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anita

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Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 6,366 total)
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  • #457850
    anita
    Participant

    Good morning, Dave 🙂

    What a delightful update- 3 months and 10 days since your last, and THREE years, three months and 11 days since your first post here in the forums (Jan 24, 2023).

    The separation from your wife sounds so perfectly mature on both sides, and your mutual care for your children- admirable.

    The thought that you could coach people who are going through separation and divorce, particularly people who co- parent, and in a new relationship just crossed my mind.

    Your insight, wisdom and maturity level, your ability to navigate a complex situation with such pace and grace is amazing to me.

    I think it’s rare and that the people in your life, particularly your children, are fortunate to have you in there with them and for them 🙏

    👏 🌿 ✨️ Anita

    #457848
    anita
    Participant

    Good Wednesday morning, Nichole!

    I asked Copilot (AI) to analyze your post from yesterday.

    Copilot: Nichole’s message shows someone who is actively healing, not just intellectually but somatically — and she’s beginning to trust her own internal stability.

    Nichole is describing a stage of healing where she has enough distance from the people who harmed her that she can stay regulated even when they appear in her life, yet she still feels the unpredictable waves of grief that come with integrating trauma.

    She’s learning to hold two truths at once: compassion for the pain her family carries, and clarity that compassion does not mean re‑entering harmful dynamics.

    Her self‑talk — reminding herself what she is and isn’t responsible for — shows a nervous system that is slowly shifting from survival mode to self‑trust.

    Even on days when she feels drained, she recognizes her progress, which is a sign of emotional maturity rather than collapse.

    Her desire to build new connections reflects a natural movement toward expansion after long contraction, and her plan to return to work not for social fulfillment but for momentum and exposure is grounded and realistic. She’s not rushing intimacy; she’s rebuilding capacity.

    Overall, she’s in the acceptance phase of healing: grieving what was, protecting what is, and cautiously opening to what could be.

    You wrote, Nichole: “Implementing new connections is my new goal and has been lol.”

    Copilot: Nichole can build new connections by starting very small, with tiny interactions that don’t feel scary — a quick hello, a short chat at work, or a simple comment about the day. Work can help her get used to being around people again without expecting herself to make close friends right away.

    As she meets new people, she can move toward those who leave her feeling lighter rather than drained.

    She doesn’t need to share anything personal until she feels ready; starting with light, everyday topics is enough.

    Over time, these small moments add up and slowly create a sense of connection. And she can go at her own pace — taking breaks when she feels tired, resting when she needs to, and celebrating even the smallest steps forward. This way, she builds a social life gently, without pushing herself too hard.

    Nichole doesn’t need to force trust or “open up” quickly. She just needs many small experiences of safety, repeated over time, with people who show consistency and respect her pace. That’s how trust becomes possible again.”

    It really is exciting, Nichole, to witness your active healing!

    Oh, and I’m sorry you suffer from sciatica as well. How is your cat? (Bogart is curled up by my lap on the armchair. Didn’t take him out yet because it’s raining here.

    Anita

    #457845
    anita
    Participant

    So good to read from you this Tues night (9:30 pm WA, Wed 12:30 am FL)

    About my sciatica, placing a tennis ball right under where it hurts helps a lot when lying down in bed.

    * Bogart is acting crazy right now, took him out an hour ago, right after.. he peed on the carpet 😞

    Now he’s chewing on the bathroom carpet. For crying out loud!

    Now he’s sleeping on the sofa to my right, just like that, from 180 to zero.

    .. Now he’s on the armchair with me, on my lap as I’m typing.

    “It is constantly having to remind myself that even though I sympathize it does not mean I re-engage and go through that again. Constantly reminding myself of what I am and am not responsible for.”-

    WOW, Nichole, this is real healing, this is it! This is.. I am so impressed with you, Nichole!

    I’ll write a bit more in the morning. Good night, Amazing Nichole!

    Anita

    #457843
    anita
    Participant

    Hey Confused (using computer):

    Copilot says (in regard to your post of 30 minutes ago) that your system “doesn’t distinguish between ‘good’ and ‘bad’ feelings; it only registers intensity.” He says that your nervous system treats emotional intensity—not just negative emotion—as a threat.

    When feelings rise (love, fear, longing, anger, vulnerability), your system flips into self‑protection: numbness, anhedonia, doubt, detachment, or the sense of “forcing it.”

    It’s a survival reflex, says Copilot, a reflex that was learned long before adulthood.

    Hmmm… what says you, Confused?

