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anitaParticipant
Dear Lisa: good to read from you again. Please share more?..
anita
anitaParticipantDear Louise: as bad as you’ve been feeling recently, you will feel better. This feeling badly is not forever. I’ll writ more tomorrow.
anita
November 14, 2024 at 12:50 pm in reply to: How do I best support my partner and reveal my wealth to her? #439397anitaParticipantDear Jim:
Back on Feb 1 this year, you shared that your partner has been abusing you every 2 or 3 weeks: “She feels insecure… SO much that it frequently (on average every 2 or 3 weeks) leads to an event where she simply cannot control her fear of being left or abandoned for one reason or another and this results in long bouts of crying, screaming and abuse towards me. She calls it ‘blind anger’, says it rarely happened before me… I’m a very placid and nonconfrontational person, patient and gentle“-
– is this still happening at any particular frequency? I am concerned that you may be.. a very placid and nonconfrontational… patient and gentle victim of domestic abuse?
Or has the abuse cease? I think that the issue of abuse should be addressed and resolved before anything else.
anita
November 14, 2024 at 12:26 pm in reply to: The phenomenon of “helping someone excessively can make them turn against you” #439396anitaParticipantDear Arden:
“I chose to make them happy then. Couldn’t see it. I secretly resent them for that.“– I read this after I submitted my post for you on your new thread. It really is about sacrificing oneself/ neglecting oneself for the benefit of others=> leading to resentment, just like the online source from which I quoted said.
“Remember when I told you about my partner giving a lot of money for her sister to get her a phone? I felt so bad after hearing about this. It happened again when I was not aware. Turns out he, out of the blue, given her one month salary worth money when she was not even asking..“- understandable, Arden: the rage on the part of the self-sacrificing, the one caring and over-doing for others.. rage about those who are done for, those who take, those who have it easy.
“I would kill for an apartment all to me from my family. All to me, no rent, no stress, no landlord to try to get rid of me“- I understand, Arden. I wish you had a childhood where you were taken care of, a time of being a carefree child and teenager. Unfortunately, you didn’t have that, and it created an emotional wound within you, and understandably, envy of those who had it/ have it better.
Only that the people you think have it better, generally do not. We tend to look at others’ fortunes/ advantages from the point of view of our misfortunes/ disadvantages.. but misery has many sources. Maybe your husband is aware of his sister’ miseries that you are not aware of, and has been trying to help her..?
It is very difficult to change from being a self-sacrificial person => an assertive, self-caring person. Such habits are very difficult to break/ change. What do you think/ feel?
anita
anitaParticipantDear Arden:
“I was available, for my friends’ vulnerable times. For their couple fights, I was around. If she needed to lie her mother, I was there. If she needed to study I was there… I was available for them, and when I wasn’t available for once, I was getting a bad attitude… I was working two jobs and my landlord got rid of me. I was also in a relationship, so pretty busy. Therefore I stopped being available for their pains… every close girl friend I can think of, almost every one of them are very selfish“-
– I found this online, Arden. Please tell me if it’s accurate in regard to you, having been an over-responsible, over-doing, selfless (self-sacrificial) person): “Over-responsible, over-doing, and self-sacrificial people often harbor deep feelings of resentment towards those they perceive as selfish or taking advantage of them. This resentment stems from several factors: 1. Feeling Exploited: They may feel that their efforts and sacrifices are being taken for granted or not reciprocated. 2. Burnout: Constantly putting others’ needs ahead of their own can lead to emotional and physical exhaustion, heightening feelings of frustration and resentment. 3. Lack of Appreciation: When their hard work goes unnoticed or unappreciated, it can foster feelings of bitterness. 4. Unmet Needs: They might neglect their own needs and desires, leading to a build-up of internal frustration and dissatisfaction. 5. Imbalance in Relationships: The unequal give-and-take in relationships can create a sense of unfairness and injustice. 6. Self-Worth Issues: Overdoing for others can be a way to seek validation and self-worth, but when this isn’t met with appreciation, it can lead to self-doubt and anger.
“These individuals might struggle to set boundaries or assert their needs, which further perpetuates the cycle of over-responsibility and resentment. It’s crucial for them to recognize these patterns and work towards healthier boundaries and self-care practices”.
Does this resonate with you?
anita
anitaParticipantDear Louise:
About Louise-the-child & teenager: “My childhood home was very difficult. My parents argued and fought constantly.. We lived in the middle of nowhere, so I had no ability to get myself away from the home. I was dependent on my parents to drive me to visit a friend. So I felt very trapped in this place where my parents were constantly shouting and screaming at each other. My father had mental health issues . But also as a young child, I would get very homesick if I went away from home even for a night. As a teenager, I had a lot of conflict with my parents and I did run away from home a few times“-
– your childhood home was the birthplace of Conflict within you: wanting to be in the home (very homesick), and wanting to be out of the home (very trapped… run away from home).
