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February 22, 2026 at 8:25 pm #455395
anitaParticipant… Zenith.. ???
February 22, 2026 at 8:17 pm #455394
anitaParticipantLaven, you haven’t been forgotten, not by me.
✨️🌙 Anita
February 22, 2026 at 7:55 pm #455393
anitaParticipantHow are you friend? 🤍 Anita
February 22, 2026 at 7:53 pm #455392
anitaParticipantHow are you, Sonia? 🤔 ✨️🌙 Anita
February 22, 2026 at 7:49 pm #455391
anitaParticipantDear Robi:
I’m wondering 🤔 if you’re still in Romania right now, and hoping you’re in Warsaw, although I understand the challenges in regard to your gf and her mother.
If only things could be simple and easy 😕
✨️🤍 Anita
February 22, 2026 at 7:44 pm #455390
anitaParticipantI hope 🙏 you’re okay this Sun night 🌙, Omyk. I hope there’s a well deserved peace in your heart 💙 tonight, today, and every day.
✨️ Anita
February 22, 2026 at 7:40 pm #455389
anitaParticipantI hope you’re okay 👍, Confused.
✨️🌙🤔 Anita
February 22, 2026 at 7:36 pm #455388
anitaParticipantI hope 🙏 to read from you again, leanBee.
🌙🙏 Anita
February 22, 2026 at 7:33 pm #455387
anitaParticipantI wonder how 39-year-old Tom is feeling today/ tonight. I hope 🙏 well?
✨️ Anita
February 22, 2026 at 7:30 pm #455386
anitaParticipantHow are you this Sun night 🌙 10:30 pm Florida time, Nichole?
I just “harassed” Bogart the Beagle, that is, showed him some loving attention. We all need that, don’t we 🙂
🤔 Anita
February 22, 2026 at 7:24 pm #455385
anitaParticipantAny news in regard to the Apt vs Townhome decision, Alecsee?
🤔 Anita
February 21, 2026 at 5:12 pm #455384
anitaParticipantAbout the experience of being Alone Again (AA, lol), whatever comes to mind:
Thomas wrote yesterday: “(I) feel closer to her”, meaning to me.
Well, this is EVERYTHING right here, feeling close to people. It doesn’t need to be a romantic kind of closeness, of course, or any kind of categorized closeness- just simple, human closeness.
I think it’s called “Agape” in the new testament, brotherly love, or sisterly love- not even categorized by gender. Better say, human love.
Or not even categorizing it by species, as dogs love people and people love dogs (and other animals).
But anyway, emotional closeness is magical ✨️. It makes all the difference in the world.
And closeness can be online because we are people, real flesh and blood.. and emotions behind the words we type.
Closeness is what I was deprived of, severely deprived growing-in (way more accurate than saying growing up, or outward).
I don’t mean physical closeness. I mean emotional closeness.
There was my mother, physically too close, but emotionally WORLDS 🌎 😢 APART.
And then she insisted that I don’t get close to anyone else (aunts, uncles, cousins, peers in school or in the neighborhood, or anyone else).
So, no emotional closeness with anyone day after day, year after year.. decade after decade.
I am writing this not to blame, not because I am stuck. But because I am unstuck.
Alone Again, unnaturally. It’s unnatural to be alone (for too long).
This is all I have to say this Sat night 🌙, well, evening really.
Oh, one more thing: I took the plastic off of my tattoo, washed it, put lotion on it, and it feels fine (a few people told me it’ll itch like crazy), but it doesn’t, not so far).
Signing out for now.
🤍🎵🌙 Anita
February 21, 2026 at 1:50 pm #455383
anitaParticipantDear Mollie:
This morning, I reread your first (original) post in this thread as well as following posts and consulted with AI (Copilot).
Your first post in this thread was on March 28, 2025 (age 23). In that post, you didn’t give many details about your childhood or your parents, but you did reveal emotional patterns that point to how your early relationships shaped you.
