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anita

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  • #457705
    anita
    Participant

    Oh, no abuse- that’s good. I was concerned.

    Well, Confused- I am all for you coming to a place of Clarity and Peace within yourself.

    It’s Wed 9:40 pm here, Thurs 7:40 am in Greece where you’re at and where I was born and grew up (Israel), a little distance to the east of you.

    Anita (computer, no emojis)

    #457704
    anita
    Participant

    “To be present is to see the other person as they are: their habits, their evasions, their peculiarities, the parts we don’t fully understand. And to meet that without the immediate reflex to fix, improve, or measure them against who they should become.”-

    It just occurred to me that it’d be a good idea to have the above said as part of wedding ceremonies.

    And if implemented in marriages, how much love-missed misery could prevent.

    * Notice: “love-missed misery”- that’s my word-dance 🙂

    “But perhaps the practice shifts here. Not toward perfect, unconditional love, but toward a willingness to notice when we’ve left presence and to return.”-

    To return to the promised land.

    “Presence is not passive. It is attentive, responsive, quietly engaged”-

    You’ve been practicing this kind of presence for a long time here in the forums. I remember you were accused of being passive months ago, in one of the threads. You responded with a uniquely engaged-kind of grace- not defensiveness, not offensiveness.

    If only world politics was run in this spirit of grace.

    “Is this a reality we can stand within?”- to stand within (to not shake it, fight it, turmoil-it).

    To stand within it. To B and let B.

    To not exert power-over, or to submit to power-over. To void the human power quest- in relationships, personal and global- bombs, nuclear, violence.

    But I digress or not. Not.

    Ani-natta-nita

    #457702
    anita
    Participant

    You shared before that you did people- pleasing in previous relationships. I don’t remember you saying before that you accepted sh**** behavior 😔 .. like what?

    #457700
    anita
    Participant

    Hmm. ChatGPT mentioned ” insecure attachment”- does this resonate for you, that you suffer from insecure attachment?

    #457699
    anita
    Participant

    “The pursuit of being ‘unconditionally loving'”- the word “Pursuit” sounds like another P word- Pressure.

    Dancing 🕺 💃 is about releasing pressure, not adding.

    How many supposed love relationships are about pressure:

    Pessure to Perform (P2P): to produce the appearances of material success, the appearance of social confidence (extroversion), and perhaps- for the less materialistic- the pressure to produce the appearance of unconditionsl love.

    What you suggest, Peter, is Presence, not Pressure.

    Not “I (here) love you (over there)”- but a “we”, or some other pronoun not spoken yet.

    2 B Continued.

    #457697
    anita
    Participant

    How R U, Nina?

    (as I went over our conversation, I noticed for the first time that I addressed you twice as Mina instead of Nina (having glasses now when using the 📱 helps)

    I hope that my last reply was not too heavy?

    🤔 Anita

    #457696
    anita
    Participant

    WOW, Peter: brilliant and easy for me (!) to understand, I am in awe of the perfection of your message. In my mind, it’s Perfect.

    I never read anything like that on unconditional love.

    This is a message I wish lots of people would read.

    I’ll let myself dance with your words instead of Analyzing them- next.

    💃 Anita

    #457695
    anita
    Participant

    Hey 🙂 Confused:

    So, you’re saying maybe you fell into depression the 10th and 11th of November and as a result you lost feelings for her, and next, you started obsessing (ROCD)

    Or

    the 10th and 11th were the end of the honeymoon phase and that ending led to your depression and obsessing.

    Are these the 2 options 🤔 or is there a 3rd option?

    ( using 📱)

    #457692
    anita
    Participant

    Hello Miss L Dutchess (this reply is helped by AI):

    You described a very common pattern in adult children of harsh, punitive, or controlling parents: you learned early that speaking up = danger. Your mother scrutinized you, punished mistakes, and hovered over you, so you learned: don’t confront, don’t express needs, don’t risk upsetting anyone, stay small, stay quiet.

    This is why you rant online instead of speaking directly—online feels safer than real life.

    And I want to say: you handled that situation extremely well.

    You noticed a boundary being crossed, you named it calmly, and you addressed it directly instead of swallowing it the way you were forced to as a kid. That’s real growth. Most people who grew up with a harsh or punitive parent struggle for years to do exactly what you did.

    His reaction wasn’t a sign that you did something wrong — it was a sign that he didn’t like being held accountable. The whispering in your ear, the repeated comments, the condescending tone… none of that was appropriate. Your discomfort was valid, and your message to him was appropriate and measured.

    A few things to keep in mind as you move forward:

    * You set a boundary without attacking him. That’s healthy communication.

    * His defensiveness is about him, not you. People who enjoy small power plays often lash out when confronted.

    * You didn’t escalate. You stayed grounded and factual. That’s emotional maturity.

    * You’re almost out of that living situation. You don’t need to fix him or teach him anything — you just needed to protect your space, and you did.

    If you want something practical to take with you into your next home, here are a couple of gentle tools:

    * When someone crosses a line, address it early, just like you did. It prevents resentment from building.

    * Keep your tone neutral and simple. You already did this beautifully.

    * Trust your discomfort. If something feels invasive, it is.

