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Viewing 4 posts - 16 through 19 (of 19 total)
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  • in reply to: Lack of Belief/Self Love Holding me Back #74070
    RC
    Participant

    Hello!
    Many of my thoughts have been articulated already, but something I want to point out is that by coming on to this website and posting this, it shows you want to be positive. That is HUGE. You want to change therefore you have set into motion a wonderful and challenging process that will bring positivity into your life.

    You have so many reasons why you can’t be positive, so many stories and attributes that you are attached to. Imagine you moved to a far away place where you knew no one. You could maybe just decide to be positive! Can you just choose to be positive? Something that helps me is smiling at strangers and trying to get them to smile back. I know it sounds really silly and even annoying, but it’s been proven scientifically that if you smile, even if it’s forced, it makes you a teeny bit happier. One of my favorite Buddhist monks says he looks in the mirror every day and if he doesn’t want to smile he moves his lips with his fingers into a smile and the silliness of it makes him laugh, therefore smiling!

    I would recommend meditation for the reason that it helps us detach from our egos. Your ego has a hold of you and is very concerned with “me me me” and “I I I” (as all egos are!!) Meditation helps us experience the self that has nothing to do with ego, and therefore it is possible to see that this person you are describing is not in fact You, but rather a collection of stories based on a limited and short-sighted human experience. Meditation also helps us notice negativity and instead of adding more negativity to it, just letting it be and not being run around by it.

    You got this! Who cares what you’ve been your whole life?! None of it really matters nor exists except for what is happening NOW. So choose, now, in this moment to be positive! 🙂 🙂 🙂

    in reply to: Feeling stuck #74069
    RC
    Participant

    Hi Laia,
    I think both responses you received contain important points: give yourself the option to leave. This is your life and you must make the right decision for yourself and for your children. Speak with your husband – if you cannot communicate your feelings of being trapped and unable to breathe (which are very powerful feelings indeed), then it is definitely time to start down a new path. Feeling depressed and lonely can be very crippling indeed, but feeling trapped physically and mentally makes it all so much worse. If you were to move on with your own life, what would that entail? What would need to be done? What arrangements would need to be made? If you were to stay, what would need to change? Decide what YOU want, and go for it.

    Best of luck.

    in reply to: Am I able to love? #74068
    RC
    Participant

    Hi Marek33!

    I struggled for years with the feelings and fears you have written about. It was a slow, awkward, messy process of working thorough my hang-ups and insecurities to finally find a bit of peace with loving and letting myself be loved. I will start by saying this: To truly love with an open heart you must accept love but also accept the possibility for pain and disappointment and rejection. Being in love and having close relationships is all of those things. It is joy, pain, fear, excitement, and everything else you could imagine feeling. I think it is important to love yourself but I think knowing how to do this is hard. Having relationships while learning to love yourself are good things to have happen at the same time. I think often people put an emphasis on loving oneself first before having any relationships but I think they can happen together.

    Also, if possible, don’t hide your insecurities! Everyone, and I mean everyone, has them. I’ve found that showing what you’re trying to hide makes people more comfortable around you. Once you acknowledge your fears and welcome them into your life they become much less scary. I struggled with eating disorders for a while and I found that once I treated my body image issues with respect and kindness, they became less treacherous, more like some flyaway frizzy hair than a crippling mind-darkening disease. Challenge yourself to really ask yourself why you are so afraid of being abandoned or hurt, and what would really actually happen if you were to let someone close enough to hurt you.

    I am so hopeful for you! It sounds like you really want to love openly, and I think once you are ready to accept the possibility that you might get hurt, you will enter into a new part of this path you are on. Trust in the process, and be patient with yourself, you are making many great steps toward happiness! Humans by default are messy, awkward and wonderfully silly beings so go easy on yourself as you would a sibling or friend.

    Best wishes to you,
    R

    RC
    Participant

    Hey Caroline!

    I am 22, I graduated last year from college and experienced really similar feelings as you’ve described. I felt really overwhelmed with all the uncertainty I was facing, especially after having lived a very structured lifestyle in terms of academics and athletics. I chose to wait to apply to grad school because I want to explore a life without structure, and just freestyle my life!

    I can really relate to what you said about feeling very alone. A year later, I don’t have life “figured out” by any means, but what I have learned is that it truly is so important to be kind to yourself and be patient with the process. A friend once said to me: “you are so kind to me, why don’t you try treating yourself like you treat me?” Do you treat yourself how you treat your friends? Why should you be any less patient or understanding with yourself? If your friend or sister/brother/cousin were going through this struggle, what would you tell them to do?

    Sometimes I wonder, too, if when I’m 45 I’ll look back on this time and miss the days when I was anxious about graduating and figuring out what to do next. Sometimes I look back on college and say “man I wish I would’ve just relaxed a little!” and I think I’ll probably say that about this time in my life one day too.

    You’re right – this time in life is SO uncomfortable. And anxiety and fear is very real and can be so debilitating. What helps me sometimes is to think of it as growing pains. Growing up hurts and is uncomfortable, but often the most uncomfortable times are when we learn the most. Sometimes a situation feels like the worst thing in the world but when it’s over you realize it’s value and all of a sudden it becomes something positive.

    The fact that you are seeking answers shows that you are strong and wise. Much stronger and wiser than you know. Ben said it well, you ARE waking up! And waking up is painful but to be aware is the greatest skill we are capable of having.

    Breathe through this time and trust the process. You are loved!!

    xx
    Rose

Viewing 4 posts - 16 through 19 (of 19 total)