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December 6, 2017 at 10:59 pm #180877NateParticipant
Hi Victoria,
I can relate to feeling different. I tried to fit in as best I could, but always had a sense of being different. As years went by, after graduating, this feeling has even continued with me, until today.I am different. I have also finally accepted my “differentness”. I am an unusual person. I know it, people have told me, “I have never met anyone like you”, “where do you come from” (in a positive way, of course). Sometimes they just look at me with squinched eyes trying to figure me out. I just warmly smile back at them.
The other day at work, one of the employees came up to me and asked “how can you be as you are each and every day?” I said, “what do you mean by that?” He said, “you don’t change. Each and every day the same. This calm, nice pleasant “persona”, although there is so much stress here every day, with the bosses yelling, and speaking to us rudely”. I simply said “because this is the person I choose to be”.
It is who I am at my core. I choose to be true to who I am and to who I want to be. Not for anyone else, just for me.
Victoria, I don’t know if you can understand what I mean, but I think you do.
I love how you wrote: To me, being true to myself and who I am is far more valuable than pretending to be something I’m not.
That is so true, thank you for writing that.No one can make us do or say or be anything that we do not want to be. It doesn’t matter how much they yell or what words they use. If we feel pain and hurt inside, it is something we need to sincerely reflect on. No one can make us feel anything. That was a hard concept for me to understand.
There is a lot of stress where I work. Totally unnecessary stress, in my opinion.
About a week ago one of the bosses came upstairs where I was working, hands on her hips, red in the face, on the verge of absolute rage, and ask me “did you do this?” “were you in charge of this?Without going into a lot of unecessary details, I mentally relaxed, paused about 2-3 seconds, “sat on it”, and felt in my body where I was feeling the emotion, quickly analyzing what I was feeling, meanwhile the hairs on the back of my head were standing up, my hands were slightly trembling, but I was also not going to be pulled into it. Years ago I would do what most people do, react with a typical knee-jerk reaction, and respond in like. Voices raising, a lot of tension in the air, many times saying things I didn’t mean… you know the drill.
But I choose not to be that person any more. I choose to be true to who I am and who want to be.
Do you “feel” me, as they say in the States?I had a long conversation with this woman, who is one of the bosses. I waited for a “good moment” to talk about it. I explained that whenever she gets like that, always expect that I will “shut down” for a few seconds. She smiled at hearing that. I told her I will not be pulled into these unnecessary rants. Then she did the unexpected, and admitted that she has always had this problem. She said she has trouble controlling it. So I suggested other ways to ask the questions, other words to use, so that we can both feel that we are working together to solve a problem, not her on her throne pissing down on everyone else. I also explained that when she acts like that, it is totally counter-productive. For the employees will, for the next few hours, be thinking more on the yelling than doing there job.
I know this is all work related, but it can also be used with our family.
No one can make us feel anything. It comes from the meaning we ourselves give to our own thoughts. Our thoughts then produce the emotions.It is something worth learning and developing for ourselves, because once you experience the power in this, it will transform how you relate to others and also how they relate to you.
I am alone. But I do not feel lonely. I hope you feel that way too.
I am happy that you have at least one friend to share things with, although it is long-distance. Still there is that sense of connectedness.Another concept that has helped me get through some things, and also helped me with certain relationships, is the concept of “we are all the same”.
We all started out the same, and so are made up of the same “stuff”. Of course we were then exposed to different circumstances externally, and so “our story” is different from person to person. Our early experiences are different from one another and so we have formed certain beliefs about things. Some things we feel very certain of, and these things cause us to think a certain way, and so we feel certain types of emotions, based on our own belief system.
Our emotions, be it anger, fear, sadness, jealousy, etc are based on our thoughts, coming from our sub-conscious belief system.Had we had different experiences, in different circumstances, we would be or act a different way than we are now.
Your father and your mother are caught up in their own world, or “belief bubble”, as author Gary van Warmerdam put it.
They have slowly, through the years, dealing with various marriage problems, and many other things, put together their own “belief bubble”. And it causes them to be and act as they do, for the good or bad.Thinking about things that way, makes me feel more compassion for people, even my own family.
Reading about this also helped me to realize that I too needed to analize what I myself believed, and make necessary changes in my own belief system, when it didn’t serve me well.
We all really want the same thing. To live a happy and full life.
If your burning desire inside is to feel completely at peace/at ease/ and at home, then you will realize that.For I too sought the same thing. I am alone, at peace, at ease and am at home. But not my original home. I now live on the other side of the planet, but I am still at peace and at ease. Whether I am at home or away from home.
It comes from the inside, and that is where you are truly meant to be.- This reply was modified 7 years ago by Nate. Reason: had tags
December 6, 2017 at 8:35 pm #180859NateParticipantThat fact that you are asking these important questions and not knowing or finding the answers, tells me that yes, you could greatly benefit from seeing someone. If you have a true and “wise” friend who is empathetic and compassionate, they can also help you sort through some of these things. But you really need a wise friend. Not a sympathetic friend to cry together with. That is also good, but what you need right now are answers. Real answers and possibly a new direction.
