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Helcat

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Viewing 15 posts - 406 through 420 (of 1,247 total)
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  • Helcat
    Participant

    Sorry I’m busy taking care of an infant, so my attention is divided. I just noticed that she ignores you for large periods of time during disagreements. This is an abusive behaviour called stonewalling. Everyone needs space to decompress but it’s healthy to keep it to a short period say an hour.

    Helcat
    Participant

    I also think individual therapy would be a good idea for your girlfriend. She is looking to get married at some point, she might need some help from a professional in order to achieve this goal.

    Helcat
    Participant

    Hi Alex

    I’m glad that you found the responses here helpful.

    Either option, ending the relationship or couples counselling sound like a good idea. Sometimes couples counselling is even used to end a relationship on good terms.

    I think that your girlfriend is used to people not accepting her and only using her for sex. A lot of men are uncomfortable being in a relationship with people who worked in the porn industry, it might seem sexy at first but people start seeing it as a blow to their ego. It is honestly fair for you to have difficulties with this. Whilst it is uncomfortable for you to hear about, it would also be uncomfortable for her to hide and never speak about it. It’s okay if this relationship isn’t for you.

    That your girlfriend doesn’t acknowledge her trauma and takes personal responsibility for it doesn’t make it any less of a trauma. Sexual development is normal for children but it is up to the people around them to keep them safe, have good boundaries and not abuse them. It’s good to hear that she’s not hurt by her past. But this trauma has led to her having difficulties with relationships for her whole life.

    I don’t think she’s a monster. She is just used to being treat like she is disposable. Should she name call, no. But she isn’t alone in that behaviour. Should she make you sleep on the couch? No. I would never ask my husband to sleep on the couch.

    Wishing you all the best! ❤️🙏

    Helcat
    Participant

    Hi Alex

    It’s good to hear that she enjoys her experiences with you.

    Well sexual conversations for her are a very large part of her life. Not talking about it is asking her to hide who she is from you.

    I can understand the discomfort with everything. I would think of it in this way. She was sexually assaulted as a child. It is common for sexual assault survivors to subject themselves to difficult sexual experiences afterwards.

    My husband had a pornography addiction. He talks about it sometimes and it did make me feel uncomfortable. But it was also a big part of his life for a long time. I didn’t want him to feel ashamed of it. Perhaps she doesn’t want to hide who she is from you or to feel ashamed of it. If her past experiences are too much for you, perhaps she isn’t the right person for you.

    We all have experiences and hers are unusual. But I’m sure that you can have empathy for the difficulties that she has had.

    Wishing you all the best! ❤️🙏

    Helcat
    Participant

    *-?

    Helcat
    Participant

    Hi Alex

    It’s pretty common for couples to discuss their previous sex lives. I’m sorry to hear that you have been arguing. Are your arguments related to your topic today? Or other things too?

    It sounds to me like she might be hinting that her regularly engaging in sex years are behind her. She is older than you, perhaps she is going through menopause which actively changes sexual drive for women? I hear it can change a lot of things during sex too.

    For women who say have had a hysterectomy sex can be very difficult too. There are lots of things that women have to deal with while for men, not as much changes.

    Perhaps you fear that her comments reflect on your performance? But perhaps she is trying to communicate her personal difficulties?

    It might be worth looking online for information about menopause and things that can help with that for sex. Not because of you, but to help her.

    Realistically though, she may not want to have sex as frequently as you do. How do you feel about that?

    Wishing you all the best? ❤️🙏

    in reply to: “Frenemies” and the desire for true friendship #432691
    Helcat
    Participant

    Hi Nycartist

    I see what you mean, your friend often makes critical remarks. I think that you’re very sharp in catching onto her insecurities about herself. I also believe that might be where the comments are coming from.

    It reminds me of my mother and sister. My mother used to tell my sister that she was fat and compare herself at that age and say how much skinnier she used to be.

