Home→Forums→Emotional Mastery→Understanding myself
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September 11, 2013 at 3:55 pm #42077KateParticipant
Hi everyone.
I just recently discovered this site and I think it’s great. I find Buddhism very intriguing (I am also taking a philosophy course in college..to say the least it is my favorite class) and I find myself reading many blogs and forums on here and wondering how I could apply them to myself. I just recently started my sophomore year of college as a Pre-Med student and..well, I am not happy. It is as simple as that. I have transferred to 2 different colleges and have constantly been “the new kid”. When I was younger I never had trouble fitting in and making friends and when it was time to enter the real world I feel like that totally shifted. I used to be the social butterfly and now I keep to myself and am pretty shy for the most part. I constantly feel alone, rejected, unlikeable. Needless to say I feel like an outcast and that everything I do is wrong. I always seem to look at everything negatively, over thinking situations to the max, and stressing out about things that aren’t really that big of a deal. Since I started college a little over a year ago these feelings have become more and more noticeable and since then I have developed a strong disliking for myself and my feelings and for the way I act and I see that that is a huge problem. I find myself constantly wanting to just be happy. To feel at peace with myself just once and I find myself using goals or material things as “gateways” to happiness. Like “If I get this, I will be happy”. For example when I first started school I majored in nursing and it wasn’t really my passion. I never really dreamed of being a nurse and so working towards that was hard. Why would I want to devote my efforts, time, handwork and money into something I didn’t want to do? So I was stuck and confused and didn’t know what I wanted to do and I remember thinking that if I could just decide a major, my passion, something that I would love doing.. that I would be happy. So here I am one year later working towards doing something that i’ve wanted to do since I was young. It’s the only thing I can see myself doing for the rest of my life but yet I still have that same feeling of “needing more”. That wasn’t enough. I know that isn’t the correct way to achieve happiness and I know that it begins with yourself, not things. It begins with understanding yourself. And that is my biggest struggle.I am a complete emotional wreck, and I cannot seem to get my feelings and emotions in check. One moment I will feel good and then within the blink of an eye I will start crying and not even be able to tell you why. Sometimes I can’t really pinpoint what exactly is bothering me or why. I would like to be more in touch with my emotions and my feelings, and become better at controlling them. I recently started taking a meditation class and I absolutely love it! For a short time it eliminates the constant worries and anxieties that are always running through my mind, and that for me is the closest I have gotten to a sense of ultimate calm and peace. I want to be able to do that more often. I don’t want to look at life in such a negative way. I want to be able to focus on the good things, appreciate the little things, and eliminate the unimportant things that just cause “imaginary problems”. I have pushed many people away over the years (my friends, boyfriends..) because of my insecurities and the way I morph situations and thoughts into something way worse than they actually are. My current boyfriend is such a good man and so good to me and I don’t want to see the same thing happen again. I want to get more out of life and change my point of view. I don’t want to interpret things into being worse than they are, but instead better. I want to learn to interpret things in a new way. I like the aspects of Buddhism, yet the elements of it seem so simple, but are not easy at all to achieve. I want to change the way I think, in a sense. But I do not know where to start.
I know I could sit here and say I want all of these things and absolutely do nothing to achieve any of them. I know that will not get me anywhere, I am willing to work at this and I just need a little guidance. Where do I start? If anyone has any input whatsoever I would love to hear what you have to say. I am hoping this is the right place to put this sort of thing.. any advice, guidance, opinions, etc. would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks so much,
KateSeptember 11, 2013 at 5:48 pm #42082MattParticipantKate,
I’m sorry for the difficulty and emotional painfulness you’re experiencing in this moment, and know how some of the difficult questions you’re asking and situations you’re in can be disorienting. A few things came to heart as I read your words.
The first is be patient with yourself. Buddha taught that we have a fundamental ignorance of how to find our balance. We’re born with a few instincts, but the rest we have to stumble and bumble and scrape and slide as we find inner stability. This is normal and usual, and it takes time to grow the roots of our wisdom deep. It is like a flower that grows upward toward the sun, pushing through layers of rock and soil, and it is only with time and space that the petals unfold. So be gentle, patient with yourself, it helps a lot.
