Home→Forums→Tough Times→Tough Times in your Twenties
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November 13, 2016 at 8:56 pm #120327SteveParticipant
Hi there,
This is the first time I’ve ever used a forum, I prefer to usually just read through the threads.
I’m going through an incredibly tough time and it seems like the people on this site are genuine and wise, so I figured I’d start here.I’ll try to provide enough context for my situation without diving too deep into the details.
I’m in my early twenties and about half-way through my university degree. My life was pretty much stellar up until uni started. I was happy, always in a relationship and had tons of friends almost to the point where I often had to make choose between seeing one group or another. As time progressed, and due to various reasons and circumstances, I reached the exact opposite situation. I’ve been coping with depression and anxiety for the past few months; I’m seeing a councillor and am currently taking anti-depressants. This has helped but obviously isn’t a long-term solution. I’ve been single for more than two years (there have been a few things here or there but nothing that lead anywhere) and just can’t seem to meet anyone. Many of the friends I had either moved away or I just don’t talk to anymore. I have low self esteem and I’ve lost the confidence I used to have.
Everything comes in waves; I could feel great one day then sucked into a black hole the next.
In general, I feel awful and anxious and as a result my family has to put up with a stubborn young adult with unpredictable mood swings and a bad temper.My emotions affect me and everyone and everything around me- family, friends, work, school- everything. They are persistent and uncontrollable. I hardly enjoy many of the things I used to and honestly can’t remember the last time I felt genuinely happy. Every time someone mentions how these are supposed to be the best days of my life, I’m reminded how they very much so aren’t.
To anyone willing to take the time to hear me out, I could really use advice in regard to how to move forward from this, how to deal with the changes in my life and how to love and accept who I am. Many thanks in advance 🙂
November 14, 2016 at 5:06 am #120343Maria MangoParticipantHi Jazzhands 805,
Your twenties, you’re doing them right.
If you want, please elaborate on what you think is the underlying cause of this anxiety and depression you are feeling, we’re all here to listen. In the meantime I have some advice:
Hear me out on this: your early twenties are not actually the best time of your life-that comes a little bit later when you’re close to your thirties after you have a few more things figured out. But life only gets better if you push through hard times like this and learn from your pain. And this pain is totally normal, everyone experiences it when they get out into life to find that it’s not all it’s cracked up to be. But the difference is not many people learn from it. I believe by reaching out to this forum, you are willing to own your situation and change direction now to make your future better
When I was 22 I went through exactly the same thing and then I heard this: your life is like a boat on the ocean, it goes wherever you head it. And like a captain of a ship, if you make even tiny, tiny change in your heading now while you’re in the midst of the seemingly endless expanse of the ocean, your end destination will be radically altered.
So that means even though you feel like nothing is happening to make you feel better today, the choices you make can help you get to the destination you are seeking. Though the ocean may be rough, you’ve already made one great choice to go to counseling. Some other choices that will change your heading:
Simple steps to start out with (bear with me, they may seem silly but they helped me when I didn’t feel like I could get out of bed)
-Make sure you brush your teeth everyday
-Take a shower everyday
-Eat breakfast everyday (start with anything, even if it’s a donut, just get into the habit of eating in the morning)
-Drink lots of water
-Read a ton of books
-Find a supportive group on campus
-Wrap yourself up in fluffy pajamas and drink a ton of tea in the evenings, make sure you get enough sleep
-Keep going to therapy and tell the truth, the whole truth, never hide anything from your therapist because they can’t help you unless you tell them exactly what’s bothering you.Some more advanced steps once you start to feel like your mood is evening out
-Focus on a sport or exercise
-Focus on your finances
-Attend meditation classes or yoga classes (perhaps your uni has free classes)
-Research internet resources (there are many on this site under the “home tab-helpful free resources” that can help you start to educate yourself about the root causes of anxiety and depression)
-Start working towards eating a healthy breakfast
-Start journaling or just writing anything
-Keep writing here, it’s a great place to ventI’m just going to leave those there, it’s up to you to find what works best, these are just things that helped me. Just remember Self Care (the steps on the first list are basic Self Care steps that are easily eschewed during times of depression) is super important in this time and you deserve to do it for yourself!
Cheers,
M
November 14, 2016 at 8:44 am #120363AnonymousGuestDear Jazzhands805:
You wrote: “My life was pretty much stellar up until uni started. I was happy, always in a relationship and had tons of friends”-
Was your life really stellar? In comparison, I am sure it was, and this is how we view our past, in comparison to the present, but was it objectively stellar, I wonder: did you have anxiety as a child and a teen, fears, loneliness…?
I am asking because I don’t think trouble starts in one’s twenties. Trouble often comes to the surface when circumstances change, no longer having the friends you had, but trouble, in my experience, often starts in childhood. If the trouble started earlier, then a vital part of the answer/s you are looking for is there.
Hoping to get your reply.
anita
November 14, 2016 at 9:38 am #120373InkyParticipantHi Jazzhands805,
My kids are going through something similar.
