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anita

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  • #459317
    anita
    Participant

    I am experiencing more emotion right now (close to midnight) than I can rationalize or categorize into neat labels and a sense of control.

    It’s this pain, a never-ending, never-to-be-soothed early pain of love unmet, day in and day out, night after night, year after year, 7, 17, 27, 37, 47, 57-year-old face, light turned off, love-empty for too long, frozen at 7.

    How, how can a whole world be so unaware of the little hears hurting so much, yearning for love that’s NOT THERE?

    B Back in the morning.

    Anita

    #459316
    anita
    Participant

    The feeling of love: at first (as a child), it was a never-ending reaching out for love. I ran after my mother:

    LOVE ME, LOVE ME, I WILL DO ANYTHING, EVERYTHING…

    There was no pacing of that love.

    Then later came the severe suppression: withdrawing, distant, turned inward; frozen, not moving.

    And then, with healing, came the opening: only at times, on a few occasions, I sent “too much” love, too much emotion, more than the other person can absorb or feel comfortable with.

    But I didn’t know that.

    Didn’t know how to pace it.

    I guess it’s the middle way, that which is between Nothing at all AND Everything all at once.

    Anita

    #459312
    anita
    Participant

    Good evening, Peter 🙂

    “I ‘saw’ them. I saw how much love they held, how deeply they wanted to express it, and just how beautiful they were, if they could only ‘know’ it”-

    As I re-read the above a few minutes ago, I saw you, Peter. I saw how much love you’ve held, how deeply you have wanted to express it, and just… how beautiful you are, and I hope you can know it.

    And I see me, how much love I held for so long, how deeply I wanted to express it, but had to suppress it until conditions allowed it.

    “How do I wish to Be? I wonder if we anchor ourselves in that state of *Being* first, in that dropped-luggage presence”-

    To re- anchor myself in that state of Being (loved and loving) that was robbed from me early on, having led to my “What will I do” (without love)? and “How will I do it” (gain, earn, pay for love)?

    The luggage for me has been the separation from Being.

    Dropping the luggage is returning to Being, a return to the Beginning (not the Genesis kind though).

    So, I don’t have to do anything to earn love. I already am. I want to rest in it tonight, tomorrow and every day of my life.

    Thank you Peter for bringing this to my awareness 🙂

    🌙 Anita

    #459308
    anita
    Participant

    Reading your words, Peter, feels grounding for me — thank you.

    This idea of anchoring in Being, in that dropped‑luggage presence, really speaks to me. I want to let it settle a bit and write again later tonight 🙂

    #459303
    anita
    Participant

    W.O.W, Peter:

    “I would Be. Love. Presence”= “allowing grace to shine through”.

    Rigid boundaries dissolving => grace, freed, flows through.

    Maybe my invitation to answer or not (grace) freed something in you, and you answered.

    You saw a person (over the weekend) beneath the noise of their defense and baggage/ beneath your own self-protective reaction to their noise?

    What if I could see more of that in people. My need to analyze and categorize people is a defense.

    Dissolving that? Wow (this “wow” is my simple expression of something that “can’t be defined by words”.

    Fewer words, better.

    🌿🌿🌿 Anita

    #459300
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Devesh:

    You are welcome 🙂 You said you feel empty inside. Sometimes that emptiness comes from carrying responsibilities that started too early.

    In general, many boys in India grow up with a very heavy message: that they must put their own life aside so they can take care of their parents, support the family, and be the “good son.” This message often starts very early, long before a boy understands what freedom or choice even mean.

    When a child hears this message again and again, he learns to silence his own needs, dreams, and desires. He learns to erase parts of himself so he can fit the role that is expected of him.

    This isn’t because parents are bad. Most parents truly believe they are teaching responsibility, loyalty, and family strength. They often struggle themselves, and they want security for the future. Their intention is love and protection.

    But the effect on the child can still be very heavy because when a boy grows up feeling too responsible, too early, he often becomes an adult who feels empty inside — because he never had space to discover who he is.

    And when loyalty is tied to being a “good son,” it becomes very hard to speak about this because it feels like betraying the family. So many men stay silent, even when the distress inside them grows.

    More about this reality: when a boy is taught that his own wants or desires don’t matter, and that choosing for oneself feels like disloyalty, he stops desiring and stops choosing for himself. Life becomes something that happens to him, not something he chooses or directs.

