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The RuminantParticipant
Hi Jack,
I am equally fascinated and perplexed by your question. Why do you think that they are disrespecting you? Why do you think that it’s a gender issue? I also find it interesting that you use the word “disrespect” and not some other word that would suggest that you are treated poorly. I’m asking, because I’m genuinely curious. We’re all human beings first and all the gender stuff is secondary. Sure, women might be more perceptive about many things, but being disrespectful towards another human being because of what is being sensed is just bad behavior and unacceptable. Regardless of gender.
All that aside, why would you think that you’re an idiot? Isn’t that a bit harsh? I’m not sure if it matters where those beliefs come from, but they are silly beliefs. The good thing about beliefs is that they’re not the same as reality, and you can choose what you believe. So why on earth would you choose to believe that you’re not good enough?
The RuminantParticipantI strongly urge you to look into the symptoms of codependency and first tend to yourself, not him. Here’s one list: http://psychcentral.com/lib/symptoms-of-codependency/00011992
Caretaking. Another effect of poor boundaries is that if someone else has a problem, you want to help them to the point that you give up yourself. It’s natural to feel empathy and sympathy for someone, but codependents start putting other people ahead of themselves. In fact, they need to help and might feel rejected if another person doesn’t want help. Moreover, they keep trying to help and fix the other person, even when that person clearly isn’t taking their advice.
Your relationship with this person is a romantic one, not a patient-therapist one. I know that it’s a horrible feeling to see others suffer, but as long as you do not take care of yourself first, you’ll do more harm than good by attempting to solve his problems for him.
The RuminantParticipantHello Alice,
I have several toxic relationships in my history. I don’t really care to go into details, because it is in the past for me now and the circumstances actually do not matter that much. Also, I think I have forgiven it all, so I’ve pretty much also forgotten it all as well 🙂
There are two things that I learned at different points, which made all the difference and made forgiveness rather easy for me:
1) How I got treated wasn’t really even about me. It could’ve been someone else in my position, and they would’ve gotten the same treatment. Sure, the hurtful comments are always personal, as otherwise they wouldn’t be hurtful, but the reason behind the comments wasn’t me, but the other person’s inability to handle their own pain and hurt. Mind you, I’ve said and done many hurtful things as well, and I do know that it was always my own pain coming out. It was a cry for help. That said, it’s not an excuse, and we are all responsible for our actions and it is our responsibility to choose to start healing instead of continuing to destroy ourselves and those around us. Which brings me to the second realization…
2) Toxic relationships require two people with unhealthy or twisted views of relationships. There’s no reason to hold onto shame and guilt, but to be brutally honest with oneself and understand where the mate selection went wrong. It is really hard to be honest and accept one’s own part in the whole mess, especially if you’ve taken on the role of the understanding victim. Sometimes I think that it’s even more difficult to realize that you actually need healing if you’re the person who works in more passive ways. Other people will give you understanding and support you, and so there is no reason to face the fact that those relationships skills aren’t good either. So the person moves on from one failed relationship to another, completely baffled as to why they deserve such treatment and if they are in fact cursed or unworthy.
I do need to point out that my view is based on the sort of society where we’re all free to choose who we want to be with. Also, the way we view relationships does have it’s roots in our childhood and our experiences. Each and every narcissist and sociopath I know has a history of domestic violence or cold and unloving parents. That can not be healed in the context of a romantic relationship. You can’t fix other people, but you can choose to fix and heal yourself, if you are lucky enough to realize that you need healing.
I know my response isn’t terribly warm or empathic, but it did help me a lot to have a more neutral and emotionally untangled view of my own past. It’s good to allow oneself to feel all the feelings as well, but I do think it’s better to draw conclusions based on a more neutral view, and not create a narrative for yourself when you are feeling scared and wounded. Just get it all out and feel it all, and only start the analysis after you’ve calmed down.
May 26, 2014 at 11:24 pm in reply to: Two beeps away from throwing all toys and mattress out of my cot. #57443The RuminantParticipantHello Deedge!
