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anita

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Viewing 15 posts - 31 through 45 (of 4,864 total)
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  • in reply to: Real Spirituality #453171
    anita
    Participant

    Thank you, James. I would like to process your input over time further tomorrow morning.

    🙏🤍🙏 Anita

    in reply to: I just randomly and suddenly fell out of love #453170
    anita
    Participant

    Hi again, Confused:

    About the How (continuing my last post to you): When the brain senses danger — emotional or physical — it first tries to protect you with Fight‑or‑Flight. But if the situation feels impossible to escape and there’s no way to fight the source of danger, the brain flips into a Freeze or numb state. (Fight, Flight and Freeze are the 3 responses to danger in the animal world)

    Chemically, stress hormones like cortisol surge and then drop, the brain releases natural pain‑numbing chemicals, and the thinking part of the brain goes quiet. At the same time, the nervous system slows the heart rate and breathing to conserve energy. This combination makes you feel far away, disconnected, or unreal.

    It’s not a choice — it’s the body’s built‑in way of protecting you from overwhelming feelings by temporarily turning down your awareness. When the body senses safety again, the nervous system slowly “turns back on,” and you begin to feel present and connected once more.

    – Now, what’s the danger that caused the recent dissociation? Could be a memory of danger that was triggered. You mentioned “violence and arguing constantly” in regard to growing up with your mother. Not something you were able to run away from because you were a minor stuck living with her (the Flight response was not available to you),and I assume you didn’t Fight her, at least not successfully, so gone was your Fight option. What remained was Freeze response (dissociation) .

    I would like to read your thoughts about this..?

    🤍 Anita

    in reply to: I just randomly and suddenly fell out of love #453165
    anita
    Participant

    Hello Confused:

    “that changed in one morning and I don’t understand why and how.”-

    Yesterday you wrote: “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 cant remember if I was dissociating when I was a kid”-

    My best guess is that the dissociation you’re currently experiencing is your body remembering (and re-experiencing) the dissociation you felt a lot of as a child, felt and forgot that you did.

    The “why”- because you need to heal as much as possible from the chaotic relationship with your mother.

    I’d like to write more later about the “how”. Please feel free to offer me your thoughts about what I wrote here.

    🤍 Anita

    in reply to: Real Spirituality #453163
    anita
    Participant

    Dear James:

    I want to process and study your short but strong answer thoroughly, including what you shared previously:

    At death- my ego, personal identity, psychological self; my mind, beliefs, experiences, memories, fears, desires.. the sense of “I”- all these disappear. There’s no continuation of me.

    That absence of self — the total emptiness — the “Nothing left”- is not a loss but a liberation. In mystical traditions (Sufi, Zen, Advaita), “nothingness” is not negative. It is pure freedom, pure peace, pure being- the end of illusion, the end of suffering.

    * In Advaita, it is the return to Brahman (pure consciousness). In Buddhism, it is nirvana — the extinguishing of the individual flame.

    * In Sufism (Islamic Mysticism, a mystical tradition within Islam) — Fanā’ means the annihilation of the ego. It is followed by baqā’ — abiding in God. Famous Sufi expressions: “Die before you die.” (Meaning: let the ego die so the True Self can awaken.)

    “When I vanished from myself, I appeared in God.”= When the ego disappears, what remains is the divine reality. Not a personal God in the sky. Not a deity with a personality. Not a separate being. In Sufi mysticism, “God” (Allah) is: the One reality, the infinite, the source of all existence, the ocean into which the wave returns

    So “appearing in God” means: The individual self dissolves into the infinite. It’s the moment when: the boundary between “me” and “the world” dissolves, the sense of separation disappears, only unity remains

    A metaphor: Imagine a wave on the ocean. The wave thinks it is separate. It has a name, a shape, a story. But when it collapses, it returns to the ocean. The wave “vanishes from itself” and “appears in the ocean.”

    The wave (individual self) rises (lives) and falls (dies). When it falls, the wave disappears. But the ocean (impersonal being) remains. The wave was never separate from the ocean in the first place. Death is the wave returning to the ocean.

    In simple terms, the personal self ends, the impersonal reality (you called it “pure consciousness”) remains, and that impersonal reality is freedom.

    Here is a collection of.. The Best of James’s, I’ll call it: “Stillness is the absence of mental chatter—the ever-present silence, untouched and eternal. Therefore, Stillness is the end of grasping. Grasping means reaching, clinging, holding to thought, desire, fear, or hope. When the grasp relaxes, mind becomes quiet, like an open hand.” (Aug 27, 2025)

    “Radical acceptance is not passive. It is the deepest strength. When fear comes, you don’t resist it; you let it be seen. When anger arises, you don’t judge it; you allow it to pass like a cloud. Even danger, even uncertainty, welcomed without resistance, they lose their sting. The paradox is: by accepting everything, the heart opens completely, and care flows naturally. You don’t ‘try’ to care love, compassion, and right action simply arise.” (Aug 28).