    The problem was that my mother was overweight, my sister was not – she was just being bullied. She said these things to feel better about her own appearance.

    Perhaps you could tell your friend when she makes comments like that. “Please don’t make comments about my appearance.” Or something like that.

    I’m glad to hear that you enjoy talking to people and being friendly! That was definitely the vibe I got from you.

    Good luck figuring things out with your friend. I’m sure that you will find the balance that suits you best in the relationship.

    Love and best wishes! ❤️🙏

    in reply to: Orphan #432685
    Helcat
    Participant

    I just wanted to say that even though it might not feel that way to you, I think you’re a really strong person to have been through the things that you’ve been through.

    Some people would have given up and you haven’t. You’ve worked really hard and treat even the “difficult” (I’m putting it politely, but they are far more than difficult) people in your life with compassion. It’s not an easy thing to do at all.

    I think that says a lot of good things about your character.

    in reply to: Orphan #432683
    Helcat
    Participant

    Hi Laven

    I can only imagine all of the difficulties that you have endured in your life. Of the things that you have spoken of so far. My heart goes out to you because you don’t deserve a second of the horrific treatment you have experienced.

    I would like to listen to you and know more about you. It might be hard to believe, but a stranger across the world cares about you. Unfortunately, I can’t do much but listen.

    I’m so sorry that the foster family doesn’t care about you, pretends to love you, forcing you into slave labour with abuse and threatening homelessness.

    I’m so sorry that when disageements happen your foster mom abuses you by saying that you deserve to be abandoned. This is especially cruel because of everything that you’ve been through.

    I’m so sorry for the trauma that you endured with your biological family.

    I’m sorry for the difficulties you had bouncing from home to home. It is incredibly hard feeling like no where is home for you. As well as having the experiences where no one loves or accepts you.

    None of this is your fault. By circumstances of birth, an unfortunate lottery,  you have been surrounded by people that are incapable of love. You deserve so much more.

    There is a saying, the evil you know is better than the evil you don’t. It isn’t necessarily true though. Change is hard because it’s not what we’re used to. The unknown has an element of fear about it. What fresh new horrors await? But good things can be found in change. Getting out of the situation could be a blessing one day. When you are ready. It is probably difficult to even imagine a different life.

    Love and best wishes! ❤️🙏

    in reply to: “Frenemies” and the desire for true friendship #432670
    Helcat
    Participant

    Hi Nycartist

    Quite often people misattribute being friendly for being flirty. It’s not uncommon for people in happy relationships to be flirty as a joke either as they feel secure in their relationships they don’t see it as true flirting where there would be a sexual interest.

    I don’t think that your friend calling you flirty is a bad thing. Has she said anything else judgemental recently? You mentioned that there used to be issues between you both, could it be that you are worrying about those issues cropping up between you again?

    Are you assuming that your friend isn’t being supportive? Or did she say something to suggest otherwise?

    My husband is flirty without realizing it. Sometimes my sister and I tease him lightly about it and we all laugh together. Sometimes these comments are banter and jokes as opposed to serious?

    I definitely think it’s possible to have relationships which aren’t judgemental and are loving and supportive. The trick is meeting kind people with good communication skills.

    Love and best wishes! ❤️🙏

    Helcat
    Participant

    Hi Seaturtle

    I’m sorry to hear that you are hurting going through the depression and sadness stage. Well done on all of your hard work going through most of the other stages already.

    It sounds like part of you is doubting yourself a bit.

    On the one hand, you know that you made the right decision and don’t believe some of the things your ex and your fears suggest. On the other, you are taking to heart the times when your ex blamed you. I don’t think what he said was true. You didn’t give up on him. He gave up long before you did. You tried really hard for a long time and kept asking for him to try too. He refused.

    One person can’t keep a relationship going. Both people need to try. No one is perfect in relationships but as long as both people try things can work out.

