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anita

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Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 5,843 total)
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  • in reply to: Alone Again, Naturally #456396
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Alessa:

    This Sunday morning, here, I am feeling so much gratitude for you thinking about what I shared and taking time out of your busy life to respond in such a thorough, empathetic way.

    Thank you 😊 🙏 🤍

    Yes, I remembered the “You’re a big zero” message my whole life, and before only a few days ago (when I posted here), I was not in the memory. It was as if I was not the recipient of those words and sentiment.

    The memory of her words was disturbing to me but not in a felt-way.

    🙏 for validating my wording (having been terrorized). This wording feels so true.

    And for saying that by threatening my life, she forfeited any right to be seen as a source of safety or care. This too is validating. And before I read these words.. I wasn’t sure about it because she bought me food and clothes and sometimes went out of her way to buy me a martszipan cake.

    (This reminds me of you sharing that your bio sometimes brought you pizza)

    I am guessing she felt that cake balances or neutralizes homicidal (and suicidal) threats..?

    You wrote that she lost her mother- card. This is why on another one of my thread, I referred to her as monster (a similar 5 letter word).

    Yes, I was the shock absorber of her emotions. This is why I still experience these very distressing tics (I feel them even if they’re not very obvious outwardly) every minute or every few minutes of every waking moment, as well as holding my breath. Even now when there’s no chaos here and Bogart is peacefully sleeping on my lap.

    You wrote that I am no longer obligated to stand in the line of fire 🔥 for her or for anyone else. This feels very meaningful and I want to think-feel about this imagery more later.

    Another imagery or metaphor you introduced, having been a soldier in my own home- I want to develop this metaphor further later.

    Thank you for your prayers 🙏 🤍 🙏

    I am holding up quite well. I am paying attention to my breathing, relaxing my breathing and exhaling from time to time.

    Again, I am deeply grateful for your message and I pray for health and safety for you and your loved-ones 🙏

    🤍 🤍 🤍 Anita

    in reply to: Alone Again, Naturally #456394
    anita
    Participant

    Continued: I never knew what safety might feel, never knew what it would feel like to exhale.

    I held my breath, constricted, freezed into no- life, waiting till it’s safe enough to live, decades and decades of waiting- holding my breath.

    Not because a certain country or terrorist regime threatened me and kept me from breathing- living.. It was just my mother, just this one single human threatening me day in and day out, and no one to stop her. No one to shield me.

    Again, my private terrorist was not a Muslim or anyone of a particular religion. And no one of the Jewish religion has ever stepped in to protect the child me, no one protected me at 5, or 10, or 15, or 20…

    🌙 Anita

    in reply to: Alone Again, Naturally #456393
    anita
    Participant

    Strange (whatever comes to mind this Sat evening, red 🍷 involved):

    It is strange how unaware I’ve been for so long. I wasn’t able to understand what I couldn’t: emotional patterns so deeply rooted- that I couldn’t SEE.

    Little girl Anita was in deep, deep sh**, in deep trouble early on. Showing up (being born) into deep sh**. (I just don’t have a more accurate imagery).

    I was born into a mother that was.. well, crazy 🤪- out of control, 😱 – screaming: “I WILL KILL YOU, I WILL KILL ME- BECAUSE YOU (Anita) MADE ME!”

    So, how does a child grow up with this.. familial terrorism?

    Notice, terrorism, instilling fear 😨- not a political terrorism you hear about in the news, but personal terrorism such as a mother chooses to inflict on her own little girl.

    So, if I am to confront middle- east terrorism (the Iranian regime, it’s proxies), I am first confronted by the terror-ism inflicted on me personally:

    Not by the Iranian regime, not by any of its proxies, not by any country in the middle east.. but by just one person, the person who birthed me: my mother= my terrorist. My personal, or private terrorist.

    And this is the truth, the reality of my life, my story.

    🌙 Anita

    in reply to: I just randomly and suddenly fell out of love #456388
    anita
    Participant

    I think it’s admirable, Confused, that you’ll do the movie night even though you’re full-blast avoidant at the moment. Why your brain targets her for avoidance? Because.. she’s so loving and kind and that’s unfamiliar? (I just wrote whatever came to my mind)

    in reply to: I just randomly and suddenly fell out of love #456386
    anita
    Participant

    Hey Confused:

    Exactly 12 hours since you posted last. How are you?

    in reply to: I don’t know myself anymore #456385
    anita
    Participant

    Hey Kelly:

    Rereading your last post this morning, it sounds like your mind and body were in a very activated place. When the future becomes real in a relationship, it’s common for fear to show up in strong ways — even when nothing is “wrong.” Many people feel that tightening in the chest, the spiraling thoughts, the “what if I choose wrong” feeling. It’s a very human response to pressure and uncertainty.

    What you’re describing — the swing between guilt, fear of losing something good, fear of making a mistake, and the numbness that follows — often happens when someone is overwhelmed. It doesn’t mean anything about the relationship itself. It just means your system is under a lot of stress.

