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How do I pack my bags and just leave it all behind?

HomeForumsPurposeHow do I pack my bags and just leave it all behind?

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  • #103783
    Soopy
    Participant

    It’s Friday night and I am currently on my bed slightly tipsy, as it was when it dawned on me – I hate the way I am right now.

    Or to be more precise, I hate where I am right now. I like to consider myself a relaxed person, but I’m something of an empath, and others’ energies affect me. My philosophy in life is ‘let it flow’ and ‘whatever will be, will be’ but the people around me are just so, so negative. My mother’s family (she is the fourth of FOURTEEN siblings) are so nosy, they are Asians with a very traditional mentality. All they try to do is compete, pit me against my cousins which I don’t care about. If they’re doing worse than me, I could care less, and if they do better, then good for them. It is literally none of my business, but they try to make it. Familial ties are very sacred in Asia, and they come by very often to give their unwanted ‘opinion’ which are, more often than not, hurtful, completely misinformed and unnecessary. My mother, who I love very much, is a bit emotionally unstable herself, and tries to guilt trip me whenever I try to be independent. I am currently 22 and living at my mother’s house, even though I can more than afford living on my own. Because I feel sorry for her and I want to keep her company. My dad works abroad and comes home a weekend every fortnight.

    Then there is the ex. I don’t want to go in too deep about him, bottomline is right now I just want to be far, far away from him.

    I am too tired with these people. I want to be happy in the simplicity of life but their unhappiness and pettiness weighs down on my emotions. Every day I feel cooped up, unhappy, not belonging. People like life to be complex. They like to look for a rain cloud on a sunny day. They try to find things to make you feel bad about yourself, so they can feel a little better about their lives. And I used to think this wouldn’t affect me. Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me, I say. After a while it does get to you, because you care about these people so much. You love them, but they are just so. so toxic. I don’t want to feel like this, I don’t want to care so much.

    So, I want to just pack my bags and say goodbye to this scene for a while to get some fresh air – how do I go about doing that? I have the money (I have saved up a bit, and I also have some passive income monthly from investments, so I would be able to afford a modest life without work). Where do you suggest? Preferably in Southeast Asia as well… Europe and America are just too expensive. Also, I find it a bit daunting to move into a completely new city knowing absolutely nobody, do you have any tips for that? How do I go about finding people to connect with (not just people to date or hang out or whatnot… I want to have some real emotional connections, get to know some real human beings). And if you were me, how would you do it? Even better, if you had done/are currently doing it, how?

    #103784
    Joe
    Participant

    Soopy

    Maybe a change of scenery could do you some good. If you can afford to take off, what’s stopping you? I’m not suggesting you just dive head first without thinking about the consequences, if you are serious about going away as a long term commitment obviously you should plan and consider everything – where you are going to stay, what you are going to do, insurance, visas/legal documents etc. It never hurts to have a back-up plan as well.

    I wish you all the best of luck, I hope you get to see some marvellous places and meet some wonderful people.

    Please post more 😀

    Joe

    #103794
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Soopy:

    I like your thinking very much. I think it will be perfectly fine, morally, ethically if you do pack your bags and leave for any amount of time, including forever. I see humans as herd animals. In nature the individual gives in to the herd because it serves the individual, but in humans, so very often, the family- which I call the herd-of-origin- does a great disservice to the individual. And the individual does not benefit. Therefore< I command you for wanting to leave the herd-of-origin aka family.

    As to where to go, I talked yesterday to a man who visited Vietnam a few weeks ago. He said the air quality in the cities was bad to very bad. So, I would go where the air quality is good enough. As far as the US, there are inexpensive areas of course. The US is a big, big place.