    It’s good that you also have good memories of the relationship, not just bad ones. It’s okay to miss those. You will always have the good memories. But the good didn’t outweigh the bad. It didn’t change the fact that you felt terribly unseen in the relationship and he simply wasn’t the right person for you. These things happen unfortunately when dating, it isn’t easy or pleasant. But it doesn’t mean that you did anything wrong. Quite the opposite, it was very mature of you to recognize when someone isn’t right for you. I honestly think you tried to handle it with compassion and gave him every chance to treat you the way you deserve to be treated.
    <p style=”text-align: left;”>You are a beautiful person inside and out, no doubt. I hope that the next person you date appreciates you fully. Realistically, it may take some time to find your person though. I’m glad that you found my old message comforting.</p>
    I think that ultimately, growing is learning to treat yourself with that love and respect too. What do you think you need right now?

    Thank you for your kind message in regards to communication with my partner. We are not perfect but we are trying. It may surprise you but I have been with my partner for a few years. It has only been this past year where he has begun to open up about his feelings. It is difficult for men, they are conditioned by society not to talk about things. Even more surprising perhaps might be that he used to be a therapist. Not my therapist, to be clear. But he was one a few years before he met me.

    I agree, it is reassuring just to hear that someone didn’t mean to hurt you.

    I’m glad to hear that you feel comfortable letting me know if you are ever hurt.

    You mentioned recently that you felt selfish about the decision to break up.

    I would suggest that when you are feeling calmer that you prove to yourself the ways that you aren’t a selfish person. Write down all of the good things that you do to help and care for others. Doing this on a regular basis is a good way to change internal beliefs about yourself that have been taught to you by other people.

    I hope that you feel better soon. Please be gentle with yourself and take extra special care of yourself when you are feeling down.

    Love and best wishes! ❤️🙏

    in reply to: Saddened #432591
    Helcat
    Participant

    Hi Laven

    I’m so sorry to hear about the difficulties with your foster family, as well as the verbal abuse that you endure. It must be difficult being a care giver in that situation.

    I was informally adopted and experienced similar difficulties with my adopted family. It’s really hard isn’t it? What has been hard for me is feeling that you’re never accepted. Do you have difficulties with feeling like this too?

    To me, you sound like a good woman doing her best against all of the odds. You don’t deserve the way you are being treat. You deserve to be loved and appreciated for who you are as well as the things you do. It sounds like you lost that feeling when your partner left. Would you agree? I’m sorry that your heartbreak continues.

    Do you feel like if you didn’t care for your foster mom no one else would and something bad would happen to her?

    It sounds like your foster mom has had these difficulties with verbal abuse towards you for a long time? I would agree that it’s not because she’s old.

    Love and best wishes! ❤️🙏

    Helcat
    Participant

    *and

    Helcat
    Participant

    Hi Seaturtle

    Congratulations on the new job! A nanny is very similar to mothering. We are actually thinking of getting a nanny. It’s a shame that we can’t hire you as a nanny as we are on the other side of the world. You sound like a really good nanny. I’m glad to hear that the job doesn’t stress you out.

    It does sound healing taking care of this girl the way that you should have been taken care of. It makes me angry for you that you were blamed for being a child and treat like that. I wish that someone would have stood up to your father for you growing up and stopped him from behaving like that.

    I probably have a controversial opinion on understanding abusers. I think it’s a good thing that you understand his circumstances and appreciate the resources he was able to provide.

    For a long time, I couldn’t understand the idea of forgiving abusers. It took a lot of work to get to the point of where I could. To me, it is important because it isn’t really about them. It is about making peace within ourselves. I don’t think forgiving them takes away anything that they did, or erases that pain. But understanding that they are broken fallible people that probably shouldn’t have had children was helpful to me. I can’t help but in a way be thankful for existing. Not thankful to my abuser. But if she hadn’t had a child I wouldn’t be alive. And if my adopted mother hadn’t taken me in I wouldn’t be alive either. If I hadn’t been through what I’d been through I wouldn’t be the person that I am today. But yes, I think understanding abusers is a part of forgiving them.

