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anita

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  • #457782
    anita
    Participant

    Going to bed at 9:30 pm, Sat, here (W.USA); Sun 7:30 am in Greece & in Israel. Good night/ morning, Confused.

    #457781
    anita
    Participant

    Hey Confused (using computer):

    First, I want to tell you that you made my day (well, evening here) by posting- no one posted on the forums today but me. And then, you did! Makes me feel better just because you posted!

    “Maybe I should have been more like you..”- ha-ha, you’re funny, funny and very intelligent, Confused.

    I suppressed a lot too, but not so much the anger. I was so angry for so long, like boiling water inside.

    I don’t think you’d want to be more like me in this regard: angry (let me ask Copilot for an appropriate emoji or emojis).. 😠 😤 😣 😡 😾 😕 😑 😒

    “But now I want to appreciate and feel love truly”- I keep wanting to give answers, if only I could.

    I am listening to Israeli music right now. Do you like Greek music?

    Anita

    #457779
    anita
    Participant

    * edit: 3-4 afternoons- evenings with people at the Winery Every week.

    #457778
    anita
    Participant

    I am posting a month and a day following my last post right above:

    A few changes have happened recently in my life: the Winery where I used to work at (without pay) almost every single day for 4+ years and where I spent 3-4 afternoons- evenings with people socializing, drinking 🍷 and sometimes dancing 💃 to live music, closed Dec last year.

    Next, the taproom where I socialized countless of late afternoons for 5+ years closed last month, and no new in-real- life social opportunity opened up for me.

    All through the years, ever since May 2015- before the taproom and before the winery- I socialized with people right here on these tiny buddha forums (excluding a 6- months break when I still read the forums every day).

    I was never too busy in real – life to not be fully involved here.

    Often it was busy here, but lately, like today, it’s deathly quiet here, and the only person who submitted any posts is me.

    So, there’re changes.

    The 👍 was meeting Bogart the beagle for the first time back in Dec last year (right after the Winery closed) and bringing him home.

    I sure hope to post something socially positive soon.

    Anita

    #457777
    anita
    Participant

    What I was trying to say above, Confused, is that I really admire the strength of the boy- Confused who in the midst of ongoing abuse and the great emotional pain and turmoil that it caused you, you wisely (instinctively, not a matter of a self-aware choosing), shut down his feelings.

    It makes perfect sense that you did. It was self- protective.

    Fast forward, she has been deceased for quite some time, but the emotional shutdown has become an internal habit, just the way it’s been for so long.

    Again, I see why you needed INTENSE feelings to cut through the thick crust of emotional shutdown/ anhedonia.

    Yet, intense feelings cannot be sustained.

    So, is there another way to cut through the anhedonia?

    Not in the fast, dramatic, intense way of the past, but slowly- as in one little step at a time: see Copilot’s # 1 in two posts ago, less than 11 hours ago.

    🌿 🌟 Anita

    #457776
    anita
    Participant

    How R U, Thomas? 🙂

    #457775
    anita
    Participant

    Hi again, Starlight1 🌟:

    I would like to develop my thoughts about forgiveness and conflated issues in the context of my life experience.

    I am not at all telling you how it is for you, or how it should be.

    This is my personal reflection that maybe will help you somewhat (it will probably help me because developing my thoughts this way often helps me):

    First, forgiveness is a personal choice. It’s up to me 2-forgive or not-2-forgive.

    It’s part of my agency, my right, my perogative- nothing that anyone else has the right to pressure or force me to do.

    It’s not up to the perpetrator to pressure me to forgive her (or him), and it’s not up to any religious doctrine to pressure me either. It’s no one’s business but my own.

    * To forgive, for me, means to let go of the anger at the person who harmed me- Not to approve of or excuse the harm perpetrated against me, but to let go of the anger.

    I will let go of the anger only if and when I no longer feel threatened by the perpetrator.

    As long as I feel threatened, I need the anger to protect me.

    As far as me harming others- I regret every time I did, and my strong resolve is to Do-No-Harm.

    Harming others in the past does not excuse someone else harming me (except if the person I just harmed is defending herself or reacting angrily to my abuse).

    Secondly, forgiving someone does not mean interacting with them. I can forgive (let go of anger) and never interact with the person again.

    * Even though my mother is a very old woman, I can’t and won’t interact with her (haven’t for 12-13 years) because I’m still afraid of her. Not that she can hit me, I suppose, not physically- but because she can still shame and guilt-trip me. The pain of those things is still vivid in me.