    Maybe you can write more details about the kind of place where you want to live. i wonder what country you reside in now and what do you like and dislike about the town/ city where you currently live?

    anita

    #103947
    Soopy
    Participant

    Joe:

    Thank you for your response. You asked what is holding me back… as you said, I literally could take off this very day if I wanted to. However, this is not the first time that I’ve done something like this – I’ve ‘escaped’ to three different cities in my country in the past 2 years, one of which is Bali. Each of the times I did this, either my mother or her relatives would ‘force’ me to return. You see, I’m the only child. My mom is emotionally dependent on me, although she has her job to keep her busy. She goes to work at 6 in the morning and comes back at 8 at night, and yet she expects me to be home that whole time, and welcome her on the doorstep. Whenever I decide on going somewhere for a while, she cries a lot and confides in her brothers/sisters, who would then tell me that I’m a ‘bad, rebellious daughter’ because I make my mom cry. So it’s been hard for me to get some independence.

    I just want to plan this one right, because I want this one to last for a while. At least until my mind is sane enough to return. Thanks for wishing me luck! I really hope I make some great experiences on this escapade. My life has been too mundane, it’s almost like living in a cell.

    anita:

    Thank you for your insight. I somewhat envy Western people – individuality is very highly regarded there. Over here every little thing you do would spark questions such as ‘think about what your neighbors might say about it’, ‘the family wouldn’t like that’, it takes a toll on someone like me, who doesn’t want to care about what people think of me and the things I do for myself.

    I had in mind somewhere like Thailand or rural India, although I’m worried about the latter since I’m a woman (and you hear all sorts of news…). I’m from Indonesia, Jakarta to be more specific. It’s a very busy city, with traffic jams everywhere. Locally I could ‘escape’ to Bali, which is about an hour flight’s away, but I’m undecided since it’s a bit too close to home and my family might decide to either drop in or call me back when they feel like.

    I haven’t considered the US mainly because flight tickets are so expensive from over here – I think it’s close to 1000 USD one-way. As you said, I wanted to go somewhere with fresh air, not so busy but not deserted either. Just a simple small town somewhere would probably be nice. For example, I would love to return to this one village in Austria, I love everything about that place. But unfortunately it would be too expensive for me in the long run!

    #103967
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Soopy:

    I remember this place in Austria, a ski resort, called Insbruk (may be misspelled). I bet it is very expensive but i remember how beautiful.

    I exited a very sick and dependent relationship with my mother, so I have experience in separating from (in my case) abusive, guilting, shaming mother. It took a long time. Eventually I chose me over her. Eventually I had to choose: who am I for, me or her? It was always her and it brought me nothing but misery. It was about: do I sacrifice the rest of my life?

    I chose me when I was over fifty years old. I am now 55. I hope you make the right choice earlier than me and I highly recommend you make the choice ASAP. Nothing noble about self sacrifice.

    I would leave, if I was you. Choose you. Please, choose you.

    As to where, someplace with clean air, no/ little traffic jams, someplace where your family can’t reach. Someplace reasonably safe. Someplace where you can make your life worthwhile.

    Please post again:

    anita

    #104023
    Soopy
    Participant

    anita:

    Innsbruck! I have not been around that side of Germany, my parents and I used to go for a skiing trip to this quaint little village called Filzmoos. The residents are as beautiful as the scenery and I would love to stay there, but if I were to go on a tourist visa I would only be able to stay for a short while.

    Thank you for sharing about your relationship with your mother. I am currently in that position. I do feel a lot of love for my mother, since whenever she is not being manipulative and overly attached, she does everything she could for me. I could say that growing up and even now, my mother spoils me and still wouldn’t let me do things such as renewing passport or making a new bank account by myself since she worries I couldn’t.

    I’m also getting the idea that she feels since she has sacrificed a lot of her youth for my sake, she wonders ‘why won’t you make sacrifices for me too?’ I don’t want to have to cut her off yet, although I have considered it many times. It just seems less stressful that way, but I don’t think I have the heart for it. All I want is for her to understand that while I love her more than anything in the world, I also need to find myself. If I were to tell my dad or any of her family about this, they would go off about how ‘ungrateful’ I am being.

    Have you found that place, someplace you felt made your life worthwhile, anita? I’d like to know your experiences, too.

