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May 25, 2026 at 10:06 am #458141
anitaParticipantDear Nar:
It’s been so long, almost 4 years and 3 months since you posted last. What a fascinating thread this is. I want to get back to it later.
Anita
May 24, 2026 at 8:49 pm #458137
anitaParticipant* let me try spelling this word correctly this time: conscientious (did I get it right?)
May 24, 2026 at 8:37 pm #458136
anitaParticipantJust thinking this Sunday Eve, exactly 2 weeks since I started thinking in this thread on a Sun Eve:
Because it’s been so very sssslow, ssslow, sssssslow here, in the forums- I’ve been looking at old threads and learning.
I have been learning how often my trauma was triggerred when reading posts by people who either resembled my mother in some ways (volatile, angry, etc.) or had people in their lives who resembled my mother in some way (didn’t have to be by a lot)-
And my replies were corrective, directive, and fiercely protective of whomever the person I projected myself into was (the perceived victim of the person I projected my mother into)
I was not an objective reader and responder- not when triggerred.
More this Sun Eve or on another Eve.
đđżâ¨ď¸ Anita
May 24, 2026 at 8:19 pm #458135
anitaParticipantHey đ Confused:
I think that you’re a decent person, caring, consciountious, “not the one to abandon”-
Even when your feelings abandon you, you’re not the 1 2 abandon.
I suppose character stays, feeling or not. And it something you don’t lose. Something to relax into, something that defines you, something you can trust đ
How was shutdown for me? I’ll answer with whatever comes to mind:
It wasn’t peaceful. Lots of stress in it, lots of disquiet, unrest following the moment of NOTHING.
Not a successful long term strategy.
The brain sort of dancing, but not a pleasant dance, more like freaking out.
Afraid of feeling, yet feeling too much of the ” wrong” kind of feelings: that angst, that distress, that.. oh boy, can I have a new đ§ please, a brand new brain, please đđđ
This is my reply. How does it compare to Copilt’s, Confused?
â¨ď¸đżâ¨ď¸ Anita
May 24, 2026 at 6:43 pm #458134
anitaParticipantHey Dear Confused:
First (since I am on the computer right now), Copilot’s response to your recent post:
What youâre feeling right now â the flatness, the lack of sadness, the difficulty crying, the sense that emotions are âmissingâ â isnât a sign that something is wrong with you or that your feelings for her disappeared. Itâs a sign that your system is tired and overloaded.
When someone spends a long time being alert, anxious, or afraid something will go wrong, the body eventually hits a point where it says: âI canât keep running at this level. I need to shut things down for a while.â
That shutdown looks like not feeling sadness, not crying even when something is meaningful, not feeling excitement, not feeling the same energy as before, feeling like emotions are far away or muted.
This isnât because you donât care. Itâs because youâve been running on high alert for so long that your system is protecting you by going into a kind of energyâsaving mode. Itâs the same thing that happened to you in November â your body got overwhelmed and went flat.
Numbness is not the opposite of caring. Numbness is the opposite of capacity.
Your feelings are still there. Theyâre just covered by exhaustion, stress, and fear. When your system gets a chance to rest and feel safe again, the emotions come back on their own â you donât have to force them.
And the fact that you want to feel like before, that you remember how good it was, that youâre staying steady for her â all of that shows that your emotional connection is still alive. Itâs just quiet right now because youâre overwhelmed.
đ¤ Copilot
My response- when I get to the phone.
Anita
May 24, 2026 at 3:26 pm #458129
anitaParticipantHey đ Confused,
What youâre describing makes complete sense. Youâre noticing the constant alertness, the fear that something good will suddenly collapse, the way you brace yourself even when nothing is wrong. That kind of hypervigilance doesnât come out of nowhere, and the fact that you can observe it in yourself now is actually a sign of progress. Youâre not delusional â youâre becoming more aware of patterns that were running in the background for a long time.
Whatâs happening with your girlfriend sounds very real too. When someone reaches that level of exhaustion and emotional shutdown, it doesnât mean they donât care. It means their system is overwhelmed. The way you responded â giving her space, taking pressure off her, reminding her of what you appreciate â was steady and kind. You didnât panic, you didnât push, and you didnât disappear. That matters.
Itâs also natural that seeing her struggle brings up feelings in you. When someone we love goes numb or scared, it touches something deep. But the way youâre handling it shows that youâre trying to stay present instead of running or shutting down. Thatâs not nothing. Thatâs growth.
You donât need to force yourself to âunderstand everything emotionallyâ right now. Emotional understanding comes slowly, in pieces, and usually long after the rational part. What you can do is keep noticing what happens inside you, the way you did in this message. Thatâs how patterns start to loosen.
And the way you teared up remembering the good moments â that tells me those feelings are still there. They didnât disappear. Theyâre just covered by fear and stress right now, on both sides.
One step at a time. Youâre not stuck. Youâre learning yourself in real time.
đźâ¨đ¤ Anita
May 23, 2026 at 11:12 pm #458125
anitaParticipantJust thinking this Sat night:
I may be catastrophizing, but this may be the ending of these forums, simply because it’s deathly slow and getting even slower.
This, here, is a place where I’ve been at since May 2015, every day (including during the 6- months during 2023 when I deleted my account).
Seems like tiny buddha’s forums, like any other website forums, are dying because social media platforms have taken over. (and I am not a part of it).
So, in my personal life, the irl taproom experience 2017-April 2026 has ended, and so did the Winery (2021- Dec 2025), and now, I realize, the tiny buddha forums I was SO involved with 2015-2026 are dying as well.
Anita
May 23, 2026 at 10:09 pm #458124
anitaParticipantR U still here, EvFran?
