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January 19, 2026 at 12:12 pm #454328
anitaParticipantDear Sonia:
It’s interesting that you said “I am anxious as a kid”, present tense. I know part of me is still the same kid I was half a century ago.
What made you an 😟 anxious kid?
🤍 Anita
January 19, 2026 at 11:36 am #454326
anitaParticipantDear Thomas:
Nightmarish ER stories indeed. I live in the U.S., like you. I so wish the health care system was much, much better and more efficient for everyone.
I am sorry 😞 you went through all the troubles you went through. I am wishing you and your family a safe, healthy 🙏 year.
🤍 Anita
January 19, 2026 at 10:05 am #454320
anitaParticipantDear Sonia:
It makes sense that you care about your friend — you’ve been carrying his pain on your shoulders for a long time. But caring for someone doesn’t mean sacrificing your own wellbeing. It’s okay to step back when the emotional load becomes too heavy.
You’re not responsible for managing his depression or preventing his bad days. That’s his work, not yours. Wanting boundaries doesn’t mean you’re abandoning him — it means you’re finally taking care of yourself.
A real friendship can survive healthy distance. And if he struggles, that doesn’t mean you caused it. You’re allowed to protect your own mental health.
I wonder if you grew up, Sonia, with an anxious, depressed parent who suffered a lot?
🤍 Anita
January 19, 2026 at 8:26 am #454316
anitaParticipantDear Alessa:
You are very welcome 😊. I hope that your migraine is gone and that you and your son are playing, resting and doing well 🩵🤍
* Thomas, you said: “I once took my brother-in-law to the emergency room. He was having stomach issues. My wife said to tell them he has chest pains. So instead of sitting in the waiting room for hours. They took him in right away… I knew it was stomach or spleen related. But if I had said it was stomach issues then we would have been sitting in the waiting room for hours before even being seen by the intake nurse. Complaining about chest pains, they took him in and got him seen”-
I get why you wanted him to be seen quickly, Thomas — when someone you care about is in pain, it’s scary to think they might have to wait for hours. At the same time, reporting chest pain that doesn’t exist can pull medical staff away from people who are actually having chest pain (which may indicate a heart attack), people who may die in the emergency room because your BIL was taken in first.
Also, falsely reporting chest pain can lead to unnecessary tests or procedures for the person who you’re trying to help.
I think the safest approach is to describe the real symptoms clearly, to mention anything that makes the situation urgent (sudden onset, severe pain, vomiting, fainting, etc.) and let the triage nurse decide the urgency/ priority. They’re trained to pick up on the serious stuff even when it doesn’t look dramatic.
That should keep everyone safer — including the person you’re trying to help.
🤍 Anita
January 19, 2026 at 7:52 am #454315
anitaParticipantGood morning, Confused:
The Serenity Prayer comes to mind: “God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change; the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference”.
The purpose of this prayer is to eliminate the resistance to what we wish was different but that which we cannot change, and in so doing, to lower our anxiety and direct our energy to what we CAN change.
Because there’s so much in life that is uncertain and so much that cannot be guaranteed, we have to endure a certain amount of anxiety. Expecting someone else to calm that anxiety for us on a regular or ongoing basis (more than a moment here, a moment there) is putting too much pressure on the other person.
And pressuring yourself to calm another person’s anxiety (more often than a moment here, a moment there) is putting too much pressure on yourself.
What do you think about what I just wrote?
You wrote yesterday: “I make a lot of excuses for my parents and for most people and their behaviours, I know that. I always see their side of the story and be quick to validate them, often leading to neglecting my own feelings and side.”-
This may be your way to calm other people’s anxiety: to focus on their feelings and to quickly validate them while neglecting your own feelings. Is it?
You also wrote yesterday: “Chaos feels so natural to me and I often thrive in chaotic work environments, I noticed that in most of my relationships, when things flow easy and calm for too long, I instigate some ‘drama’ to keep the spark alive. Not anything serious though.”-
I wonder how you’ve instigated drama in your relationships, examples?
🤍 Anita
January 18, 2026 at 7:15 pm #454303
anitaParticipant“What is the word”?
My answer: it’s little boys 👦s and girls 👧s looking for certainty, for assurance, for safety, for calm.
Looking for that- as children, teenagers, in our 20s and 30s- And on and on, until..
Until we surrender to the uncertainty of it all to how little control we truly have, to.. how much we humbly (humbly) need each other.
🤍 👧 👦 🤍 Anita
January 18, 2026 at 6:51 pm #454301
anitaParticipantI am going to retire for the night 🌙 soon. Be back Mon morning 🌄.
But for now, think of it, Confused: You are NOT responsible for her feelings, the two of you are adults, equally adults. She is responsible for her feelings, same as you are responsible for yours.
Her feelings are not your responsibility.
🤍🌙🤍 Anita
January 18, 2026 at 6:40 pm #454300
anitaParticipantAnd this role reversal happens when a child has to.. parent the parent because the parent is a child who’se out of control (my experience )
January 18, 2026 at 6:30 pm #454299
anitaParticipantIt sounds to me like you (Confused) took on the emotional ROLE of a parent in regard to her, like she’s your child for whom you- as a parent of some sort- are responsible for.
While in reality, the two of you are about the same age..???
January 18, 2026 at 6:20 pm #454297
anitaParticipantSo. what could be fun (careless, spontaneous, whatever happens – happens) becomes unpleasant?
January 18, 2026 at 6:17 pm #454296
anitaParticipantHmm… “have to”, feeling an obligation, a responsibility is.. what’s the words, it 🤔 rains on the parade of love and spontaneity. It’s no longer fun and open. It’s a JOB. ??
January 18, 2026 at 5:55 pm #454294
anitaParticipantThe fearing closeness point- her writing you a poem comes to mind, expressing feeling close to you, and best I remember, that scared you and was part of what led you to “suddenly fell out of love” experience (the title of this thread) no?
👀
January 18, 2026 at 5:39 pm #454292
anitaParticipantHey Confused:
You are very welcome 🙏 I am glad 😊 reading from you this Sun evening (here).
I understand that you don’t see a connection between your mother and your romantic partners. I don’t see a connection either. The connection I see 👀 is in between your reactions to your mother AND your reactions to your partners, or maybe better say the emotional dynamics:
Craving closeness, fearing closeness; giving more than receiving, and like you just wrote, seeking chaos because.. you tell me, if you will (because I’m a bit confused right now ☺️
🤍 Anita
January 18, 2026 at 11:50 am #454286
anitaParticipantDear Ivy:
Good to read that you are feeling better, Ivy!
For recommendations, you might like older 2D animated series, classic family movies, or some hidden‑gem adventure cartoons.
Again, I’m glad you’re feeling better and finding comfort in drawing and writing 🙂
Anita
January 18, 2026 at 11:06 am #454284
anitaParticipantDear Tom:
Then keeping your head down at work and looking for a different job, a different work environment makes perfect sense. I hope it will happen sooner than later 🙂 🤞
🤍 Anita
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