    You don’t have to solve anything right now. You don’t have to decide anything. When fear is loud, clarity usually goes quiet. Giving yourself some space to settle — emotionally and physically — can help things feel less urgent inside.

    Whatever you’re feeling, you’re not alone in it. Many people go through this kind of inner conflict when a relationship becomes meaningful.

    🍃 Anita

    in reply to: I just randomly and suddenly fell out of love #456381
    anita
    Participant

    Makes me 😊 just to read from you, whether you’re grateful or not, whatever you feel.. it’s just good to read from you.

    in reply to: I just randomly and suddenly fell out of love #456380
    anita
    Participant

    Thank you, Confused 😊

    A nice payday at work and a calmer night 🌙 is something to be 🙏 for.

    And I am grateful for you posting this message exactly 10 minutes ago, makes me happy 😊

    in reply to: Alone #456378
    anita
    Participant

    How are you, Lisa, 10 days since we talked last?

    in reply to: I don’t know myself anymore #456377
    anita
    Participant

    To add: it’s clear to me that you love him. But when Fear is intense.. it takes over.

    Calming down is first step. Think of all the things that make your life safe right now. What are those things?

    in reply to: I don’t know myself anymore #456376
    anita
    Participant

    Hey Kelly:

    I hear how upset you are, and in my mind, it’s understandable. I relate because I too grew up in a home where my father repeatedly cheated on my mother (before they got divorced when I was 6), and she turned her anger on him before they got divorced, and then, she turned it on me and on my younger sister- for many years after.

    Right now it seems like it’s all too much for you and you need a break, a real break, so to calm down and become steady, grounded.

    The break you’re having with him right now is.. not a break for you because.. you’re afraid to lose him altogether.. do I understand..?

    🍃 Anita

    in reply to: I just randomly and suddenly fell out of love #456373
    anita
    Participant

    Hey Confused:

    I am glad to report that today was better and calmer than yesterday, thank you for asking. It’s a good practice to list things we are grateful for. Well, I am grateful for a calmer day. Anything at all Confused is grateful for 😊?

    anita
    Participant

    Dear Alessa:

    I am ☺️ to hear from you. It sounds like you’ve been very busy for a long time. I’m glad you wrote when you could 🤍

    Bogart and I are doing well. I am sitting comfortably on a lounge chair right now, typing on the (surviving) computer, while Bogart is sleeping and lightly snoring besides me 🐶💤

    It must have taken a lot of patience to work through all those tangles with the cat, especially while building trust at the same time. It’s sweet to picture him getting more playful and comfortable in your home 🐱

    Congratulations on the 84% 🎉— that’s a strong result, especially with everything else you’re juggling. It makes sense that the tests feel back‑to‑back right now, but you seem to be moving through them skillfully.

    Potty training can definitely ebb and flow, so I heard. It’s such a long process, and your energy naturally shifts over time. Like you said, he’ll get there.

    I’m glad you’re finding the book interesting. I’ll be curious to hear your thoughts about it.

    And starting nursery at the end of April sounds like it could bring some rest 😴💤 into your days. I hope that transition goes smoothly for both of you.

    🤍 Anita & Bogart

    in reply to: I don’t know myself anymore #456370
    anita
    Participant

    Hello Kelly:

    Thank you for sharing more. What you wrote about hiding during your parents’ fights, suppressing your feelings, and learning to be “okay” on your own makes a lot of sense. Many people who grow up in homes with conflict or unpredictable anger develop very similar patterns.

    In that kind of environment, a child’s body learns a simple survival rule:

    “If I show my feelings, I might get hurt. If I stay small and quiet, I’m safer.”

    So, the child learns to hold their breath, tighten their body, stay hyper‑aware of others’ moods, scan for danger, suppress tears, hide anger, hide needs, hide sadness, and stay watchful. Over time, this becomes automatic — it becomes the child’s “normal.”

    When that child grows up, the body often continues reacting the same way, even when the adult environment is safe. In relationships, the nervous system might panic when things get serious, doubt feelings, fear closeness or abandonment, need reassurance, feel uneasy during silence, spiral into “what if” thoughts, shut down or go numb, or feel confused about love. Not because the partner is unsafe, but because the body learned long ago that closeness = danger.

    It doesn’t mean anything is wrong with you, and it doesn’t mean anything is wrong with your boyfriend. It’s simply that old survival patterns can get activated when closeness is desired.

    You mentioned craving connection and reassurance, and that your boyfriend’s style is more “we each take care of ourselves first.” That kind of difference can be challenging, especially for someone who grew up needing emotional safety that wasn’t available.

    I’m wondering if this general explanation resonates with you — not as a label, but as something that sometimes happens to people with similar childhood experiences.

    🍃 Anita

    in reply to: I don’t know myself anymore #456368
    anita
    Participant

    Hi Kelly Nguyen: I’ll be away from the computer for a few hours. Will reply when I am back.

Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 5,843 total)