I read your post and wasn’t sure what to say. Left to do other things, thought about other things, and then all of a sudden, for some odd reason, these thoughts came to me. You say that you’re not sure what to say to another person in the same situation, as you’ve become blind to the possible solutions. What if we were to change the object from work and photography to a person, to a relationship? What if someone said that they could only be happy if they were with someone, and for some reason they kept failing at relationships? Do you think they were destined to be unhappy forever? Rhetorical questions, you don’t have to respond 🙂
You give a lot of power to external events, people, even objects, and subsequently become a victim with no power over their own destiny. I don’t know much about karma and I’m not that certain about laws of attraction, but I have noticed in my own life, that the more attached I am to something, the more likely it is that I will lose it at some point. Or perhaps I constantly lose other things as well, but I don’t notice them. In things that do not matter that much to me, I seem to be really lucky in life. Things happen with ease. I don’t know why it works that way, but I have learned not to be so attached to things and events, and to not give away my power. I am an autonomous being amongst other autonomous beings.
Currently, I see joy as something that’s spontaneous. It is my response to a thought or experience. Or sometimes I just allow it to come to me, even if I were to be in the most mundane setting. Just by focusing on all my senses and how great it is to be able to feel and experience things vividly. But if you were to force joy to stay with you permanently or expected a particular thing to constantly give you joy? Kind of like holding a butterfly in your hand so tightly that it would die.
You can decide to enjoy your living immediately, if you want to. There’s no need to wait for the perfect setting, the perfect job, the perfect relationship. You have the ability to feel joy and to feel that you are alive. You don’t have to look at your camera and think “I wish you would work, so that I could finally enjoy life and be happy”. Life unfolds all the time, and there is beauty in all kinds of situations, if you wish to see it. There is beauty even in pain and sadness; human life can be so vivid and fragile in the same time. I know we are so used to numbing ourselves, because there is so much of everything happening, that it can be overwhelming. I guess that’s why it feels so good to really be present and open all the senses and experience life as it happens.
- This reply was modified 10 years, 7 months ago by The Ruminant.
The RuminantParticipantOh hi!
I didn’t get any kind of notice about someone mentioning me over here, and I stumbled across your post by accident whilst browsing through what’s been going on over here! 🙂 I wasn’t clicking through every thread, but I did click on this. How funny.
I wish I was some sort of master Buddhist who was also super efficient, but truth be told, my days are not that different from what you described. It bothers me a lot. The good thing is that it is not as bad as it used to be, and that is because I’m living more and more in this world and not just in my head. My coping mechanism as a child was to escape in my dreams and fantasies, and I have always been more of a thinker than a doer. So, it’s no surprise that I am able to fool myself easily and create an alternative reality; thinking about doing something all of a sudden becomes a thing that I’ve already done, even when I actually haven’t.
The only way I can think of getting out of that and more into actually doing things is to just be more humble and appreciate the reality, knowing that things only get done after you have done them. Sometimes things feel overwhelming, and that’s when it’s good to just take a moment and relax and try to focus on just one small thing at a time. What I do not recommend is attempting huge changes into your habits. That is unrealistic and will likely lead to even more feelings of loss of control, when you’re not able to to do (and you won’t be able to do it).
I also see my struggles as those between an unruly child and a grown-up who’s trying to get the child to do things. Force does not work, it makes things worse, but being brutally honest in a kind way helps. I must accept that if I want something, yet don’t do anything about it, then I’m not going to get what I want. I know it must sound weird how I’m having to explain to myself these very basic realities of life, but I am doing a lot of self-parenting these days. I am only now learning how to take care of myself and a lot of other things I should’ve learned when I was a child or a teenager or even a young adult.
Anyway, I think it goes back to the same basic things: being mindful, being compassionate and embracing reality.
The RuminantParticipantHi Dez (@hakom)
Sorry, I have had a rather busy week, and I haven’t had a chance to get into the right mindset to participate in this forum.
I’m not sure if it a good idea that I would speak on behalf of your husband, even if I feel like I might be similar in some sense. I personally appreciate transparency, but unfortunately, it’s not always that simple. For example, would it be a good idea to tell him that you have looked into his e-mails? That would be transparency, but at what cost? I honestly do not know.