Anyone else???
May 23, 2026 at 8:16 pm #458123
anitaParticipantThank you, Thomas, for wishing me well and for saying I’m not doing anything to disrupt the forums.
I too hope that Laven is okay đ
I too wish more people participated in the forums. I think that what has been happening is that although millions (!) of people are coming across the tiny buddha’s blogs, advertisements, etc. (what you see on the “home page”), hardly ANYONE knows that the forums even exist-
Because the millions read what you see on the home page- not here, on the tb website- but on Facebook, Instagram and other social media outlets (as feeds, pieces of what you see on the home page). These forums don’t appear on the social media feeds.
I think that in the beginning lots of people posted in the forums because they logged into the website like you and I do, but over the years, hardly anyone does.
So the forums are in reality, tiny buddha’s tiny secret đ
So, old participants in the forums stop posting over time (that’s normal), but unlike in the past, new people don’t join us because they don’t even know about the forums, and they’re busy communicating with each other- not on any particular website’s forums, but on social media.
Websites’ forum participation is a thing of the past đ
At this point, I am bringing up really old threads so to learn from them, to see how I used to reply to members and why, it’s about my desire to learn about how I changed and am changing since I first participated here in May 2015.
I thought of sharing all the above because it may interest you, or explain things. Does it?
â¨ď¸đżâ¨ď¸ Anita
May 23, 2026 at 6:21 pm #458121
anitaParticipant* Edit: Good Saturday afternoon, East Coast; Saturday morning, West coast.
Well, now it’s 9:21 pm your time đ
May 23, 2026 at 11:13 am #458120
anitaParticipantGood Saturday East Coast Saturday morning, Thomas đ
As you know, it’s been very slow in the forums, and like you, I wish more people would visit and interact here đ
I wanted to bring up your thread to the top of Page 1 of list of topics.
â¨ď¸đżâ¨ď¸ Anita
May 23, 2026 at 11:04 am #458119
anitaParticipantWhat a fun exchange, exactly 10 years and 4 months ago, between Seaisisland and myself. Nice to see that I wasn’t always analytical, clinical, directive and corrective!
I suppose nothing that was shared in this thread
(nor my communication elsewhere with Seaisisland or with Jock) reminded me of my mother so my trauma responses were not activated.It’d definitely be a miracle if either Seaisisland or jock ( previously Jack) will be reading this.
đż Anita
May 23, 2026 at 8:40 am #458118
anitaParticipantHi Mollie
You are very welcome đ â¨ď¸
Humphrey Bogart is most famous for âCasablancaâ (1942), where he played an American nightclub owner in Morocco during World War II, a story about sacrifice, moral courage, and lost love.
I just looked up The Banshees of Inisherin (2022… 80 years after Casablanca), a dark tragicomedy set on a remote Irish island in 1923. With no warning, Colm tells (the devastated) Padriac that he wants nothing more to do with him and ultimately tells him that, if Padriac persists in attempting to relate to him, Colm will amputate one of his own fingers, which he did, but Padriac kept trying to reconnect with Cold, so Colm cut off four more fingers.
I am reading that Psychologically, Colm represents the person who retreats into isolation and selfâdestruction when overwhelmed, while PĂĄdraic represents the person who clings harder when faced with loss, unable to tolerate emotional separation. Colm cannot tolerate closeness and Padriac cannot tolerate abandonment. Fascinating, Mollie, I am intrigued!
Mollie: “I really am a dog person⌠not a cat person⌠because when I was younger a cat scratched me… I was scratched by a cat when I was about 10; and then bitten by a dog when I was 21!”-
Fascinating and I suspected you were scratched by the đą as a child, and years later, bitten by the đś. The term “formative years” refers to our childhood years because that’s when we’re psychologically formed, and I suppose the scratching by the cat formed you into “not a cat person”.
Really a pleasure talking to you this Saturday morning. No special plans for the weekend. Hope you have a pleasant weekend!
⨠𼰠đ¤ đž Anita
May 22, 2026 at 8:20 pm #458116
anitaParticipantGood Friday night, Thomas.
I hear what youâre saying about the forum feeling quieter lately. Roberta is still around â she posted in my thread a few days ago. Peter tends to take breaks now and then, as he always has, and Alessa has simply been busy. People come and go for their own reasons, and it isnât connected to anything Iâm doing recently.
I appreciate you sharing your thoughts, and I hope you get some good rest tonight.
đđ¤đ´ Anita
May 22, 2026 at 6:56 pm #458114
anitaParticipantRegarding the “it” we, who grew up in “loud, obnoxious, negative and angry” homes (Adrian’s words) can’t face –
In my experience- IT is how terrible it really was growing up in a hostile home. We soften the reality we survived, making believe that the people who terribly harmed us are really good people who offered us a “good childhood” (Adrian’s words)
It’s what a child does to survive a hostile home :see the ones who caused severe harm as kind, nice, lovely people- it makes the child feels safer.
In adulthood, the make- believe doesn’t hold water, so the anxiety keeps going and going, changing shapes and forms, but it stays.
Because we didn’t face the truth- not because we’re not intelligent- but because it’s normal and instinctive for a child to soften reality, so to survive it.
I kept seeing my mother as a good person even though I was angry at her for so long, thinking of her as a Monster (not a Mother).
I figured long, long ago, as a child, that the fault was mine, that I was bad ( well, she told me I was bad, again and again and again).
It’s natural, instinctive for a child to take the blame (and the shame) even when not directly accused, blamed and shamed.
Taking that on feels more survivable than the alternative: that we are really (really) stuck with a person who is harming us.
Anita
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