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June 19, 2026 at 8:02 pm #458773
anitaParticipantHey Debbie: did you get the photo I took this morning (had help sending it to your email using my phone)?
Anita
June 19, 2026 at 7:24 pm #458772
anitaParticipantHow are you, Robin? I hope to read from you again 🙂
June 19, 2026 at 6:44 pm #458771
anitaParticipantHey 🙂 Confused:
I’m all for you feeling calmer, so I hope you keep taking the escitalopram 🙏
Oh, you mean what if the escitalopram stops working- a question to ask the psychiatrist. From my experience, the dosage might be increased and/ or a new drug added.
But it’s working right now. Confused tends to imagine the worst possibilities. I relate. I am trying these very days to change my Negative Attitude to===> Positive Attitude and Gratitude.
The negative is that you argued but the positives are that the day started great ✔️✔️✔️ and the argument resolved (she understood that you are not hiding her from people in your life because you’re ashamed of her or have no intentions to make a life with her… right?)
45 minutes in the Gym sounds long enough to me 🤔
Anita
June 19, 2026 at 10:23 am #458764
anitaParticipantGood Friday morning (here), evening (there), Robi 🙂
The smell of vodka alone is enough to trigger a coma warning in my 🧠. To taste it (and I did) is torture, so if I end up in a coma, it’ll have to be lots and lots of sweet 🍷🍷🍷🍷🍷🍷🍷🍷
I am glad you survived the event! (I’ll drink to celebrate it later 🍷..)
You asked how I am today- well, silly, aa you can see above 🐔
You named him, yes, makes sense..
Never tried ecstacy, but sounds interesting: better than alcohol and without the calories?
No worries, Robi, you can’t talk this 👵 into hard drugs 🤔
” Now I just want some peace”- I like that!
Congrats for fine-tuning the alcohol intake, finding the middle way (a Buddhist principle). The middle way between total abstinence and drunkness. Coming to think about it, doestraditional Buddhism advocates for the middle- way when it comes to alcohol?
Alcohol definitely facilitates connectedness with other people and within, when not overly consumed, of course. Then it just makes you sick.
Your Cafe Bistro idea sounds enticing! I just had an auditory visual of a Robi-designed attractive place for community building with music and a fancy antique Merceded Benz parked in the front 👍🎶👍🎶👍
Anita
June 19, 2026 at 9:07 am #458762
anitaParticipantDear Thomas:
Thank you for taking the time to write such a thoughtful message and for your kind words 🙏🙏🙏.
My experience with my mother was not one of hidden love. It was one of absence, and that’s the truth I’m working with. What I’m exploring is how that lack of love shaped me.
I appreciate your kindness and the care behind your message 🙂
Anita
June 18, 2026 at 8:49 pm #458744
anitaParticipantHey 👋 again, Confused:
So glad to read that escitalopram is helpin- just like it’s supposed to (it was developed, tested, and studied a lot before it became available).
I didn’t understand the question at the end of your post. Can you explain it?
Yes, whenever I’m on the phone (like now) or on the computer, I always check tiny buddha- it’s an 11 year habit!
More adjectives you used to describe her: Open, Transparent.
You are making progress, Confused 👏, a delight to witness!
“I am a slave to feelings/ intensity/ highs”- like a drug addict? Maybe advice for real drug addicts can help you 🤔
🐔 Anita
June 18, 2026 at 8:12 pm #458742
anitaParticipantOne of the reasons it’s so difficult to look back and see my mother as she was- is the child’s way of seeing things in black- and- white, all- or- nothing (binary thinking) characteristic of young children.
Integrating shades of grey into black and white thinking happens when people mature.
So, looking back tonight, I see that I saw her as an injured child that I needed to take care of OR the abusive adult that she was, the monster. Integrating these 2 images is difficult.
I have a vivid memory of one of the Pet Cemetary movies decades ago. In one of the scenes, a 5-year-old or so boy who murdered someone, when caught, is shown with the corners of his mouth down, like an innocent child about to cry. And it hit me so strongly back then that I remember it so vividly decades after watching that movie.
Because that’s what my mother was to me: abusive, cruel… and yet, an innocent child. I couldn’t integrate those 2 aspects of her: which one was real?