As a child, living in the middle of nowhere, where nothing was happening outside the home, Little Louise wished and longed to live somewhere else, somewhere where things were happening, a place of excitement.
In the home, you were exposed to domestic war (parents argued and fought constantly… constantly shouting and screaming at each other). There were moments of lull in the home, maybe whole evenings, maybe days, and Little Louise felt some comfort and security, a sense of belonging and love, but war was just around the corner. From one point on, Little Louise no longer trusted home to be a place of comfort and belonging. It was a place of expected trepidation, a place to survive by being as numb and unfeeling to it as possible, as distracted as possible. But she remembers (deep inside, subconsciously, if not consciously) those moments of comfort, security, closeness and belonging.
“I have lost my mother and him in the last 6 months, probably the people I felt closest to and who brought me the most security in my life“- this right here is evidence that there were moments in that war-zone home, moments of comfort, security and belonging, moments when you felt close to your mother, moments when you felt security in her company. You crave comfort, security etc., in a home (your most recent, with your ex) because you experienced them in your original home, only too little, and in between long stretches of war.
“It is a conflict inside me. The longing for freedom but then for security too“- your adult longings are for: (1) comfort, security, belonging and closeness you experienced too little of in your original home, (2) freedom from the trepidation/ distress (negative kind of excitement) that you experienced a lot of, in your original home, (3) places of (positive) excitement outside the home, places over there, places of hope, places you longed for, as a child living in the middle of nowhere.
“Most my adult life I have been in relationships – I think they call it a serial monogamist. But at the same time people always think I am very independent as I go away travelling a lot on my own in an adventurous way. I also wonder if it is a case of the grass is always greener – I tend to crave excitement, especially in a relationship, and with travelling, and am easily bored. But maybe this is indicative of another problem and I need to learn to accept a relationship as it develops and becomes less ‘exciting’ rather than looking for something new, which I think is what I tend to do“- it’s the same Louise-the-child, trapped in the old home, in the middle of nowhere, craving .. something, somewhere, someone new. Home was a war zone, causing you a negative kind of excitement, leading to numbing/ dissociating- which feel like boredom. Hope to undo the boredom is over there where the grass is greener, a place of adventure/ positive excitement.
“For the past few years I no longer felt physically attracted to my boyfriend and I didn’t want any intimacy with him, or even physical affection… I know he wasn’t happy with this situation but he tolerated it. I would often spend a few months away travelling alone over the winter, which he also tolerated. On the last occasion I met another man. We started messaging each other and this went on for months after I returned home… My long term boyfriend asked me one day if I still wanted to be in the relationship with him as I guess it was clear I was very disengaged. I said no not really and proceeded to prepare to leave our home… I think about contacting my ex boyfriend as we are still in contact and asking if I can come back“- I was wrong yesterday to suggest that you contact him for the purpose of you receiving social support. He should be given a complete/ non-compromised opportunity to be set free from a failed relationship, and to move on.. to someone/ something new.
“I am still travelling – something I have always loved in the past – but I feel completely lost and depressed and unable to enjoy it“- completely lost because you don’t have a place where you can experience moments of what a home should be, moments you experienced too little of, moments you need.
“I also regret selling furniture of mine.. I keep obsessing over furniture I sold“- a feeling of home, of comfort and security, a sense of belonging and closeness, is associated with your furniture. You are obsessing about a feeling of home.
“Before we lived together I lived on my own for ten years, and I grew to really like it. For most of those years I was in the relationship with him and I liked that, living separately but seeing each other regularly. As soon as we moved in together I felt what I would say is probably a similar panic to what I feel now“- this panic is how it often, too often felt to be a child at home with your parents, trapped.
“The other man…“- the other man is and has been a distraction, distracting you from the boredom of living with your ex, distracting you from the feeling of being trapped with your ex. He is the greener appearing grass. I was wrong yesterday to suggest that you contact him for the purpose of receiving social support.
“The fact is now it feels really unbearable. It is 3 am where I am. I cannot sleep. My mind is constantly full of these thoughts and just wanting to go back home. It really feels like a crisis and in the moment I don’t know what to do… You may imagine I am younger but I am in my late 40s. I guess I have been like this my whole life and I have no idea where to start. All I know is, I feel this desperate urge that I have to go back home“- you are like a child being away from home, like a child suffering from separation anxiety, experiencing a range of intense and distressing emotions when away from home or from a primary caregiver: fear and Panic, Loneliness, Helplessness, Sadness, and more.
