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anitaParticipantInteresting that you picked up on it. It crossed my mind that you used her as an escape during my last post to you, but then I thought, no, or at least not fully, that the two of you had meaningful exchanges. So, really, it’s not one thing OR another, it’s this and that and this other thing.
anitaParticipantDear Alessa:
You are welcome and thank you 🙏 🤍
Last evening I prepared a turkey lunch meat sandwich for myself, with lots of turkey, had it at the edge of the kitchen counter for a moment. Bogart managed to get to it and eat it all before I could stop him. After that, later at night, he went number 2 in the bathroom, diarrhea style. Is it because of the turkey lunch meat?
I’ve been sharing with him (voluntarily) a bit of my lunches, human food, every day, mixed it with his dog food for flavor. I didn’t today because I’m wondering if it’s unhealthy for him.. ?
Up to 6 months, at the breeder’s where he was raised), he nursed on his mother’s milk and then on dry dog food, that and nothing else. So, I am wondering if human food is unhealthy for him?
I agree with what you said. The principle of Do-No-Harm comes to mind.
I hope you have a good night. It’s just after noon here, raining, but have to take Bogart on a longer walk (than this morning’s tiny walk).
🤍 Anita
anitaParticipantHow are you, The Ruminant, after almost 12 years to the day of posting this thread?
🤍 Anita
anitaParticipantDear Kay:
Little chance you are reading this. You posted here last when you were 18. Now, you are 30.
How are you?
🤍 Anita
anitaParticipant* edit: if we want to put an end to some of the negative consequences
anitaParticipantHey Confused:
As I was looking at your Dec 19, 2025 posts, I came across “In my case too, the relationship with my mother was very chaotic, violence and arguing constantly, throwing some awkward affection here and there, then rinse and repeat. I can’t remember if I was dissociating when I was a kid, definitely trying to escape in imaginary worlds and games though”-
And it occurred to me how much we do have in common. I too escaped into imaginary worlds, daydreaming for hours every day, every chance I got. There were no computers back then, so my escape was strictly mental, imaginary.
A member here in the forums (Robi1992), only 3 years older than you, also grew up in a chaotic home with an unpredictable, sometimes violent mother, and like you, he escaped into imaginary worlds and games: (Robi, Feb 18, 2024: “When I was about 11, my parents bought my first computer. I was hooked from the early beginning. I would spend an entire day and sometimes night playing games and watching films. The internet has become my playground. Finally, there was a place where I could hide, explore and fit in… For many years, as an adult, I would spend my days in front of the computer.”
Children who grow up in chaotic homes like you, me and Robi, need an escape. But we can’t escape the consequences of growing up in chaotic homes. Neither the suffering nor the consequences end just because we become adults and live away from home. As adults, we have to take on the difficult but necessary healing process if we want to put an end to the negative consequences of growing up in chaos.
🤍 Anita
anitaParticipantGood morning, Confused 🙂
In regard to “something is missing/not right”-
You mentioned OCD and depression a few times, beginning in your very first post here (“I have started therapy with someone that specializes in ocd/depression”, Dec 19).
It’s common that people with OCD (I was one) describe a strong internal tension like: ‘This isn’t complete.’ ‘This doesn’t feel right.’ ‘I need to fix this.’, ‘Something is off and I can’t relax.’
The feeling itself — “something is missing/not right” — can appear in other emotional states, such as in anxiety and depression. But in OCD, the “not right” sensation is usually followed by a strong urge to fix it, such as checking, re-reading, re-thinking, mentally reviewing, seeking reassurance, trying to get the ‘perfect’ feeling.
The person feels driven to do something until the internal tension goes down. It’s not just discomfort — it’s pressure.
People with OCD often know nothing is actually wrong, but the feeling is so strong that it overrides logic. It feels like: ‘I know this makes no sense, but I can’t shake it.’, I need to fix this even though I know it’s irrational.’ That mismatch — insight + compulsion — is very characteristic of OCD.
In OCD, the goal is to get the right feeling, the person often tries to reach a sense of ‘rightness’, ‘completion’, ‘certainty’. It’s not about solving a real problem — it’s about chasing an internal sensation.
