and more to do with you wishing others will like you. If you notice the pattern: “this other guy likes me, maybe I’m with the wrong guy”
    I’ve felt the same feelings, thought the same thoughts, and I can tell you that this is because you are externalizing your needs for love and attention and seeking that initial buzz that comes with a new relationship. That jumbled mess of emotions with the tagline: “does he like me? Yes he does!”
    The only thing that helps is for you to realize that you’re the one in charge of these thoughts and emotions and it’s you, not him (whoever you are with, it doesn’t matter, you will find the same thoughts after a while).
    You don’t need the kind of attention that other guys give you for being good looking or anything else. The kind of attention you need is from your accomplishments and the kind of love that you and only you can give to yourself.

Viewing 12 posts - 1 through 12 (of 12 total)