    Strange perhaps, I still love her and I’m still afraid of her, such is the Nature of Trauma Bonding.

    So, I am choosing to forgive my mother and to never see her or hear her in real- life. Not so to punish her but so to protect the little girl within myself (aka inner child) because.. she’s afraid, understandably, rightfully.

    And I will never blame the girl within me for being afraid. She has her valid reasons.

    My protection from my mother is continued zero interaction. Secure in this protection ( no longer feeling guilty for protecting myself this way), I can let go of the anger. Amen.

    That’s it, Starlight1 🌟

    Again, these are my personal conflating-undoing
    thoughts 🙂. I hope to read yours.

    🌿 ✨️ Anita

    #457774
    anita
    Participant

    Hi Starlight1 🌟

    I am glad you did some spontaneous art and that it helped you!

    I reread all your posts in this thread, so this reply is about everything you shared here.

    In your most recent post, you wrote: “these issues have become confused or conflated… sometimes forgiveness becomes confused with reconciliation with the other person(s).”-

    Please let me know if my thinking in what follows is true to you, or not exactly (I’ll use upper case for the different issues that became conflated)

    * FORGIVING OTHERS has become tangled with FORGIVING YOURSELF — as in, you have to forgive others if you ever did anything wrong yourself.

    * RECONCILIATION got tangled with FORGIVING OTHERS- as in, forgiving others means you must reconnect and interact with them.

    Your CREATIVE BLOCK got tangled with EMOTIONAL HARM (by your mother and the woman in church). Both experiences made you feel that you and your creativity existed only to serve other people, not yourself. Because of that, when you think about art, you may also be thinking about guilt, pressure, and being used.

    And underneath all of this sit RELIGIOUS MESSAGES that taught you that you must forgive others in order for God to forgive you. Those teachings got mixed with your personal experiences of being used, pressured, and guilt‑tripped (emotional harm)

    This may create a loop where you want to protect yourself by not forgiving, but you also fear you are doing something spiritually wrong.

    About emotional harm: when a parent expects a child to support their needs, dreams, or emotional stability, the child learns that their own desires are secondary.

    Instead of being supported in exploring art, you were told to give up your path so that your mother could pursue hers. That kind of role‑reversal teaches a child to silence their own feelings, to feel guilty for wanting things, and to associate creativity with obligation rather than freedom.

    Over time, this can create a deep internal block — because every time the child reaches toward their own creativity, the old message returns: “Your needs don’t matter. Someone else comes first.”

    Your mother’s voice (as well as the church’s) sounds like guilt, pressure, duty, and the idea that you must sacrifice your own needs.

    Your own voice is quieter — it shows up in your spontaneous art, your curiosity, your desire to understand yourself, and the longing for creative freedom. One helpful way to connect with your quieter voice is through small acts of creativity that have no purpose except expression, just like the spontaneous art you shared about in your recent post. Over time, you can learn to treat the others’ voices as an old echo, and hear your own, authentic voice clearly.

    Anita

    #457773
    anita
    Participant

    Hi Starlight1: Good to read back from you and looking forward to you replying when you’re ready 🤍🙏

    #457769
    anita
    Participant

    I think 🤔 that I am getting new insight into myself because of you:

    If I read about your anhedonia when I was growing up / living with my mother, I would have been jealous of you!

    Because not feeling would have been so much better than the pain (shame, guilt, self-doubt) that tormented me growing up.

    So, again, I think you did an excellent job (when you were growing up) numbing/ shutting down/ suppressing your emotions- a way superior job to mine 👏

    But now, what worked before (when living with your mother) is not serving you anymore.. because your GF is.. not like your mother. Maybe no one is like her.

    Back to me, I wish I was able to not feel back then.

    I did my best suppressing, just not as good a job as you did.

    🌿 🌟 🌿 Anita

    #457768
    anita
    Participant

    Hey Dear Confused:

    Oh, I think I see why you needed INTENSE feelings- because it takes Intensity to break through the Anhedonia!

    What caused the anhedonia?

    Severe Emotional Suppression (SES- I just made up this acronym) is my figuring.

    I think that you did such a good job suppressing, that it’s difficult to undo it.