In other contexts, people don’t chase a ‘perfect feeling.’ They’re just distressed or confused. The feeling (“something is missing/not right”) doesn’t create compulsions.
In one sentence, in OCD, the “something is missing/not right” feeling creates a compulsive drive to fix or complete something, even when the person knows it doesn’t make sense. In depression, it is about loss of emotional connection, of an internal spark, a feeling of aliveness and missing the old (not depressed) self.
It’s an internal emptiness without a compulsion/ drive to fix or complete something. The feeling doesn’t demand a specific mental or physical action. It’s uncomfortable, distressing, maybe confusing, but not compulsive.
Maybe this distinction is helpful, what do you think, Confused?
🤍 Anita
anitaParticipantI will email the address you provided Sat morning (it’s Fri night here), 🌙 good night, Q
anitaParticipantI want to add, I have communicated via a private email with about a dozen + tiny members over the years, still ongoing with only one member.
My best communication was with members on tb forums, right here.
So, I prefer these public forums. It’s just that if you think a private forum is advantageous, you are welcome to offer me a private email.
🤍 Anita
anitaParticipantI have no social media account (Facebook and such). I have an email address but it has my full real name and I don’t know how to produce a more anonymous email address ( I am very, very low tech). You are welcome to provide me with an email address you are comfortable sharing here, if you want to
anitaParticipantDear Q:
The most important thing 👏 is that you’re doing well, that you are less anxious and better at regulating emotions. I am thrilled 😊 to read this, this Fri evening.
Of course, I am curious about recent events, but I understand your discomfort sharing about it in a public forum. I qouldn’t mind communicating with you on email, if it’d be helpful to you (?)
If it might, you are welcome to give me an email address I can write to. Otherwise, we can talk here about anything you want to talk about.
🤍 Anita
anitaParticipantHey Confused:
Let the part of your mind that knows better (the wiser part) resist the craving of the restless,craving part 😫 so that you can rest.
Really, resting 😴 is what you need.
😴 🤍 🌙💤 ✨️ Anita
anitaParticipantBrilliant point 👉 about patience, Confused! You need Time and Patience T&P-P (T&P-Pressure). The pressure to understand, to figure it out.. that’s in your way.
Do your best to not fight within yourself anymore, to rush. Give yourself a break, a vacation, please 🙏
🤍 🤔 👀 😊 Anita
anitaParticipantHey Confused:
What you described isn’t madness or paranoia — it’s your mind reacting to a lot of emotional stress all at once. Dissociation can come in waves, and it can move through different layers just like you explained. It means your system got overwhelmed and tried to protect you the only way it knows how.
The confusion you feel about your emotions, the memories feeling distant, the crying that suddenly shuts off (reading this just reminded me experiencing the exact thing, the crying stopping abruptly, it puzzled me at the time, made me feel that I am a freak) — these are all things that can happen when someone is overloaded.
Try not to fight with yourself about what you ‘really’ feel. When you’re dissociated, it’s almost impossible to get clear answers. Your mind is trying to make sense of numbness, and that can create a lot of tangled thoughts.
You’re not losing yourself. You’re not going crazy. You’re going through something heavy, and your body is trying to keep you safe. Give yourself time. Be gentle with yourself. You don’t need to solve everything today 🙂
🤍 Anita
January 30, 2026 at 11:06 am in reply to: growing up – becoming adul / procrastination – in connection to childhood trauma #454765
anitaParticipantDear Robi (part 4, final part for today):
Copilot to Robi (and remember, Robi, the last input it received was from Feb 19, 2024): Someone in your position can begin to shift these patterns by first recognizing them clearly. Understanding that your reactions were shaped by your environment helps reduce self‑blame.
Building a sense of self happens slowly, through small choices and small acts of independence. Setting emotional boundaries — even tiny ones — helps separate your needs from your parents’ expectations.
Allowing yourself to feel both anger and longing makes space for healing, because both emotions are natural responses to inconsistent caregiving. And forming relationships where you are seen as an equal, not a child, can gradually rewrite your internal map of what closeness can feel like. Over time, you can build a life that feels larger, freer, and more your own than the one you grew up in.
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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.