    “For me, love is the complete acceptance of everything and anything exactly as it is.” (Sept 1)

    “I see bad people like babies. They came into this world completely pure, like clean water, innocent and untouched. Everything they became—their personality, their habits, their ways of thinking—was shaped by their environment, family, society, and life circumstances… The person I see now is just the result of everything around them, not something they consciously chose in the beginning. Understanding this doesn’t mean I approve of harmful behavior, but it allows me to look at them without hatred or judgment.” (Sept 1)

    “Love is the highest and purest service we can offer to humanity. It’s not about recognition, reward, or doing things for show—it’s about giving, understanding, and being fully present for others. When we act from love, every small gesture, every word, every act of kindness becomes meaningful. Helping others with love is not just about changing their lives, it transforms us as well. Love sees beyond faults, beyond appearances, beyond judgment. It connects us to the essence of people, to their struggles, their joys, their humanity. When we serve from love, we serve without expectation, without ego, without thinking ‘I am doing something great.’ The act itself becomes the gift, and the impact spreads silently, like a ripple in water. In this way, love is not just an emotion—it is the truest service we can offer to the world.” (Sept 1)

    “When the so-called self dissolves, something different happens. The body and the universe are no longer two. In that, there is no cold detachment — the body inevitably becomes an instrument of Love. Compassion, care, listening, and presence are no longer choices of the ego, but the natural action of Life itself… So yes, the memories, the scars, the stories remain in the body, but without identification they don’t rule the being. They are seen, felt, and even shared with tenderness, yet not carried as a burden of ‘me’.” (Sept 3).

    “Every breath is heaven. Every fear is hell. Heaven and hell are words, stories, warnings, not geography. Life itself is the teacher, and every moment is the lesson.” (Oct 6)

    There’s more to quote, but I’ll stop here. I want to reread the above and continue to process later. Thank you, James. I am feeling more of an appreciation to your wisdom today than I ever felt before and I want to apply it more, much more, in my daily living in the forums and in real-life.

    🙏🙏🙏 🤍 Anita

    in reply to: A Personal Reckoning #453156
    anita
    Participant

    In regard to her message, “you all are perpetrators”- I tried to be on her side by never trusting anyone/ be against everyone (and therefore, be WITH her), but no matter what, I was never allowed to be WITH her. No matter how much I rejected everyone, I was not to be one with her-

    It never happened that I was one with her, as a team of two.. no matter how much I desired it to be that way.

    As she experienced it, I was Always Enemy, NO MATTER how much I desired it to be otherwise. She just wouldn’t let anyone in as a friend or ally.

    In her world there needed to be just one good, victimized entity (herself), and everyone else (her daughters, her grandchild)- terribly inadequate disappointments.

    She’s been nothing but a terrible person to those born to her and who loved her the most. She was the WORST to those few who loved her the most, and in so being, she destroyed SO MUCH in those few who loved her the most.

    Anita

    in reply to: I just randomly and suddenly fell out of love #453155
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Confused:

    I mean, a legitimate loss of feelings may be about you being tired of the LONG-DISTANCE aspect of the relationship, understandingly wanting something that’s physically close..? (there are quite a few ingredients to the puzzle, if you care to explore)

    Anita

    in reply to: Stressed and anxious #453154
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Q:

    It did get better. He’s more affectionate and interactive indoors.. needs to allow me to take him on walks outdoors. I don’t want to always stay indoors. I would love to update you about a walk outdoors and another dream come true: to take him to the local taproom where people bring their dogs to, a dog friendly place. I’d love to see him positively interact with other dogs 🙂

    Right now his adorable self is comfortably lying by the fire.

    🤍 Anita

    in reply to: I just randomly and suddenly fell out of love #453153
    anita
    Participant

    Well, what is a “legitimate” loss of feelings vs illegitimate>?

    in reply to: A Personal Reckoning #453152
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Tee/ Everyone:

    I wrote earlier: “I want to list, matter of factly, her “Lies about (my)self, about her, about other people, about life..’, her narrative”-

    What she said in so many words: “I (mother) am GOOD, ALWAYS GOOD. If you have any problem with me- that’s nothing but an indication of you being BAD, that and nothing else.

    In other words, if you (Anita) express anything other than ADMIRATION for my total, unquestionable goodness- that’s nothing but your (Anita’s) BADNESS.

    If I hit, slap, kick you- it’s nothing but an indication of your (Anita’s) badness, and if you resist or protest in any way (be it in an angry look and nothing else), that’s you (Anita) being BAD on top of bad.

    In yet other words: I was expected to look down at the floor as she shamed and guilt-tripped me at great lengths; hit, kicked, punched me and NEVER, EVER express- in any way )not even in a look in my face)- anything but TOTAL ADMIRATION for her goodness. Which meant, unquestionable acceptance of my badness.

    In yet other words, the only way for me to be just a bit good was to accept her loud, clear and repeating message- that I was B.A.D.