A. Your parents’ disapproval had strong power over you- you wrote that they didn’t approve of the man you loved because he was 10 years older. Your reaction was to feel turmoil, stop contact with him, and focus on repairing things with your parents. This suggests you grew up in a family where parental approval mattered intensely, and where you may have learned to sacrifice your own desires to keep peace.
B. You felt guilt and pressure around disappointing them- you said resigning from your job felt horrible because you had previously indicated you’d stay longer. Even though this wasn’t directly about your parents, the emotional tone was the same: fear of letting people down and fear of not meeting expectations. This often comes from childhood environments where expectations are high and approval feels conditional.
C. You apologized for having feelings- you ended your first post with: “I’m sorry if this is an ungrateful, spoilt post to read.” This is a classic sign of someone who grew up minimizing their needs and emotions.
D. You were still seeking their permission- you stopped seeing someone you loved partly because your parents disapproved, and you were still thinking about how to explain yourself to them. This points to a childhood where family expectations were placed above your own autonomy.
Your adult choices — job, partner, location — were still shaped by what your parents think. Their approval held strong influence, you feared disappointing them, and you internalized guilt and self‑blame.
In your later posts, you gave a much clearer window into both your childhood emotional environment and your current relationship with your parents. When everything is put together, a consistent picture emerges: a family system where love, pressure, approval, and anxiety were tightly intertwined.
From your later posts, we learn:
1. You grew up in a home with conflict and tension. You wrote: “My parents were worried about my brother, there were arguments at home, to the extent that I would develop tension in my tummy… anxiety.”- there was emotional instability, and you absorbed the stress. You developed anxiety as a child and became hyper‑attuned to the emotional climate.
2. You became the “good child.”- you described overthinking, worrying about pleasing others, feeling responsible for harmony, and apologizing for having needs. This is common for a child who tries to balance out a sibling who requires more attention.
3. You learned to manage other people’s emotions. You said: “I would worry about food for them, ensuring the flat is clean… even though they tell me not to worry.”- this is the pattern of someone who grew up anticipating others’ needs, trying to prevent conflict, and striving to be perfect so no one gets upset.
4. You internalized pressure to achieve. You wrote: “Because I was achieving all the time… my parents perpetuate the cycle of this is the profession for you, because it’s the best one and you are the best.”- this suggests you learned to equate worth with performance.
5. You learned to minimize your own struggles. You repeatedly apologized for venting or having problems. This reflects a child who learned: ‘I shouldn’t burden anyone.’
About your current relationship with your parents: * They are loving and supportive — but overwhelming.
You said: “I am lucky to have their support… but sometimes they are overwhelming.”- this is common in families where love and pressure coexist.* You feel responsible for their comfort. Even when they visit, you worry about food, cleanliness, and being a good host. This pattern usually begins in childhood.
* Their approval still shapes your decisions. You ended a relationship because they disapproved, felt pushed toward a career path, and feared disappointing them.
* They are supportive, but also anxious. You wrote: “They worry and try to keep me on track.”- they love you, but they project their fears onto you — and their anxiety becomes your anxiety.
* You feel close to them, but also dependent. You said: “I rely on them for support… I don’t have much energy for socialising outside my bubble.”- this creates a push‑pull: you need them, you feel smothered, you want independence, and you fear losing their approval.
Putting it all together: you grew up in a family where:
1. Love and pressure were intertwined. Your parents clearly love you, but their love came with high expectations, anxiety, and a sense that you must “make good” on your potential.
2. You became the emotional stabilizer. With a brother who caused worry and arguments, you stepped into the role of the responsible one, the achiever, the peacemaker.
3. You learned to earn approval through achievement. You were encouraged to succeed, but in a way that made you feel you must always be “the best,” choose prestigious paths, and avoid disappointing them.
4. You internalized anxiety early. Your “tension in the tummy” was a child’s response to chronic stress and emotional vigilance.
