Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
anitaParticipantAnd if you’re fearing the loss of future in-love feelings.. you can’t lose what you are yet to have- maybe- in the future.
And if you’re fearing the loss of an affectionate, shy, real-life partner- how can you lose what you didn’t yet 🤔 have?
anitaParticipantLose a feeling you once had? You already lost that euphoric, “in love” feeling, right?
So, what is there still to lose?
anitaParticipantWhat are you afraid to lose? 🤔
anitaParticipantYou don’t know why the rumination happens? No idea 😳 ?
anitaParticipantHey Confused:
Glad to read that you may plant/ cut grass (when the ground is not frozen).
When you find yourself ruminating again, pause and do a little grounding exercise: look around you and name 4 things you 👀; listen and name 3 things you 👂, ✋ two things and name them.
🤍 Anita
anitaParticipantHey Confused:
I want to elaborate on the above two messages in general terms: in psychological research, RUMNATION means getting stuck in repetitive, looping thoughts — often about a relationship, a mistake, or a fear. It’s replaying conversations, imagining worst‑case scenarios, trying to “solve” feelings by thinking harder and feeling unable to stop the mental loop.
This style of thinking is strongly associated with feeling depressed, anxious, and hopeless over time. It’s not the topic of the rumination that causes the emotional pain — it’s the looping, the “thinking about the thinking,” that keeps the mood low.
The more you struggle inside the rumination, the deeper it pulls you. Interrupting it isn’t about “thinking harder,” it’s about shifting modes. Grounding techniques help because they shift the brain out of “thinking mode” and into “experiencing mode.”
There’s a general psychological idea that when someone is stuck in rumination, bringing attention back to the present moment (experiencing mode) — through sight 👀 🌈, sound 👂🎵, touch ✋🧸, movement🚶🌀 — can interrupt the mental loop.
Common sensory grounding approaches include * Seeing- naming five things you can see, noticing colors, shapes, shadows, looking out a window and observing movement.
* Hearing- listening to sounds, noticing the rhythm of your breath.
* Touching- holding something textured (fabric, stone, warm mug), feeling your feet on the floor, running your hands under warm or cool water
* Movement- stretching, walking, yoga, Tai Chi, slow, deliberate breathing, and more.How are you feeling today, Confused?
🤍 Anita
January 14, 2026 at 8:45 am in reply to: “He initiated closeness, then disappeared — still hurting months later” #454153
anitaParticipantDear Adalie:
You may want to consider Room and Board in exchange for Caregiving of an elderly or handicapped person where the caregiver (that would be you) receives a private room, meals, and sometimes a small salary in exchange for some help with daily tasks.
There are programs called “Senior homeshare” or “homesharing with a caregiver” that match older adults with younger people who need housing. The younger person provides companionship or light care in exchange for free or low‑cost housing.
What do you think about this option, Adalie (I don’t remember if we discussed this before)?
🤍 Anita
anitaParticipantBlue it is!
Blue heart makes me think of you, Alessa- hope you are feeling much better this Wed morning 🌄 (your time).
🩵 💙 🩵 💙 Anita
anitaParticipantOkay, so when using my phone, pink appears red. Let’s try blue heart 🩵
anitaParticipant* using my phone 📱, thought it was a pink heart 💕 (not red)
anitaParticipantAdult Anita (AA): Girl 👧 Anita GA), I love you, today, tomorrow, every day forevermore. I am on your side always. You are never alone.
GA: I don’t remember ever not being alone. Any togetherness was short- lived and evaporated quickly, so quickly, and I was terribly 😔 alone yet again.
AA: Never Alone Again.
GA: Never Alone Again, NAA 😊
AA: YEA 🙂 I would like you to express more about how it was. Will you tell me?
GA: Just Alone.
Mother-not was otherwise, elsewhere occupied. Left me Alone, and no matter what, she stayed apart from me. Distance, big, uncompromising distance that’s always there.
Weird, don’t know what was worse: the abuse or the distance, the terrible alone-ness.
AA: What would Little Girl Anita 👧 say right now?
LGA: Help me Ima (mommy). I am scared. Help me!!!
AA: I am here, little girl. I am here with you.
LGA: (breathing shallow.. calming down) Where is Ima??? I want my Ima!
AA: I am your Ima, little girl. I am the one. Here with you. Always here with you 💗
LGA: Oh okay. Oh, okay.
(End of exercise)
anitaParticipant* Something to say.
anitaParticipantHa-ha, Thomas. I don’t remember myself smiling today until just now, and it’s already evening.
You are so funny 😁 Thomas (still a big smile on my face). Thank you for it 😊 and for this thread.
So, the 4 monks spoke because each one had something to sat.
“Itmay be time for me to be silent”- 🤫 not for long, I hope!
🙏✨️🙏 Anita
anitaParticipantTo add. Peter: I like your answer to the child in regard to Santa 🎅
Another thing, black and white, all or nothing binary thinking is just right for the understanding of simple, black and white situations.
It distorts the understanding of complex situations though, so context and nuance matter.
Roberta- I wonder 🤔 if my comment about little girl Roberta made you uncomfortable, like maybe it was too personal coming from a person you never met in real-life?
I would love feedback on that. From you too, Peter: do I come across too personal, too close at times, making you feel uncomfortable?
🤔 😳 Anita
January 13, 2026 at 4:12 pm in reply to: “He initiated closeness, then disappeared — still hurting months later” #454142
anitaParticipantThe reason I asked, dear Adalie, is that I was thinking 🤔, if it’s not only that you are dependent on him financially, but he is dependent on you as well, you have some power in the situation.
Also thinking- when he approaches you sexually like you described and knowing you don’t like it, I hope that you don’t let him use your body that way. He doesn’t have that right!
🤍 Anita
-
AuthorPosts
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.