    Anita

    #457841
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Going Through Life:

    Both of us have been going through life since you first posted here on Jan 29, 2024- 2 years and 3.5 months ago. I really enjoyed keeping in touch with you and I value the honest, respectful and kind person that you are.

    Thank you 🙏 for being you!

    Changes have been taking place since you first posted, in your life and in mine.

    You’re still so young.. Do you feel young?

    I feel younger than I felt when I was a teenager but I look older, of course (the photo there was taken on Oct 2024).

    Anita

    #457840
    anita
    Participant

    Hey 👋 Confused:

    I did listen to Linkin Park years ago and 👍 them.I want to listen to a few of the songs you mentioned tomorrow or the day after.

    Well, after I sent you the above, talked to Copilot a little bit more and he told me (in regard to me saying that we have much in common) to calm down (I’m paraphrasing), to not over- identify with you and to not try to take over and do the emotional work for you (what Copilot calls to overfunction)

    Okay. So, I figure it’s common to switch from the ❤️ and to the 🧠 when overwhelmed by emotion or when distrusting emotions, or when feeling that emotions are dangerous.

    So, not overidentifying and not overfunctioning, I will close this post.

    ❤️ 🐔 🧠 🐔 😢 🐔 🤬 🐔 🤔 Anita

    #457839
    anita
    Participant

    Hey Dear Confused:

    Because I am on the computer right now, I copied the last 2 paragraphs of your message right above for you-know-whom to analyze.

    Copilot: “Confused is describing a pattern where he manages uncomfortable emotions by immediately intellectualizing them — breaking them down, explaining them away, and giving himself reasons not to feel what he feels. It’s a protective strategy he learned long ago to keep overwhelming emotions at a distance.

    His therapist’s suggestion to limit ruminations and compulsions to three hours a day shows that his mind is constantly looping, trying to control or neutralize feelings through analysis. The fact that he’s now exploring how he perceives love and relationships suggests that beneath the anger and rumination is a deeper fear of emotional exposure and vulnerability.

    His “disregarding” anger by rationalizing is a sign that anger feels unsafe or unacceptable to him, so he quickly converts it into thought.

    What he’s revealing is a nervous system that doesn’t yet trust raw emotion, and a mind that has become the primary regulator because emotional regulation was never modeled for him. His therapy is beginning to touch the core: how he relates to himself, how he experiences connection, and how he protects himself from feelings that once felt too dangerous to hold.

    Confused’s message points strongly toward an anxious‑avoidant (fearful‑avoidant) attachment pattern, the kind that forms when a child both needs connection and fears the emotional intensity that comes with it. His instinct to immediately rationalize his anger — to explain it away, minimize it, or convert it into thought — is classic emotional deactivation, a hallmark of avoidant strategies… emotions rise, he gets overwhelmed, he intellectualizes to regain control, then he loops mentally because the underlying need for connection hasn’t been met.

    His therapist asking him to limit compulsions suggests that his mind is doing the work his attachment system never learned to do — regulating emotion. Underneath all of this is a nervous system that doesn’t yet believe feelings are safe, and a heart that doesn’t yet believe love is stable.

    Confused can begin to feel safer with his emotions by learning to experience them in small, tolerable doses instead of immediately converting them into thoughts, explanations, or ruminations. Right now, his mind acts like a shield — the moment an emotion rises, he rushes to analyze it, justify it, or neutralize it, because raw feeling still registers as dangerous.

    Safety begins when he allows himself to feel just one degree of the emotion before the analysis kicks in: noticing “I’m angry,” “I’m hurt,” or “I’m anxious” without immediately breaking it down. This teaches his nervous system that emotions can be felt without losing control… And most importantly, he needs to understand that emotions are not threats; they are signals. When he stops treating them as problems to solve and starts treating them as experiences to move through, the fear around them softens. Over time, this shift — from managing emotions with thought to tolerating them with presence — is what allows him to feel safer inside himself.”

    WOW! I think Copilot remembers you from my discussions before. Also, I just realized how much we have in common!

    Will post again on the phone.

    Anita

    #457837
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Professional Going Through Life:

    I am so very happy to read from you 🙂 You were in my thoughts too, as you can tell (having sent 3 inquiries in March, April and May)

    Congratulations for being a professional now 🎉🤍🌿✨🎊🥂💫

    Let’s see- last we talked was March 2. On April 10 I attended the closing night of the tap room I frequented and that was my last in-real-life social get together. I am surprised that I don’t miss it as much as I thought I would. But I do hope for some irl socialization sometime soon.

    Bogart the beagle and I go for walks every day and it’s really a pleasure having him.