5. You struggle to separate your desires from their expectations. You want to be a lawyer, but you also feel pushed. You feel it’s your idea, yet you’re unsure. This confusion is common when identity forms around pleasing parents.
6. You feel guilty for having needs. You apologize for venting, for being overwhelmed, for having problems — a sign that you learned your needs were secondary.
7. You love your parents deeply — and feel trapped by them. You are close to them, especially your mother, but you also feel overwhelmed, pressured, watched, and guided too closely. This is the emotional landscape of a young adult raised in a loving but high‑pressure family system.
In short: You are now trying to separate what YOU WANT from what you were TRAINED TO WANT. And that is the heart of your struggle. The struggle to separate- individuate. Is it, Mollie?
🤍 Anita
February 21, 2026 at 10:21 am #455382
anitaParticipantDear Mollie:
I prepared a study earlier this morning, using my computer and AI (Coplilot) in regard to this thread, on the topic of how your childhood relationship with your parents led to adult patterns.
I did it so to better understand you.. and I, as we have things in common (while being 40 years apart)!
I don’t have access to my computer and the study at the moment as I am using my phone. So, what I want to do here is tell you what I understand using my own words from what I remember.
First, as I went over our communication on this thread, I came across a reply where I wrote to you on the topic of Cnditional Love. This is something AI also picked on this morning.
My words: no doubt that your parents love you, as in being emotionally attached to you and wanting the best ✨️ for you.
At the same time, it’s clear that (unintentionally) they made their love conditional on your performance and achievements. A child needs unconditional love and this is sadly something you didn’t get (neither did I 😢).
Another topic that came up is Childhood Roles: your brother was the trouble maker, conflicts surrounded him, the “bad child”, so to speak. As a result, you became “the good child”, the conflict averse, the compliant, people (parents) pleasing one- at the cost of suppressing, or putting aside your own needs and emotions, likes, dislikes and preferences. A heavy cost.
Your relationship with your parents is a combination of love and entrapment, a combination that causes you ( and would cause anyone in your place, as it caused me) anxiety, self-doubt and an eating disorder.
Because of your childhood role, you didn’t adequately individuate, that is, separate from your parents (particularly from your mother?) mentally and emotionally.
It’s the reason you’ve been confused on the topic of what you want vs what they want.
It’s an enmeshment situation which requires separation (individuation is the psychological term), meaning becoming your own person.
It’s sort of being trapped in them: in what they need you to be.
The healing path is to individuate: to express the suppressed, to bring up from hiding what you need, what you want, what you feel. It’s a form of freedom. The freedom to be and become ✨️ you!
Unless you ask me not to, I will later (when I have access to the computer) submit the study of earlier this morning.
🤍 🌄 ✨️ Anita
February 20, 2026 at 8:20 pm #455380
anitaParticipantDear Thomas:
I’m so.. what’re the words.. sincerely appreciative of your reply only about 40 minutes before I’ll be submitting this reply. Thanking me for answering your question, that’s special 🙏
As to what you’d get if you did choose to get a tattoo.. something from deep within your soul. Something real to you, something that’s not waiting for ANYONE’S approval.
Something that’s all you and nothing awaiting or requiring anyone’s approval?
Maybe something like: I did my best even if my best wasn’t good enough for (whomever cares to judge me)?
I’m projecting, accurately or not.
My point is, like I said before, you’re a good person, Thomas. You deserve nothing but peace of mind.
I was at the taproom tonight, 24 hours after getting my first ever tattoo.
Had a 2nd glass of red wine 🍷 and now back home. There’s plastic covering the tattoo, have to keep it on for another 24 hours. Not a problem so far. Could be that the tattoo is only 5 letters, an inch size.
Good night, Thomas. Thank you 😊
🤍 Anita
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Though I run this site, it is not mine. It's ours. It's not about me. It's about us. Your stories and your wisdom are just as meaningful as mine.