    When a child must obey, sacrifice, or silence himself — the outer life keeps moving, but the inner life stops growing. Over time, the outer life becomes full of activity, responsibilities, achievements, income, relationships, while the inner life stays small, or undeveloped: you are doing things, but you don’t feel connected to them; you are moving forward, but nothing inside moves with you. It feels like being present for others but absent (empty) in yourself.

    Inner life needs freedom to grow.

    The above is general. Does any of it resonate with you personally, Devesh?

    🌿🌿🌿 Anita

    #459292
    anita
    Participant

    Peter: “All our lives, we travel heavy. We pack our identities, our anxieties, our spiritual titles, and our past conditioning into heavy bags, dragging them frantically from one moment to the next.”-

    Without any heavy bags, not even an ounce of a heavy bag, who would you be now, Peter? (not expecting an answer)

    I just asked myself the same question and an unfamiliar, intense jolt of youthful fire-like burned through me for a moment. I won’t analyze it (analysis is in a bag right now that I’m not carrying).

    Then that’s all I have: that feeling of an uninterrupted life.

    Anita

    #459286
    anita
    Participant

    Hey 👋 Confused:

    “The shame, self- loathing and frustration are there indeed”-

    Wait, wait, wait.. I didn’t know Confused loathed Confused 😢. How did I miss that.. really, self loathe? Please tell me more about it. And about the shame too.

    😔🌿🤔🌿 Anita

    #459282
    anita
    Participant

    Hello again, Sponge ✨️

    I am using my phone, so no AI for me. I’ll be thinking out loud about what you shared.

    Strict religious upbringing you say, and 7 siblings. Often, siblings take on different roles: the one rebelling against the parents and the loyal, obedient one; the responsible one, and the irresponsible, etc.

    It may be that you didn’t have an intimate relationship with a woman until your late 20s because you were the loyal one, loyal to your parents’ religious principles.

    You told your mother about the situation, and sounds like you felt comforgable doing so. Maybe because she’s been encouraging you to have a relationship, being that you’re approaching 30, and she wants you get married.

    Maybe, just maybe, the rules of obedience changed: at first being told: no sex before marriage (and you obeyed), but then telling you that sex is okay (before marriage) in hope you’ll get married, leading to a conflict/ emotional confusion, and the resulting inability on those couple or few occasions to perform sexually.

    Maybe.

    You didn’t share much about the woman you had the relationship with: what were her values, her goals, her interests. Maybe those were not compatible with yours. Maybe you didn’t really like her. Maybe you weren’t really attracted to her, which would explain the conflict: wanting a relationship.. but not with her.

    Just because she’s your first intimate/ sexual relationship doesn’t mean she’s the woman for you.

    And about guilt, religious invoked guilt perhaps, that’s a tough one.

    Again, I don’t know because you didn’t share everything, and that’s okay. If you’d like to share more, perhaps respond to my maybe-s, please do. If you feel uncomfortable doing so, that’s okay too.

    Also, this thread is almost 10 years old (Aug 2015), and I think that I replied to members on this thread on the very first day Jaz started this thread (I appear as “anonymous” because at one point I deleted my account but returned under a new account. All my posts though close with my name, anita)

    Maybe thoroughly reading the exchanges can help you.

    🌿✨️🌿 Anita

    #459278
    anita
    Participant

    Hey Sponge and Confused (Anita here to shed some light💡✨🔆ha-ha)

    Reading your posts, Sponge (and running them through AI), I came across a term I wasn’t aware of: Delayed Emotional Awareness, and I think it fits you and Confused (It did fit me a whole lot most of my life).

    Delayed emotional awareness means that a feeling is building inside you for a while, but you don’t notice it until it becomes very strong. Instead of sensing the early signs of discomfort, doubt, or sadness, you only become aware of the emotion once it reaches a breaking point and suddenly feels overwhelming.

    This often happens when someone grew up in an environment where emotions weren’t talked about much, so they learned to stay “fine” until they can’t anymore. The child learns to stay functional, polite, or compliant, but not to check inside themselves for what they’re actually feeling.