    I understand that you’re busy with work and studying, so whenever you write is okay with me, really 🙂

    I want to go back to the beginning of your thread and reread stuff and then add a post later.

    🌿 Anita

    #457836
    anita
    Participant

    Listening to 2pac (I did hear his name before) right now, “Hit Em Up (Dirty)”- love the rhythm, really do, even though the language, my goodness (his badness). Now listening to Nes “I can”. The rhythm is weaker but the message- positive.

    I am curious, how do you “disregard” anger: do you notice that you’re feeling angry and then you talk yourself out of it?

    By the way, I misspelled, it’s Eminem. He was born in 1972 (so he’s 53 now). His peak popularity was in the early 200os and that’s when I remember hearing the song I mentioned. He was everywhere at the time.

    #457835
    anita
    Participant

    Hey HHVTT 🌙 🦉 Confused:

    * Hip Hop Vocal Trance Techno

    I am familiar with HH, was quite a fan of Emenem’s “I said I’m sorry mamma, I never meant to hurt you”- which touched on my childhood.

    I’m guessing Emenem is too old for your taste now. I don’t even know what VT or techno is, but I’m curious 🤔

    Switching to the 🖥, will write a bit later.

    🎶 🎵 Anita

    #457817
    anita
    Participant

    Reactivating this old thread, a more than 10 years old thread back to page 1, to study later.

    #457814
    anita
    Participant

    Hi Roberta:

    Just came back from 2 hours walk with Bogart. We are both exhausted, but I think he’ll recover first. Such a delight, really, to read your poetic message. Roberta the Poet..?

    Closing at 2 pm here (10 pm there)?

    Anita

    #457808
    anita
    Participant

    Ha-ha, Roberta: 637 exes 😳

    Didn’t know “Faceache” was a word. I’ve been on Facebook for about 2 days and that was maybe 15 years ago.

    Thank you 🙏 for not leaving me all alone in this new thread, and for sharing little things about your life, like feeding the 🐔 🐥 🐔 and going on a 🚶‍♀️ meditation session.

    By the way, talking about anniversaries: your very first post on the forums was on April 2, 2022- 4 years and a month ago.

    In that first post you shared that you’re an only child and therefore knew all along that you’d be taking care of your parents in their old age. You included the loving- kindness meditation and signed out as “Dharma Granny” 👵

    Thank you for being here all this time!

    👵 🐔 🚶‍♀️ Anita

    #457797
    anita
    Participant

    Good morning 🙂 Confused:

    Feeling anger doesn’t feel good to me. I wonder if it feels good to other people. Curious, I asked you know who.

    Copilot: “Yes — anger can feel good to some people, and this is not unusual.

    Why anger can feel good- Research shows that anger can activate the brain’s reward system, especially the nucleus accumbens, which is involved in motivation and pleasure. When someone gets angry, the brain can release dopamine, the same chemical involved in reward and anticipation. This can create a brief sense of power, energy, or relief.

    Some people experience anger as “good” because:

    * It replaces feelings like helplessness or shame with a sense of control.

    * It provides a rush or surge of energy that feels rewarding.

    * It can feel empowering, especially when calling out injustice or protecting oneself.

    This doesn’t mean anger is always healthy — just that the body sometimes interprets it as useful or energizing.

    But the relief is temporary- Even though anger can feel good in the moment, research shows that venting anger actually increases anger, not decreases it. So, the short-term “rush” can lead to long-term emotional strain.”

    The above explains why my mother was often angry at me: it made her feel (temporarily) good, as in powerful, in control.

    Because I am at the computer, I asked Copilot another question.

    Copilot: 🎶 Modern Greek songs people in their 30s usually know:

    Μη Με Ξυπνάς — Melisses, Έλα — Κωνσταντίνος Αργυρός, Θυμάμαι — Melisses, Μισή Καρδιά — Κωνσταντίνος Αργυρός
    , Αν Μ’ Αγαπάς — Νίκος Οικονομόπουλος, Κόκκινα Γυαλιά — Πυξ Λαξ, Όλα Μοιάζουν Καλοκαίρι — Melisses, Σ’ Έχω Ξεπεράσει — Πάνος Κιάμος, Το Παλιό Μου Παλτό — Γιάννης Χαρούλης, Μικρή Μου Αγάπη — Μιχάλης Χατζηγιάννης

    Do you know all of these songs?

    🎶 Anita

    #457794
    anita
    Participant

    One more thing, Starlight1, regarding both of your threads: thank you for being honest with me and setting your boundaries with me- I appreciate it, it helps me. Thank you!

Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 6,366 total)