Honestly communicating your needs is always a good thing. “I need to feel safe in order to attempt opening up, and I don’t feel safe when I feel that there is a threat to our marriage” for example. OK, that was a lot of “feels”, but the threat isn’t an actual fact, but a feeling. It doesn’t make it any less valid. Intimacy requires trust; trust in yourself and in your partner. I do think that you need to build trust towards yourself, and one good way to do that is to be as authentic as you can. It really does build your self-esteem and that helps in trusting others as well, since you know that you can always fall on your feet. Don’t let your fear to take over and rule your life.
I’m sorry, I’m probably still not in the right kind of mindset to express myself more thoroughly.
The RuminantParticipantHow about a sort of “passive” approach? If your mind is already on overdrive, then trying to add more things might be too much. Simply refuse to think further any of the thoughts that come to your mind. Instead of trying to tackle every one of your thoughts, just nod and let them go. Or, interrupt your thoughts. Ever been interrupted constantly? After a while, it’s almost impossible to finish a sentence or even start one. Same goes for your own mind. Just stop the thoughts again and again and again. After a while, the thoughts stop being so intrusive.
I also think that it would be terribly important for you to take a break from Facebook. It’s not good for you. I was away from there for a long time. When I went back, after a while I started to notice how it deteriorated my mind. I was constantly somewhere else, not in my own life. Seriously, at this point, it would be easier to take away one negative thing than to try to compensate for it with extra activity. Especially if you find it difficult to focus.
Those two things require much less energy than you might think. You don’t have to introduce new activities or habits.
The RuminantParticipantDear lovely Dez,
Let us for a moment put aside the other possibly developing connection and focus on you. I really wish telepathy was real so that I could show you what I see and feel and wouldn’t have to type it all into rational sentences 🙂 There’s a lot I want to say.
“I feel like what I really need is space and time to reconnect with myself, to get my joy and inspiration flowing again, to find my center, before I can meet my husband in a really good space. Like I need to take care of a deep inner healing and not sure if my husband has the patience to hold my hand through it.”
I agree, that you need to take care of a deep inner healing, we all do, but it also seems as if you are only seeing worth in a being that is already strong and healed when connecting with other people. I don’t think that’s the case. If you would go to your husband and say “I feel scared and confused, but I want to open up to you, to be vulnerable with you. Could you please help me?” then isn’t that also creating a deep connection and intimacy? Healing each other can also be extremely intimate, and chances are that he needs healing and nurturing as well.
I think you are somehow not seeing your own capabilities and power in all of this. As if you only could have two states of being: either being defensive and appear strong, or showing your vulnerability and being completely weak in that moment. Are you afraid that if you open up, you’ll feel so raw that all kinds of scary feelings come to the surface and it not only overwhelms you, but your husband as well, and you end up becoming defensive again? What if you talk about this fear honestly and rationally before you try it?
Also, your husband is not your only source of love. You have children, who look at you with admiration and do not judge you. You are free to open your heart when you are with them and allow the love run freely back and forth. You can also love yourself. I personally had the most profound spiritual experience when I was in a support meeting and we were talking about not allowing love in. I was listening to another woman talking about it and I realized that it was I who did not let love in and that the problem was not that I wasn’t loved. The love was there, I just didn’t allow myself to have any. So in that moment I decided to change that and try. I decided that I would let my guard down and let the love in. I sat in my chair and focused on my heart and focused feeling compassion towards myself, like I would towards some other person. I also said quietly in my mind something like “please love me”. I felt this huge surge of energy flowing in. I wish I could say that it felt great, but I was so scared and felt quite nauseous 🙂 But I was determined, and just forced my muscles to relax instead of being tight, as they always were, as I was shielding myself. That love has not left my heart, and it changed everything for me. The point of my story is that we are the gatekeepers to our core and what nurturing gets through and what doesn’t. If we block love and care, then we’ll slowly wither and become even more desperate for someone to love us, to see us. But how can they love us or see us if we keep blocking the entry? A romantic relationship is not the only way to get nurturing love and a deep connection.