    Over years, emotions still happen, but the signal doesn’t reach conscious awareness until the feeling becomes very strong. So, instead of noticing early discomfort, doubt, or sadness, the person only becomes aware once the emotion is intense enough to break through the old habit of “not noticing.” It’s not a flaw — it’s simply a learned pattern where the emotion arrives on time, but the awareness arrives late.

    Does it fit, Sponge? Confused?

    (I have more to say later)

    Anita

    #459274
    anita
    Participant

    Hey Confused:

    I sure do hope that you’ll feel better soon. There’s a strong connection between our thinking and our feelings. If we think differently (easier said than done, of course), if we think more accurately, then we’d feel better. That’s the essence of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy.

    Think a feeling SHOULD or SHOULDN’T be, and you’re inviting feeling badly. It’s not just me saying that. I just asked you know whom, and he said:

    “When someone believes a feeling should or shouldn’t exist, they create inner conflict — and inner conflict always produces more suffering.

    When someone thinks a feeling shouldn’t be there, they start fighting it, criticizing themselves, or trying to push it away — and that adds tension, shame, and frustration on top of the original feeling.

    “So instead of just having the feeling, a person now has the feeling (or lack of it) plus the belief that the feeling is wrong. That’s why telling yourself a feeling ‘should’ or ‘shouldn’t’ exist almost always makes you feel worse: the judgment becomes its own source of suffering.

    “The feeling itself isn’t the problem; the fight he has with the feeling is what hurts (Confused)”

    Anita and Copilot

    #459270
    anita
    Participant

    Hello again, Sponge 🌿

    “I said to her at that time like I don’t know if something is wrong with my emotions”-

    I don’t think that there’s anything wrong with your emotions (or my emotions, or anyone’s). There can be something wrong with what we choose to do (our words and action(, but not with what we feel.

    Every emotion has a valid message even when we don’t know yet what the message is.

    For example, in your case, the message may be:

    ‘Intimacy is dangerous!’, ‘ You’re going to get hurt!’

    Even though this is your first girlfriend (you haven’t been hurt by a previous girlfriend), it’s possible (and it’s very common) that you were hurt by a family member, a parent perhaps, and that fear carries on to adult relationships.

    What do you think- feel, Sponge?

    🤔 Anita

    #459266
    anita
    Participant

    Hello devesh tiwaro 🙂

    We talked last year in March in your first thread. At the time, you felt stuck in a relationship with your girlfriend of 9 years (while having multiple casual relationships with other women), and you wanted to break free from her while feeling guilty and conflicted.

    You wanted to leave your country and explore different women and different places.

    Fast forward a year and a few months, and you’re feeling stuck in your life: stuck in your city, stuck with your people.

    You said: ” I have some financial burden, some family responsibilities.”

    And you asked: “If I go to another location without any plan, another country, city, will it be a good idea or not?”-

    I am wondering if you have been told from an early age (as a boy) that you have to financially support your parents in their older age, that you have to put your young life on hold (to sacrifice your needs, particularly your need to be free), so to fulfill.. family responsibilities?

    🤔 Anita

    #459264
    anita
    Participant

    Hello Sponge 🙂

    No, you didn’t share “too much” and I would like to reply to you more at length a little later. Maybe Confused (or another member) will reply to you as well.

    🌿 Anita

    #459245
    anita
    Participant

    Hey Eva:

    The things you’re describing — the urge to text him, the spiraling thoughts when you see him, the self‑blame, the fantasies about his future, even missing the affection that wasn’t consistent — these are signs of how overwhelmed your nervous system still is after a relationship that kept you in a constant state of uncertainty.

    When someone has been in a bond where they were never really chosen, the body doesn’t just let go because the relationship ended. It keeps reaching for what was familiar, even if that familiar thing hurt.

    When affection is rare, inconsistent, and unpredictable, the brain clings harder, searching for the next “reward,” which intensifies longing, self‑blame, and obsessive thoughts after the breakup (the addiction) You’re reacting to a long period of emotional deprivation and confusion.

    What helps now is not forcing yourself to “stop” these reactions but offering yourself small moments of grounding when they appear — reminding yourself that your body is reacting to the history you had with him — the uncertainty, the emotional deprivation, the intermittent affection.

    None of this means he was the right person or that you lost something irreplaceable. It means your heart is still unwinding from a relationship where you carried all the emotional weight alone. With time, these waves soften, and your system learns safety again.

    Anita (with the help of AI)

Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 6,715 total)