    #104028
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Soopy:

    Yes, soopy, I have found that place that makes my life worthwhile. Physically it is in Washington State, USA, in a wooded area outside city limits. It is a simple life. What motivates me daily is curiosity about what I can learn next. When distressed, i get curious. I am married and have a good win-win relationship. I am finally home.

    I understand you loving your mother. I loved my mother more than words can say and I sacrificed most of my life, over five decades of it for her while harming myself and … not benefiting her. At best it was a lose-win (lose for me, win to her) and when you look at the whole picture it was lose-lose, lose for both.

    The way it should have been is for her to build me up in childhood (and on), to encourage me to be capable. That way I could have really helped her: it would have been for her benefit. But what she did instead was to destroy me, to greatly discourage my capability factor.

    When your mother “spoils” you and when she does everything she can for you and when she doesn’t let you do things like open a bank account because she worries you couldn’t- i don’t think you are seeing what is going on (I didn’t see it either in the past):

    She is not spoiling you. She is not loving you. She is encouraging you to be dependent on her, and to not have faith in your own capability to do things for yourself. This too is part of her manipulative behavior.

    It is natural for children- way into adulthood- to love our parents, be it in the Western World or any part of the world: we are born to love our parent/s, just like other mammals. Our parents don’t earn our love. We automatically, genetically love them. Your love for her does not indicate that she is worthy of your love. You were born loving her. And then, this love distorts your view of her, at least a good part of your view of her, seeing love where there is selfishness and self interest on her part.

    Did she sacrifice her life for you or did she invest in manipulating you?

    What do you think? Please let me know and feel free to disagree with you. What matters, always, is what you believe, what you figure out to be true.

    anita

    #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.

    #104075
    Maria_L
    Participant

    I was in your ‘place’ till 3-4 months ago. Surrounded by traditional family, mentally abusive mother, city with no prospects for decent job that would allow me to live the life I wanted. I don’t even wanna start with the neighbors and with the ‘friends’. I still don’t know how I managed to live through the periods of severe depression.. I also envied people born in the ‘western’ world that could just leave home when they are 18 and discover themselves..

    And than my boyfriend got job in one of those ‘western’ countries. I got my partner’s visa, we packed our bags and never looked back. It was the happy ending I wanted.

    But you can’t escape yourself and who you are. I didn’t get happy ending. Just a beginning of a new journey that started with crazy anxiety and panic disorders. Till few weeks ago I was in isolated house, alone 10 hours a day, surrounded by beautiful nature outside, and ugly demons from inside. That’s where my panic disorder started and I had to fight a new bigger fight, worse that my mum, society and neighbours- fight with myself and the dark corners of my mind, all the stuff and insecurities that had been there for years, hidden.

    I managed to get better,and I moved again, to a nice city, isolation was not for me :). Now I am hunting for my dream job (in the creative fields).

    My point is- if you want it, you will find a way, or the ‘way’ will find you… You’ll spot an add, a poster, hear about opportunity from a friend. You’ll also find the finances somehow. All all this will be a distant memory, I promise. And you will look back on this life and even miss parts of it. New challenges will rise, new problems, new solutions. You will realize that no one could hurt you without your permition. And that it’s not the big spectacular cities, but the small things that bring true happiness. Find them wherever you are, even now.

    Be strong, things will get better, life will get better. Trust yourself. Trust life.

    #104094
    Tara
    Participant

    Soopy:

    After reading your post, you know what jumped out to me? THIS:
    Every day I feel cooped up, unhappy, not belonging.

    These are your words. These are the problems you wish to resolve.

    So without jumping to a conclusion of moving out or moving abroad, write down the three problems you wish to resolve on a piece of paper. Next to each problem, list a solution. For example: I can start doing more of what makes me happy by doing ________ to be happier. I can start spending more time with my peers and friends so I feel like I belong. I can make a commitment to only spend so much time at home so I don’t feel cooped up.

    See if you can start with this. I do advocate living on your own as a young adult, however, you may find that living on your own affords you more time with yourself (which is a great thing! Explore who you are!), but it can be a scary thing when you are battling these three dilemmas.

    All the best.
    Tara

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