Now, it sounds like your willingness to be open-minded is clashing with your heart. You don’t have to accept any kind of extramarital relationships, regardless of their nature. I personally don’t think that there is any value in forcefully pushing oneself to accommodate a relationship pattern that is not suitable for you. That said, it would be better if you could think about such things only after you are in a place where you feel safe and secure regardless of other people. Where your source of love and safety lies within you, and is not attached to other people or events. That’s when it’s easier to judge whether something is appropriate or not. When I said that I like it that you are able to look at the situation with such calmness, I didn’t mean that you should just disband your own needs and feelings to accommodate the needs of your husband. I just meant that it is scary for the other person as well, if someone attacks who they are out of fear. For example, I like to be friendly with all kinds of people. It is in my nature. I am curious about people. If I was in a relationship where the man felt threatened by me being friendly with other men and he would try to solve the situation by trying to force me into changing my whole being or shaming me because of who I am, just because he would be scared, then that would be terrible. However, if he would tell me openly that it scares him when I am friendly with other men, and it concerns him what might happen, but would allow me to make the decision of what to do about it, it would be completely different. And if my loved one would be scared, then I would do anything in my power to make him feel that he was safe and loved in our relationship. The difference is not only in either being forceful or not, but also in showing one’s vulnerability. Being open, instead of being defensive. I think that it’s quite universal, that people react favorably to another one being open and vulnerable, and they react with defensiveness to other people’s defensiveness.
I hope you’ll get something out of all of that 🙂 Just, don’t be so hard on yourself and don’t compare your soul to the soul of another person. How your soul dances might be different to the other woman’s, but it is not any less enticing. Besides, you are his wife and the mother of his children. Your soul is the one he wants to see and be intimate with.
- This reply was modified 10 years, 7 months ago by The Ruminant.
May 17, 2014 at 11:24 pm in reply to: How to deal with people who think the world of themselves… #56466The RuminantParticipantMing,
Is it OK if I pass on an advice that was given to me, which made a huge change in me?
Be mindful of the words that you use to describe things. Back in the day, I talked about myself using less than lovely words. Sometimes it was in the form of sarcasm, but still. I was told to stop doing that. I wasn’t allowed to talk about myself in a negative way anymore. I agreed and stopped myself every time I was using negative words to describe myself. I was really surprised by how much I used those words and how many times I had to stop myself talking badly about myself. I didn’t even start any kind of positive affirmations or anything like that. I simply stopped the negative talk. Over a surprisingly short period of time, it made a huge difference in me. I had no idea how much the words I used had affected my being.
So, when you use words like “self-centered halfwits”, the anger will stay with you and you will continue to take it personally. It does not add anything of value to your world view if you use words like that. Force yourself to choose other, more neutral words to describe people, including yourself. Honestly, it does make a huge difference in your own well-being. The old saying “if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all” isn’t just about being polite in a social situation. It can also be about your own well-being.
The RuminantParticipantHello Inky,
I don’t think I would know what I would do in your situation. It’s impossible to fully understand the underlying dynamic. But I could offer thoughts based on my own life and what I’ve witnessed in other people’s lives.
I have daddy issues, mommy issues and all kinds of issues 🙂 My parents were/are emotionally immature. My father was an alcoholic and absent in his own world or angry, and my mother has been more like a friend than a mother to me. She doesn’t know how to hug or be nurturing. I realized that all this is extra painful when I think that a parent should be the mature one, nurturing the child and being there. But then sometimes I think that they’re still just flawed people like the rest of us, who also had a tough time with their own parents. Only at my father’s funeral did I find out a lot of the heartache that he had to go through as a child, and compared to his own father, he actually did a better job at being a parent than his own father did. Of course, that’s not going to change things for me, but it is easier to understand why he was the way he was. He never told me, or tried to excuse his own behavior. He was proud and tough, yet very weak and vulnerable.
I’m not a parent, so I don’t know if and how that would change a person, but somehow I am thinking that not everyone will miraculously change from being unable to grasp the concept of love into someone who would have infinite amount of love in them. We have been sold the idea of a nurturing mother and a strong father, and compared to that image, how many regular people can actually live up to the expectation?