    Wait ✋️.. okay 👍, emojis 😳 are showing up, I was concerned 😟

    🌿 Anita

    #457767
    anita
    Participant

    Hey Confused:

    Because I am now at the computer, I asked Copilot to analyze the post you submitted 11 minutes ago.

    Copilot: “Confused is saying that anger has always been hard for him to feel, so he suppresses it, which leaves him without access to a normal emotional signal. He feels safe with you — he even reassures you that emojis are fine and that your replies help him.

    Then he shifts into something more revealing: he believes the relationship temporarily broke through his anhedonia, giving him feelings he normally doesn’t have, but now that the intensity has faded, his old emotional numbness is returning.

    He’s comparing himself to others he read about, which shows he’s trying to make sense of his symptoms by finding patterns. Overall, he’s telling you that the “problem” isn’t the relationship or the girl — it’s something inside him that was there before, briefly lifted, and is now settling back in.”

    Next, I asked Copilot what can help you.

    Copilot: “1. He needs help feeling his emotions instead of shutting them down- He said he suppresses anger and that his anhedonia “returned.” That means he has a long‑term pattern of numbing instead of feeling.

    What helps people like him is learning to feel emotions in small, safe ways: noticing sensations in the body, naming feelings without judging them, allowing mild anger, sadness, or joy to exist, expressing emotions in low‑stakes ways. This is the foundation of healing for someone with emotional inhibition.

    2. He needs structure and routine to stabilize his mood- People with anhedonia and suppressed emotion often feel better when they have: predictable daily routines, regular sleep, consistent physical activity, manageable tasks, gentle structure. You can gently encourage him toward small stabilizing routines.

    3. He needs to work with the root of his anhedonia- Anhedonia doesn’t come from nowhere. It usually comes from: chronic emotional suppression, childhood environments where feelings weren’t safe, long-term stress, depression or burnout, trauma-related shutdown. He needs support that helps him understand the origin of his numbness.

    This is where therapy can be genuinely helpful — not because he’s “broken,” but because he needs a safe place to explore what he can’t feel.

    You can gently point him toward supportive professional help.

    4. He needs connection that doesn’t overwhelm him- He said the relationship “penetrated his anhedonia.”
    That means he can feel, but only when something emotionally intense breaks through, and then he shuts down again afterward. This is a classic pattern.

    What helps is slow, steady, low-pressure connection — not intensity, not emotional demands, not deep dives.

    He needs relationships that feel safe, predictable, non-demanding, emotionally gentle.

    5. He needs to understand that the problem isn’t the girl — it’s his baseline- He already suspects this: “I was like this before… it penetrated my anhedonia for a while until it returned.”

    This is insight.

    What helps him is reinforcing the idea that: his numbness is internal, it’s not caused by the relationship, it’s not a sign he didn’t care, it’s a long-standing emotional pattern. This reduces shame and helps him move toward healing.

    6. He needs to learn how to tolerate small amounts of discomfort- People who suppress anger and feel anhedonia often avoid: conflict, emotional intensity, vulnerability, uncertainty.

    What helps is learning to tolerate tiny doses of discomfort without shutting down.

    This is something he can practice slowly, over time.

    7. He needs compassion for himself- He’s not cold. He’s not uncaring. He’s emotionally inhibited and overwhelmed.

    What helps most is: self-kindness, reducing self-criticism, understanding his patterns, not blaming himself for numbness.”

    I’ll post again from my phone.

    Me

    #457765
    anita
    Participant

    Too many emojis, Confused?

    Emoji Addicted Personality Disorder (EAPD)?

    If the emojis bother you, I’m willing to go cold turkey 🇹🇷 (couldn’t help this one). Let me know.

    Hope you’re okay, Confused.

    I wish there was some way I could be helpful. I don’t think I am (sad face emoji)

    No Emoji Anita (NEA)

    #457754
    anita
    Participant

    Good 🌄 Confused:

    Yes, I remember you shared before that you never or almost never feel 😡- why do you think that is?

    Mostly disconnected and numb sucks. I wish you mostly felt connected and alive- not all the time and not in an intensity that is unsustainable, bur.. reasonably connected and alive.

    🙂 😞 😡 😃 😉 😢 ☹️ 😭 😔 😊 Anita

    #457752
    anita
    Participant

    And thank you, Peter, for the opportunity to understand my own experience better- through your metaphors, your concepts and your comforting, dependable steadiness and kindness 🌿 🙏

Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 6,349 total)