Answer: it wasn’t one OR the other, it was both. Human monsters are not like the monsters depicted in some cartoons (all bad, all of the time). They were once children, and like it’s true for any adult, the child is still there.
And so, part of the typical abusive adult, even the severely abusive, still carries that innocent child.
The child part doesn’t cancel- or excuse- the monster part. It’s just the nature of a Human Monster.
Anita
June 18, 2026 at 7:31 pm #458741
anitaParticipantHey Dear Confused 🙂
She’s Amazing, Beautiful, Caring, Considerate, Honest, Loving and Sweet- all the adjectives you used in this message to describe her ( in alphabetical order).
You also called her ” a treasure” and said (the magical words, in my mind): “I trust her.”
The thought that occurred to you: “Why are U not feeling head over heels”-
And the thought that just occurred to me: what if you redirect your focus from Feeling (or not feeling) to ===> Values.
Caring, Considerate, Honest and Trustworthy- how about just appreciating these values- rather than seeking emotional highs?
🤔 Anita
June 18, 2026 at 7:10 pm #458740
anitaParticipantSend a message requesting that particular post to be deleted, that is.
June 18, 2026 at 5:50 pm #458738
anitaParticipantYou can send an email to Lori Deschene, the site owner, see at the top of the page: Home+> Contact
June 18, 2026 at 4:06 pm #458730
anitaParticipantI copied your email, so you can delete it. I’ll have to get help to transfer phone photos to email ( low tech here), will do by tomorrow
June 18, 2026 at 3:49 pm #458728
anitaParticipantBogart says: thank you, Debbie 🐶 🐕🐾🤍
June 18, 2026 at 1:42 pm #458725
anitaParticipantHi Alecsee:
What you’re describing sounds like emotional overload — when the feelings hit so quickly that your thoughts don’t have time to guide you. Many people go through this, especially after stressful experiences. It means your system gets overwhelmed fast.
When a person gets triggered, the emotional part of the brain takes over, and the thinking part goes offline. That’s why you say things you don’t mean or react faster than you can think. It’s not a character flaw; it’s a regulation issue, and it’s something that can be worked on.
Before deciding anything about the future, the first step is helping your nervous system settle; helping your emotions settle. When you’re calmer, you’ll see your options more clearly.
You didn’t “ruin everything.” You got overwhelmed. That’s human. And it’s something you can learn to manage with practice.
If you want, we can talk about what helps you stay grounded when emotions spike.
Anita
June 18, 2026 at 1:05 pm #458721
anitaParticipantHi again, Calm Moon 🌙
Reading your update, I can really see how much you have grown. What stands out to me is that you acted from your adult self, not from the old role of being the “good, invisible” girl. You felt the fear of being unloved, yet you still spoke honestly about your needs — that is a major shift.
You also saw that your seniors’ irritation belongs to them, not to you, which shows healthier boundaries and less emotional over‑responsibility.
And the relief you describe — that “strangely beautiful” feeling — is what happens when a person becomes visible without danger. It’s a sign that something deep inside you is changing.
Your faith seems to support this shift too, helping you release the old habit of carrying what isn’t yours.
In general (I am writing this not only for you, but for myself), “carrying what isn’t yours” means taking responsibility for other people’s emotions, reactions, burdens, or life problems as if they were your own. It’s when a child absorbs a parent’s sadness, anger, shame, instability, or unmet needs and believes she must fix them — even though they were never hers to solve.
As adults, this shows up as feeling guilty when someone else is upset and adjusting yourself: softening your voice, over‑explaining, apologizing unnecessarily, or avoiding asking for what you need, so they won’t feel discomfort, or if a friend looks sad, you might rush to cheer them up even when you’re exhausted, because their sadness feels like something you must fix.
Healing means gently handing those burdens back — recognizing that other people’s feelings, stress, and life path are theirs, not yours, and that your job is only to carry what truly belongs to you.
Altogether, your update is a strong and steady healing direction. I’m very happy for you 🌿✨
“He provides all good things, all the time, for everyone” — I like that! It’s only recently that I’m making it a daily practice to notice those good things and express gratitude.
🌙🤍🤲 Anita
June 18, 2026 at 12:33 pm #458720
anitaParticipantHa-ha, hilarious, you are funny, Debbie 😜
Since I talked to you last, I sat with Bogart twice on the kitchen floor and gave him trats, I think it’s working!
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