Very briefly… I have come out of a very deep hole of extreme abandonment from my entire family. My past was filled with memories of deep family love and unity. But as circumstances went, that abruptly ended many years ago. I am making “my story” very short, to be able to get back to yours.
I tried to put all of that intense pain in a drawer, tried to “forget” about it, as well as I could. I even moved to europe to distance myself. I am still here living in europe, and my family situation has not changed. It has been now over 30 years.
I will say this: most, if not all of us have “a story”, our story, of some sort of pain and hurt from the past. Often times what we do is try to “deal with it”, tough it out, and so essentially “resist”. I have read over and over “what we resist, persists”. I didn’t quite understand that at first, until I read another lesson that is “lean into your problems”. I like using that word “lean”. I can picture a man walking against a strong wind with an overcoat and a hat, one hand holding the overcoat closed and the other hand holding his hat, and as he walks, he leans into the wind, and he slowly advances, step by step, with intense purpose. I can hear the howling wind as it whips by with strong occasional gusts.
I have learned this lesson and am now applying it in my life. Just a few years ago, I took “my story” out of the drawer and began to lean into my pain. Expose it, feel it again. Dissect it. Try to understand it. I did not want to hide from the pain any more, I wanted to be free.
Mostly what I have done is to resort to reading and studying. Many many books. Books written by various therapists, life-coaches, counselors, even scientists, etc etc. This has been an incredible help to me, and I still keep studying. Not just glimpsing through them, but reading them with purpose, intense purpose, then stopping, and reflecting on what was written and trying to get the real sense of it. See the validity of what is written, and try to adopt it into my life. Sometimes, literally, tears would fall as I sense the truth of what is written, and the knowledge that it has been there for me to read all along, and how I can apply what I am learning in my own personal life now, on a daily basis. We only have to make a conscious effort.
You are living your life from only one very small perspective. Yours. And it is a painful perspective. Learn how to see life from another perspective. Do not hide from the pain. Face it head on. Slowly, intently and purposefully lean into it. Yes there will be gusts from time to time and so yes it will be especially difficult sometimes, but keep trudging on. If you need to, be angry. Use the power of anger to search for the answers and be free from the past. It does not mean you will ever forget the past, but the past will not have its hold on you any more. How can I forget my family? Impossible! And I don’t want to either. But I am finally at peace with it. I am calm with it.
I have gone to see a therapist, on three occasions many years ago. That was also very helpful. It opened my eyes to the possibiliy of seeing things from another perspective, seeing life from another perspective. To give you one “quick” example. This happened on my very first visit to the therapist. I was telling her “my story”, and I noticed she was intently and purposefully observing me, as people do when you are telling them something very interesting. It was like she was “sitting on the edge of her seat”. But what I didn’t know was that she was watching me for anything that triggered even the slightest emotion in me. For me, once I felt the emotion coming up I would quickly go off into another direction to avoid the pain. In my case, I had developed a very sharp pain in my neck each time I got emotional, a physical pain, on the left side of my neck. It felt like when you have a very bad sore throat and hurts so much to swallow, so you try to avoid swallowing. So as I began to feel “emotional”, I would turn the conversation in another direction. But she would pull me back by asking “wait, let’s go back, what did you mean by that?” “Can you explain that a little better?” I was trying to avoid the deeper emotions, but that was exactly where she wanted to go. I didn’t understand all of this “process” until hours later. To make a long story longer, she kept making turns in the conversation, left here, right there, until we got to where she thought was an “emotional knot”. I was visually unsettled and my neck began to hurt. Then she asked “and how did you feel in that moment?” My hand quickly reached for my neck because of the sudden pain I felt there. And I heard/felt a gush of breath come out of my mouth from the depth of the emotion. And I fell apart.
I am here to tell you that since that moment, that pain in my neck has never returned. Something was released. That was utterly amazing for me.
That raised my curiosity, and so began my journey into finding new answers. Exposing myself to new ideas.
At this point in time, with the wealth of information that I have studied, helping me to change my perspective about life in general, learning how to love myself, learning the important lesson to choose who you want to be, and then be that every single day, and many more things, I can honestly say that I feel great. I feel truly happy, and content with my life. Happy with who I am. What was really the first important step was to go “inside”. For true happiness can only be gotten when you are happy with yourself. You can not get true happiness from the outside or external world. That was a hard lesson to learn for me. We can get temporary happiness, yes, but not the deep true happiness, that no one can take away. That has given me a certain deep contentment in my life. A certain steadiness. I have comes to terms with the past.
Don’t just move on by putting it into a box, or a drawer or even turning your back to it. Open the box. Open the drawer. Turn and face the wind and then lean into it, purposefully. That is the only way to get true closure.
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