Regarding money and fame, I have seen how it complicates lives. I have friends who have grown up rich and are clearly quite lost and emotionally crippled. It changes a person when you are trying to create authentic connections with others and what you get in return is fake ones, just because you happened to be born into a family of wealth. On top of that, people who seemingly have a lot aren’t allowed to complain or show their suffering. They have things most people want, so there’s not going to be any empathy for the regular human suffering. They have to learn how to bottle things up and not show their feelings. If they do show their feelings, there’s the danger of either being ridiculed (“you have everything and you’re still not happy, you should be ashamed of yourself”) or being taken advantage of. Also, men who have rich and powerful fathers and are wealthy not due to their own actions seem to have some of their own issues with manhood. They couldn’t create their own lives and their own wealth. They were given a path and an obligation to be something great without actually having the incentive to go forth and be great. I have one male friend who handles his father’s business, and it is clear that the father is still dominating everything and not allowing his son to do things freely, yet still expects him to do great things. He also has been given money, but it’s still tied to his father, so it’s not really his. It’s not something he earned and made for himself. His being is that of a man who’s been castrated, so I wouldn’t expect him to step up and be a man when expected.
People also seem to not understand that being present is one of the greatest gifts one could give to a child. I think many people think that providing material wealth would be enough. My mother still says to me that nobody has been as loved as I was, yet I really don’t see it that way. Our definition of love is different. So it is possible that a person could think of themselves as being a great parent, doing what they are doing, and still not meet the needs of the child.
I guess my point is that even parents are just people. Personally, I find it really liberating to see my parents as regular human beings with their own issues. If I compare them to the ideal of what we think a mother and a father represents, I immediately become bitter and resentful. Why didn’t they give me what I needed? They should’ve known. Yet clearly, they didn’t, and any discussion about it is just too much to handle. So, I guess it’s better to accept that it is what it is, and take the more compassionate route. If I’m aware of what I need, then I can do that for myself now. Spending more time waiting for mom to turn around and hug me is only going to prolong the pain for no good reason.
Sorry for blabbing on about myself and other people and not about your situation, but it was the only way I could express my thoughts on the subject. I guess it’s such a personal subject, that it’s difficult to talk about it without thinking about my own life. I can understand the pain of a parent not being present, but to harbor hope that they’ll fix it some day is just feeding the flames of the pain.
The RuminantParticipantHello Dez,
I actually don’t have an advice for you, but I wanted to commend you for how calmly you are approaching the matter. I am actually kind of like your husband 🙂 I can relate to what you are saying about him. So, I am looking at this situation from another perspective, and the way that you say how you understand his needs is just really very lovely. For a freedom loving and curious person, it’s really scary to be confronted by someone who does not want you to be that way. So your understanding is very much appreciated, at least by me.
What is it that you need? What do you want for yourself? It seems that you want him not to slip away, but that’s about maintaining status quo. If his desires are deep connection and intimacy, then what are your desires?
The RuminantParticipantHello Joe,
There is a problem in the notion that another person would complete you and that they would fill a void within: they can never continuously fill it exactly the way you need it to be filled. There is no perfect fit like that, that could be sustained. So, eventually you would run into a situation where you’re no longer content for what ever reason, and need to look for the fix again from elsewhere.
Also, if you are looking for a woman to make you whole, does that mean that what you are offering to her is half a man? Wouldn’t it be nicer to be able to offer her a complete man to begin with? 😉
There’s a little bit of idealization of love in your story. The idea of the perfect partner, the idealization of what it was like now that you don’t have it anymore, buying a ring and planning to travel far to make her yours… This kind of mindset will always leave things just outside of your reach. In your mind the perfect something exist, so the actual reality that is in front of you isn’t as appealing. But perfect the way you imagine it does not exist, so you’ll forever be seeking it.