    As a mother, I can say that being a parent is a lot harder for me than not being a parent. Initially, it was very difficult. But it is getting easier. I think how busy I am is rather self imposed and my choice. Not an easy choice, but the alternative is giving things up.

    For me, both of my mothers were severely abused. My biological mother came from generation abuse. Her father raped her amongst other things. She was a single mother at a very young age, because of a man 10 years older than her was irresponsible and got off on siring children then abandoning them. She had very severe mental health problems and she asked for help at one point and was turned away by an idiot doctor.

    My adopted mother came from an abusive home too. She also had multiple abusive husbands who were violent and sexually abused her. She also has mental health issues.

    Help for people with trauma is a relatively new thing. A lot of older people have had very little or no help with the trauma they experienced. Birth control was also not really a thing for a while.

    On the other hand. Your father’s financial situation improved and he still abused you, so I don’t think his financial situation can be used to excuse his behaviour. But you did mention that he had a difficult childhood himself. Perhaps this is the real reason that he did what he did. That being said, everyone makes a conscious decision to either continue the cycle of abuse or stop it. You chose to stop it. Your father chose to continue it and he has to live with that choice. He chose to feel powerful, re-enact his abuse this time in the role of abuser and traumatise his own children.

    Perhaps part of the reason he asks for constant praise is because he suffers internally. Abusers often live in denial of what they have done with pain buried deep inside eating away at them,

    It sounds like to me you are in the process of removing the tape from your mouth and learning to protect yourself and find your voice.

    Ah I see, there is a lot going on with the relationship with your friend. It can certainly be difficult with people who aren’t used to you being assertive. They will need time to get used to how things are now. It is a good thing that you are standing up for yourself.

    Not only, does she not acknowledge your feelings about the situation. She is also imagining that she is the only one who is hurt.

    I think that you should definitely speak up when she is critical. Like saying that you lack empathy when you are an empathetic person. It is just hard when she immediately started blaming you.

    So she’s still in an abusive relationship add is complaining about it. That is a shame. To me that means she wants to be depressed.

    As someone who grew up with abuse I don’t understand the people who are adults that choose to be in abusive relationships. It is a relatively self-imposed problem.

    Sometimes as you get healthier you start to notice more and more unhealthy behaviours around you. Do you think this could be happening here?

    Please do not feel self-conscious for discussing your thoughts and feelings. I think that your authentic self is pretty amazing and utterly disagree with the people calling you selfish. Ultimately, we all have a responsibility to take care of ourselves. If everyone did that, there would be a lot less pain in the world.

    Love and best wishes! ❤️🙏

    in reply to: My one shame, letting go of snooping #432559
    Helcat
    Participant

    Hi Anonymous

    I think it’s amazing that you got therapy and managed to overcome this behaviour. I’m glad that you have such a supportive partner.

    I think that you should have compassion for yourself. As you said this behaviour was rooted in a painful past.

    Bad habits are bad habits and when we stop doing them we no longer have bad habits.

    Did you ever hurt anyone with your snooping? If, so feel free to apologise to them. If you didn’t hurt anyone, you can apologise for the behaviour to yourself.

    I don’t think guilt is very helpful because it perpetuates self-hatred. It is part of a cycle of negative self-talk. If you can find it in your heart to forgive yourself the feeling will resolve. Sometimes the hardest thing is to forgive ourselves. Everyone makes mistakes though.

    The important part you have already done. You learned the lesson, you got help. You stopped. Commit to never doing so again. That is really all that needs to be done.

    What would you say to a good friend if they were in a similar situation?

    If you have difficulty with feeling like a bad person. Consider what you truly believe a bad person is like and then consider the good things you do.

    Love and best wishes! ❤️🙏

Viewing 15 posts - 406 through 420 (of 1,247 total)