“There is a town I could go to in the country. I am in where there will be people that I know who I have met several times, spent time with and become friends with. I keep thinking I could go there maybe I would feel better“- this is a way, way better idea than to stay with your ex, or with the other man!
“But then part of me just wants to go home“- time to grieve the home you never had= a place where you felt adequately safe, secure, and taken care of, a place from which you didn’t want to escape. When you grieve it (it being what you didn’t have), you no longer believe it’s still there for you.
When you grieve the home you never had, you place that.. pretend-home in the past, and you make yourself free and available- not to a new distraction- but to a home, one that’s not a pretend-home for a while.
Talking about home, there is a book by the late John Bradshaw that comes to my mind, it’s called Homecoming. (Online:) “The book guides readers through a process of recognizing and healing childhood wounds by reconnecting with their inner child. This involves acknowledging past abuse or neglect, expressing repressed emotions, grieving unmet needs, and challenging toxic shame and guilt. By doing so, adults can develop healthier patterns of behavior and relationships”.
I personally exited my childhood with severely unmet emotional needs such as safety, closeness, belonging.. love, and with toxic shame and guilt, and repressed emotions, my inner child as dissociated as can be, and so, I continued to be an anxious, repressed child throughout decades of supposed-to-be adulthood. As an adult, I looked for a caretaker, a parent.. wanted my childhood to be redone, but redone right, this time. An impossibility, as we can’t move backward in time. I will tell you more, if you would like, but this post is long enough as it is and there is a lot in it to process as is.
I hope to communicate more and more with you over time. How are you feeling today/ tonight?
anita
November 13, 2024 at 8:02 pm in reply to: The phenomenon of “helping someone excessively can make them turn against you” #439383anitaParticipantThank you for saying this, Arden!
anita
anitaParticipantYou are very welcome. Be strong, Louise, back to you in about 12 hours from now,
anita
November 13, 2024 at 6:57 pm in reply to: The phenomenon of “helping someone excessively can make them turn against you” #439379anitaParticipantDear Arden: “I might have to find a way to delete or change content within this post after you read it. It’s too much sensitivity that I would be really afraid for someone to find out. Idk.“- I just copied your most recent post, in case you delete it. I copied it so to read it Thurs morning, and you can request it to be deleted, I suppose (going to “CONTACT” under “HOME” at the top of the home page). Back to you tomorrow!
anita
anitaParticipantDear Arden:
I am not focused enough to read and process your original post of only five minutes ago, but I wanted to let you know: I am so happy to read from you!!! I will be back you Thurs morning (Wed evening here).
anita
anitaParticipantDouble posting, Louise. I don’t know if you noticed my post, submitted a minute or less before yours..
anita
anitaParticipantDear louise:
You are welcome and no worries about the strange symbols. You are a good person and you don’t deserve to suffer from either guilt nor.. anything else. It will be okay, you’ll figure out what to do. Life is complicated isn’t it (I’ll be back to you in the morning).
anita
November 13, 2024 at 4:50 pm in reply to: I am having guilt-related familial issues with a guy I’m about to date #439361anitaParticipantDear Lulu:
“I want to do both. I want to be there for my family and also maintain a good relationship with him… I genuinely do like him… Ever since my sister passed, he’s been the one person I can bear a conversation with… He legitimately cares about me and he shows it… He cheers me up. He’s been the few consistent things in my life. My family means so much to me. And so does he“- I am getting a better idea in r3egard to how important he is to you, and I think that you should have both: his friendship and your aunt’s and mother’s support. if you explained to them just wat you explained here.. won’t they understand that it will be good for you to have him in your life?
anita
anitaParticipantDear Louise:
First, it is not the time to make long-term commitments and decisions in regard to any of the two men. Second, I think (and again, I am not focused, don’t remember everything that you shared, and will re-read and reply tomorrow), that if I was you, I would contact both men today and tell them (in separate communications, of course) just how you feel at this time, and that you are not in the place to be there for them, and perhaps that you regret that, and.. wait for their separate responses. This might give you much needed information.
I hope you get some rest/ sleep today, and I hope that I sleep tonight (Wed., 4:32 pm here, and getting dark).
anita
November 13, 2024 at 2:10 pm in reply to: I am having guilt-related familial issues with a guy I’m about to date #439352anitaParticipantDear Lulu: I will reply further later.
anita
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