In HS they had more friends than they could count. At the start of college most of their friends would be home during the holidays. Now? Everyone has scattered. Even on campus everyone isn’t as tight anymore. It can be very isolating.
I say get off the drugs if you can. I would also seek refuge in routines. And make sure you have (or create) something special to look forward to everyday. The list posted above is an excellent start.
There is a Golden Time in your twenties when you start your career, travel, have your own place and/or meet your future spouse.
But you are still a student. You need to concentrate on finishing up school. Don’t worry about relationships. Like, at all! I remember the end of Junior year I felt lackluster, sad and out of sorts. I think it’s common.
Hang in there!
Inky
November 14, 2016 at 8:25 pm #120426BluepandaParticipantHello Jazzhands805
Guess what I’m in my early 20s too , sort of near the middle. It’s been a year that I graduated off med school and am currently competing with 1,20,000 candidates for a postgraduate seat. I have given up my job , my daily pleasures and everything I used to enjoy just for a chance to go ahead with my career. I am still not very convinced about what I want from life, perhaps like every 20 somethings. Things are hard sometimes and we are lonely little people on a huge planet, so finding solace can be a tough job. But I would like to tell you something, just hang in there. Very few people have it easy in this world..and 20s are undoubtedly a hard time, because you still have to figure out what your life means. No matter how you feel , know that real courage lies in getting up everyday and getting on with your chores and your work no matter how hard it is. Try to find happiness in small things of life and try to get rid of the social networking platforms because they often give us an Utopian belief of how a perfect life should be. No one is perfect no matter how much they pretend. Things will get better, just hang on.November 15, 2016 at 7:10 am #120439HarryParticipantHey. I apologize, for the length of this response. This is my first time using the forum. I am twenty years old right now. I agree with Anita that the problem starts in the childhood. I lived away from my father in a different country because he could not get the visa to visit me. I could not go back either. I lived with my uncle in most of my life. His family made me feel like an outcast. I was always made fun of, and the safety that father provides was missing. I had/still have low self-confidence (work in progress). I always missed my father. Plus, all of the other relatives made me feel like I am nobody, I have now worth. I was living at the mercy of my uncle. It may seem exaggerating but at times, I felt like his slave. Although my mom lived with my uncle too, she was always working for him.I was working for him too for living expenses. I never got to spend time with my mom. High school was really bad because I never enjoyed myself, and didn’t talk to people. I wish I did. All I did was work and study. I always missed a close knit family to go back to. After high school, I moved away to New York. It was one of the best things I did. Although its still hard. Paying for college and paying for your expenses yourself, its better than being at someone’s mercy. Today, I face inner self all the time. Those experiences in childhood make me feel inadequate still, however I am fighting it. I feel lost usually too! I feel even more lost when I find people who had a better childhood and and at least get to go back to their family during holidays. I have not done that forever. This gets hard to deal with because the cycle of being lost keeps happening. We are in the same boat, especially those who are trying to build career and life themselves, without many resources. But, once you make it, you will be King/Queen of the world!! The following is my journal entry: It may seem repetitive. (Please let me know of your thoughts)
Usually, I feel directionless. I have not seen my family in forever. Life seems boring. Same routine. I feel like something is missing in me. I get happy and be grateful, but there is something, like a bridge missing inside of me. I don’t know what it is, but it kills me when I am down. When I am down, it makes me feel like why am I doing what i do, why do people do what they do. What am I supposed to do in life? I guess that my sense of belonging is missing. I push hard to continue in my down time, but even when I am happy, this missing link bothers me. I go to school, and know I am making into a good career, but why do I think so much. I just think of life a lot. Why can’t I just do things that I need do do and not think about my life too deeply. This weird feeling makes me feel very alone. I don’t know what to do about it. Why can’t I just live life of a party and work hard in school instead of thinking of life. I don’t mind thinking about life goals, and making plans, but I am like always thinking, and analyzing my life. This prolonged process with that missing link is eating me inside, and I ma less able to see my surroundings. During my downtime at work, I always get into my head and that inner critic gets me to the rock bottom. I talk to my mom, and she always says the same thing. It’s okay, we will be together again, till then focus on studies. How can I do so, when something is taking my energy, psychologically.November 16, 2016 at 1:08 pm #120516NataschaParticipantIt’s been a messy and sometimes worthwhile 27 years… I relate often to the feeling of limbo and I have been using a few radical techniques lately-
1. Experience anxiety as thrill- feels crazy but at the moments Im terrified, paranoid, confused I try catch myself and tell myself these thoughts that are making my heartrate sky rocket are not scary but thrilling. So yes I’ve been swapping fear for excitement and it’s helping me keep my wits about me
2. Trust- trusting that I will still have gravity to hold me, air to breath and beauty and tenderness somewhere somehow to enjoy helps me calm down and have a bit of clarity.
3. Hormonal health- it feels like my adolscence never ended except I have an extra overwhelming bitter taste of the world.. so I am trying to stay a good friend to myself and sleep well, eat enough and keep my bowels healthy, hug a dog… whatever I need to keep my happy hormones flowing!
so far so much better, more tenderness and self compassion -
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