Fortunately, it is possible to reverse this mindset, and realize that you already have everything that you could possibly need within you. Then it’s just about sharing that with someone else. You can look at meditation practices as a spiritual thing, or you can look at them as practical actions taken to allow your brain to grow so that you could have these realizations. To be able to be emotionally mature and to love like a grown man.
You should also love yourself in a humble way. To accept yourself as you are and accept that you are loved. To let love into your heart and let it grow. You said that you have unconditional love towards the girl who is now gone. I understand that we can have different kinds of descriptions for different things. My idea of unconditional love is that you are so full of love and compassion yourself that it will flow towards other beings, without care of who is in the receiving end. It’s not specific to one particular person, because if it was, it wouldn’t be unconditional anymore. It would have the condition that the person you love is the person you think that they are. If they would be someone else, the love would stop.
It would be great if you could cultivate your mind-heart connection in a way that you could have that love in your heart regardless of who you are with, and to understand rationally how to use it. Instead of great drama and soul mates and love greater than life, you could find such joy and perfection(!) in the most mundane things in your own life and in the life that you are sharing with another person. I’m not the right person to discuss about how to cultivate interpersonal relationships, as I’m still personally struggling with that one, but you should start with yourself anyway.
There are couple of books I’d recommend to you.
One is Buddha’s Brain by Rick Hanson: http://www.amazon.com/Buddhas-Brain-Practical-Neuroscience-Happiness/dp/1572246952
The other is How to Be an Adult in Relationships by David Richo: http://www.amazon.com/How-Be-Adult-Relationships-Mindful-ebook/dp/B00HZ374KY
Other than that, I’m not going to tell you what I think you should do. I hope that you can start a journey of personal growth. When you learn how to be yourself, your whole self, you’ll know in your heart and in your mind what you should do.
May 16, 2014 at 12:44 pm in reply to: How to deal with people who think the world of themselves… #56418The RuminantParticipantI’m glad that you had a revelation 🙂 As someone who used to be really passive-aggressive and manipulative, I know that light-bulb feeling. Get ready for another one. How to express anger? You say “This makes me really angry”. It really is that simple and about being clear and honest.
Perhaps you had thought that it was somehow better and more appropriate to use words that buffered what you really feel and think. It really isn’t, and you might be really surprised by how people will react to genuine communication. That said, genuine communication does not mean being rude and offensive. You can still be kind and lovely. Just clearly communicate your needs and feelings.
Another side of passive-aggressiveness is trying to make people behave in a way you want them to behave. Please remember that you are only responsible of your behavior and if someone reacts to your honest communication with disdain, it is their problem. Luckily, I have noticed that it’s surprisingly easy to let go of people who do not fit with the authentic self. It was harder to let go of those who did not fit with the false self. I don’t know why, but it’s pretty great 🙂
Look for books about codependence. Passive-aggressiveness is really prevalent in that condition, as is fear of altercation.
The RuminantParticipantDear Turtletiger,
I’m sorry you’re feeling so lost. It is, however, a feeling, a mental state, and those never last forever. You have left behind a comfortable nest and went out into the big world. What if you look at it as an adventure? Things happen and we get hurt during our journeys, but it doesn’t have to mean that your whole identity changes. Your identity and purpose and your whole being is still with you. It is you. You are focusing on the environment and perhaps mistaking it for who you are?
I can understand that being tired and in pain makes it so much more difficult to focus and be strong. Those are the times when summoning any energy to deal with things in a calm and rational way feels impossible. I understand that. You need nurturing. You can also nurture yourself by taking things slowly, if you can, and choosing to talk to yourself in a kind manner, instead of focusing on how scary it is to be so far away from home. Give yourself a break from the fear now and again.
I would like to gently plant a seed of thought as well. The way you describe yourself and your situation suggests that your identity has been attached to your surroundings even before you moved. So when the surroundings change, you face an identity crisis. Perhaps there is a reason that you are finding yourself in this situation? You are not your job, your friends, your house, your fiance or the potential of being a wife and a mother. You have a personality and a mind, a heart and a soul, which are all unique. You won’t find out the secrets of those by interrogating yourself and forcing yourself to reveal who you are, but you need to pay attention and listen. You can choose how you spend your energy, and instead of worrying about external things, you could perhaps spend that energy on nurturing your being. See what comes out. How will you light up as a person? What does the heart and soul of a Turtletiger look like when it lights up and bursts into joy?