    In regard to other people: They are all BAD (and so am I), and if I trust any one of them (or myself) then I am BADDER than bad.

    Her message: You (Anita) have wronged me from the moment you were born (bridge birth, low-weight baby, refusing to nurse.. milk duct infection of young mother). You’ve been BAD from your very beginning, wronging the BEST MOTHER IN THE WORLD (her words, “best..)”

    So, her narrative was always this: “I am the best; you are the worst; I’ve always been victim; you all are perpetrators”.

    Anita

    in reply to: Real Spirituality #453149
    anita
    Participant

    Dear James: The real devil= the ego/ the separate self. Your message: I am not my ego. My true self is beyond mind and ego.. But (if I understood correctly what you shared earlier) true self disappears in death.. nothing left of separate or true self when a person dies?

    🤍 Anita

    in reply to: I just randomly and suddenly fell out of love #453148
    anita
    Participant

    Hello again, Confused:

    For a boy (or a girl), having a chaotic, violent relationship with one’s mother is not.. what any boy or girl can endure without lasting emotional harm (and the need to dissociate).

    A mother is supposed to support her child consistently, not to argue and harm. The occasional affection here and there only serve to confuse..It’d be easier if the mother was consistently one way or the other. Do you agree?

    🤍 Anita

    in reply to: A Personal Reckoning #453145
    anita
    Participant

    Thank you, Alessa!!!

    He’s just like a child, looking up to me! He got so excited hearing a barking dog earlier, and right now, he’s hearing a wild rooster, all attentive.. The Call of The Wild.

    It hasn’t been raining for a couple of hours, but I can’t leave him alone and go walking. He’s listening to the barking dog right now. The Call of the Wild.

    I’m going to call for a backup right now.. Just checked, Bogart will have company as I go on my walk in a few minutes..!!! (I wouldn’t if he’d be alone).

    🤍 🤍Anita

    I

    in reply to: A Personal Reckoning #453143
    anita
    Participant

    Oh my G., Alessa, I just rescued Bogart from chewing on a sharp pencil, I didn’t get this house beagle proof! Luckily, I removed 3 mouse traps before he got to them, one which activated when I touched it. For crying out loud, I am not prepared..

    And then he chewed on a stevia packet I left on the carpet and I asked AI if it’s dangerous for dogs (not in small amounts, a relief!)

    Bogart is very active right now. It stopped raining, so I would have taken him for a walk, but the leash and harness purchased are not the right size, plus he’s afraid going out. So, I’m just sitting here letting Bogart know he’s not alone.

    Plus, he’s drinking more water right now, and him refusing to go out means he’s going to relieve himself in the house.. I wish you were here to help me, Alessa!

    🤍 🤍 Anita

    in reply to: A Personal Reckoning #453142
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Alessa:

    (And again, thank you so much for the “Dear” and white & blue emojis, it’s so very kind of you to accommodate me this way!)

    And thank you for guiding and encouraging me in my first steps of being a beagle Mom!

    It also helps that I watched dozens of “Oliver The Beagle” YouTubes (not much audio there, so not difficult to process. In one of the YouTubes, Oliver’s (human) dad gave him a stuffed animal and Oliver spent a lot of time expressing his aggression (or fear) with it. Guess who is doing the same thing right now with a stuffed teddy bear?

    I know I can’t and won’t leave him alone by himself. He’ll have human company 24/7.

    You should see him with the stuffed teddy bear, he’s so cute!

    🤍 🤍Anita

    in reply to: Real Spirituality #453141
    anita
    Participant

    Dear James:

    My study today:

    Paraphrasing, you say that offense and conflict are illusions of the separate self (ego) and Real Spirituality is about transcending the separate self. The True Self is unshaken by external events.

    You say that Love is not comfort or consensus, but a force that reveals truth through challenge or confrontation.

    You view confrontation not as hostility, but as a way of revealing truth. Love is the willingness to disrupt comfort if it helps someone see beyond their separate self.

    In Sufi mysticism, Jalal refers to divine majesty — often overwhelming, even confrontational. Love expressed through Jalal is not gentle affection but a powerful force that shakes the ego. In this sense, confrontation is a form of divine love that compels transformation.

    There are psychological parallels to what you say: therapists sometimes challenge clients to face uncomfortable truths about freedom, responsibility, or mortality. This confrontation is seen as a loving act because it helps clients grow. In psychology, “tough love” means setting boundaries or confronting harmful behavior out of genuine care.

    While everyday tough love is a practical act of care, you elevate confrontation into a spiritual act of awakening.

    I think I understand now more than before, James. Thank you for being a part of these forums. Along confrontations, you expressed gentleness many times, and for that (along with the valid confrontations), I am grateful 🙏🙏🙏

    I really am very interested in transcending my ego, a need I feel more acutely because of your input.

    🤍 Anita 

Viewing 15 posts - 31 through 45 (of 4,864 total)