Next, it seems that there is a false notion of permanence that your mind slides into as it becomes afraid. For instance, you arrive at a new college, and notice that you are alone, isolated, unknown. The fear arises that this new place is permanent, just now “what is”. So, instead of saying “hmm, who might I connect with” as though standing in front of a beautiful buffet of potential friends and interesting spirits, something else arises. Perhaps “I’m unworthy of connection” or “I can’t connect” or even just “this feels icky, where’s some beer/food/air to be found” or whatnot.
Which is fine, natural… yet makes sense why it would create a flip flop of emotions. As the feeling of permanence arises in the state of mind, and it is also unpleasant, your want of balance perhaps flips from suppression (wanting to see it as pleasant) to expression (wild emotions). Either is fine, but both carry a cost. Instead what we can do is realize it is impermanent… the isolating feeling only stays as long as you don’t try to connect/make connections, for instance. Or, the confusion with the boyfriend only arises until you ask him the question that is cycling at the center of the maze. They arise, they fade. We get hungry, we eat. We get tired, we sleep. Very natural and usual.
To help stabilize your emotions, you could also take up a metta practice. Sharon Salzberg has a metta meditation on YouTube that seems like it would strike you well. Metta is a feeling of warmth and kindness for others, which helps our mind and emotions to become smooth and peaceful. In my opinion, if our body feels emotional hunger, metta is the best food. This lets us settle our emotional needs from within, as we connect to ourselves and love ourselves… the dancing we do with others is just icing on the cake.
Namaste, may you find your path of love and light, dear sister.
With warmth,
MattSeptember 11, 2013 at 9:20 pm #42091KateParticipantMatt,
That was so beautifully well-put. Thank you so much for your advice. The way you explained my mind creating a sense of permanence around a certain feeling hit dead-on. I convince myself that that is how it’s always going to be. And i know it is only going to be that way just as long as I don’t do anything to change it. I will most definitely look into metta meditation. I hope to eventually stabilize my emotions, and not have every individual one be so extreme. I am realizing that this is going to take lots of time.
Thank you again for your help. It is so greatly appreciated.
September 14, 2013 at 2:14 pm #42236JacquesParticipantHi Kate
I understand what you going through, I too have experienced many cases of anxiety and feeling alone. When I was young I was brought up in a traditional house hold and told that I have to get a good education to get a good job and earn lots of money etc. but as I got older I started realizing that there is a lot more to life than just fitting in to society. So my whole perception on life has changed and I know now there is a greater purpose in life. I started analyzing everything that I did and tried to find meaning in everything, but most of the time I would find nothing. And so my anxiety started, I never really felt like I fitted into a group and could never really connect with my friends as they do not think the same way I do, they are happy living in their bubbles where I am not. I have also found myself becoming more frustrated with things and I lose my cool for almost nothing, some days I have a clear mind but most days my head is like a thunder storm.
I can sense that you are a deep thinker like me and that you analyze everything, there is nothing wrong with that, the fact that you have become introverted is a sign that you have become self aware and that you are starting to see the greater picture and yes that is a lot to take in and yes it is normal to feel anxious and discontent, your mind is going through changes and realizations. We are affected by our surroundings and people around us, we are different and there is nothing wrong with that, don’t be so hard on yourself you are unique and special, don’t take that thought away. My advice to you is you need to find a place that makes you feel happy and go there as much as you can this will help bring on feel-good emotions. Next step is go to a place that has unfamiliar surroundings (so you can’t get distracted) take a pen and paper and right down the first thing that comes to mind, fear, hate, anxiety, financial, study related, whatever it is and take a few minutes and ask yourself can it be solved or is it out of your control? If it is out of your control then move on to the next thought by telling yourself that it is out of your control it will help you stop trying to solve something you can’t and that could help alleviate some anxiety. If it is however within your control don’t try and solve it that instant rather give yourself a timeline to solve it and move on to the next thought. If you find yourself getting caught up on negative thoughts look around you and focus on something in the area, for instance if you see a white wall tell yourself the wall is white, the mind cannot focus on more than one thing and so distracting you from the other thoughts.This has helped me and it might do the same for you.
Just remember, you are special and unique and be glad being who you are and being different from the rest of the people, and find places that make you feel good and go there often, once you start feeling more good than bad the rest will start falling into place.
Warm Regards
Jacques -
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