Don’t be so hard on yourself.
The RuminantParticipantAllow me to tell you about how I see how our problems in relationships might develop.
When we are children, we’re pretty open to new experiences. We might be shy, but the need to explore the world around us is more important than not doing it due to any fears. Unfortunately, things will start to happen which cause pain and fear in us. We grow up with adults who have their own baggage from their lives and those affect us as well. We need to feel secure, safe, shielded from all of the harms, and so we need to develop some kind of defenses for ourselves. Some people need them more than others. Some grow up in environments that are very harsh and the only way to survive is to dissociate from reality or become very aggressive or create a completely different personality and so on. People adapt and they will do what ever they can to survive.
Those learned survival tactics stay with us. Passive-aggressive manipulation techniques in relationships or even violence or what ever we have found to be useful. Unfortunately, those tactics can make our lives, and the lives of those around us, a living hell. But they are our shield, and we don’t let down our shields easily. The more fearful, scared or distrusting child there is within us, the less chances there are that we will let our guard down. It’s not even just that, but a fearful person will gravitate towards other fearful persons and when those two try to start letting their guards down, it’s rather likely that one of them will freak out and go back on the defense, thus hurting both of them. Relationships become impossible.
You say that you wish that he would’ve said something before. Chances are that he actually did, but you didn’t hear it the way he meant it to be heard. These defense mechanisms work very efficiently, and if they detect that you might be under any threat, being told that you are in the wrong or need to change, the fear of abandonment or rejection can be so big that it’s easier to just not hear what is being said and go into denial. More and more even more elaborate defenses must be built in our psyche to cover for the mistakes made by us. It’s like building a house on top of a very shaky base. You don’t want it to collapse, and if you can do a bit more shoddy work here and there to prevent the gusts of wind from taking the whole thing down, you’ll do exactly that. You’re not going to take it down and start over…unless there is no other choice. That is why any event that will make you completely collapse is a chance to start fresh and build something much more solid this time around. You wouldn’t have changed if he had just asked. You know that drastic measures were needed.
When defenses are taken down and you end up exposed, raw, hurt and confused, it will feel surreal and scary. Your mind will try to desperately figure out a way to adapt and find some way to shield you. Be mindful of that. Don’t take the easy way or the childish way. You’re not a child anymore, so you can build yourself up again with the help of rational thinking and a compassionate heart. Be kind to yourself and let love in. Nurture your soul that’s been exposed. You will no doubt over-think things, but it’s also good to allow everything to just be. Wu wei, non-action, can be very healing to someone who always tries to control everything.
When I said that I was never able to let go of him, I meant that I tried to force myself to “let go”. But it was impossible, so I was in this fight with myself. “Let go. I can’t. I must. I can’t.” In the end, I found it more useful to just let go of that fight. What is, is, and what will be, will be. I couldn’t forcefully let go of the thoughts and desires, and if I tried, it was the same as suppressing them. Any such aggressive action will be met with a reaction. Like a pendulum swinging violently back and forth. So it’s better to let things be. Just being still, even when your heart is aching so much that you want to howl, is very rewarding. By all means, howl if you need to, but don’t try to control the feeling. Allowing the feelings to just pass through your whole being, and then noticing that you didn’t die will help you understand how unnecessary many of the shields have been. I think a lot of us are so afraid of painful feelings that we just block them. So they stay within us, never released.
Don’t be surprised if you open up these floodgates and you are starting to get flashbacks from other past events. Just allow them to come and go as well. They might hurt you on their way through your mind, but they will pass. They’ll only linger if you get obsessed with them.
I firmly believe that you can over time change your life. You as a person will not change, but you can change the way you respond to yourself and to the world. Your unique personality will light up in a different way when it’s fueled with love, as opposed to fear.
- This reply was modified 10 years, 7 months ago by The Ruminant.
- This reply was modified 10 years, 7 months ago by The Ruminant.
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