    * You don’t need to justify your boundaries. “This made me uncomfortable” is enough.

    You’re not the girl who had to stay silent anymore. You’re an adult who can speak up, protect herself, and choose who gets access to her space. And you did exactly that.

    🤍 Anita

    #457687
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Sapnap3:

    I went over your 44 threads, from your July 7, 2013 first post (about 2 years before I first participated in these tiny buddha forums), to your last post on Nov 9, 2020, which you addressed to me.

    I ran some things through Copilot (AI) earlier this morning, a resource I didn’t know about until late 2024. But then, I had to get off the computer, and back to my phone, and am too low tech to access Copilot from here. But I continued to read many of your posts using my phone.

    This is my understanding this morning, 5 years, 6 months & 3 days since you last posted:

    You grew up a very lonely child, emotionally unattended to, severely emotionally neglected.

    So much so, that at 6 or 7, you kept seeking the only attention you got back then: that of a 60- year-old man, a neighbor, who sexually molested you, touching you at 6, 7 year-old sexually and having you touch him back in that way.

    You never told your parents about it back then or later because (at least from one point onward) you believed that your mother (or both of your parents) would blame you for it.

    But at one point, as an adult, when you visited your parents in India, you were groped by an accountant who provided accounting services to your parents, and this time, you DID tell your mother about it and hoped or expected that she no longer use his services.

    Her response: she said that he was probably just trying to be friendly, and regardless- she’ll continue to use his services because he charged less money than other accountants.

    Talking about money, at one point, your mother referred to you as her “retirement fund”-

    You were the only one among your (much older) siblings who had American education and was making serious money.

    You felt an obligation to take care of your parents financially and felt a mix of love, anger and guilt about it.

    In your adult relationships with men your attachment wounds were understandably activated and you clung too strongly to them, fearing the abandonment you experienced as a child.

    You started posting here about one such relationship that ended in a breakup that devastated you.

    On April 12, 2016, when you started this thread, you wrote that you lost your father and looking back, you could see that he loved you a lot and made you feel wanted.

    Clearly, he didn’t make you feel wanted as a child or during all of your formative years. But we have a way of softening memories (nostalgia) so to comfort ourselves.

    Two days later (above), you wrote that your mother is “very loving” but loves your older sister (who was her youngest daughter for 9 years before you were born) unconditionally, regardless of her poor choices (in your mother’s evaluation), but expected you, Sapnap3, to be perfect, thinking of you as her “trophy child”, using you to show off to others.

    In your last thread on the forums, you shared that you were moving to Chicago where your mother was living at a time so to be with her.

    In my post to you back then, I reminded you of what she did that harmed you (I realized only today that I made a mistake in that post- I thought that your mother excused the 60-year- old man who abused you at 6, when she was really referring to the accountant who groped you as an adult).

    You posted for the last time on Nov 9, 2020, a reply to me. In your last reply you defended your mother, the woman who you truly loved unconditionally ( I am referring to the title of this 10 year-old thread(.

    I would like to continue this later.

    If you are reading this, Sapnap3- and it would be very unlikely, given the time that has passed- I hope that you’re doing well.

    🙏 🌿 ✨️ Anita

    #457676
    anita
    Participant

    Thank you, Confused 🙂

    So, the guy in the video needed space away from his girlfriend when he felt the “ick”, took his space, talked to his inner child, and when the ick was gone, he reconnected with his girlfriend?

    That may work 4 U and your GF: ick 🤢=> take space ✨️✨️✨️=> reconnect with inner child 👶 => reconnect with GF ❤️.

    👍 Anita

    #457670
    anita
    Participant

    Bringing up this 10 year old thread up to look at later.

    #457669
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Mark:

    Your first post in the forums was on Jan 2018, and your last- Feb 2020, 6 years and 3 months ago. You replied to many members.

    It’d be a miracle to read from you after such a long time. It’d be wonderful.

    🌿 Anita

    #457668
    anita
    Participant

    Hi again, Starlight ✨️

    You told Peter that you did a picture (art) of a hand 👈 pointing to yourself with the word ‘forgiveness’ written on it.

    I do hope that you forgive yourself. I know how difficult it is to feel guilty 😔

    Talking about art, I did a painting myself when I was in my early 20s. It meant a lot to me and it also involved a hand: it was a hand coming out of my brain/ head, fingers spread, as in trying to escape the conflict and misery within my brain- trying to escape and be free from relentless guilt.

    If you want to talk with me about guilt, I am here.

    I remember at about the same time, I said to myself, feeling strongly about it: “If I get to experience one day of not feeling guilty, my life will be worth living”.

    Fast forward.. my life is worth living ✨️

    Not all happily-ever- after fairytale style.. Just Not- Guilty. What a relief!

    🌿 Anita

    #457667
    anita
    Participant

    Yes, 📱 time, ha-ha.

    Thank you for saying same- here 🙏

    Yes, something like that, well, exactly like that.

    S.A.F.E.T.Y is it, a key 🔑 human need.

    Growing up in unsafety, unpredictability, chaos.. it messes with you. Well, it messed with me big time.

    Feeling-Thinking- Doing better now ✨️

    🐝 🧠 🐰 Anita

Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 6,323 total)