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I hate this feeling of being pathetic at work

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Viewing 9 posts - 16 through 24 (of 24 total)
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  • #198073
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear gj:

    You are very welcome and thank you for your good wishes. Please, do post anytime.

    I was thinking, regarding the fear that you “decided to let go of”- how you behave is more under your control than how you feel. As you interact with your boss who, reads to me, is inclined to criticize, and as you interact with anyone else at work, see to it that you don’t behave fearfully, best you can.

    When we act fearfully, some people who have some power over us, delight in it somehow and are motivated to maintain it. Your best bet, I believe, is to not act fearfully, best you can (will take practice), and as you gradually succeed in doing so, your boss may be less likely to continue being as critical and discouraging as he has been.

    anita

    #198081
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    I agree with what you just said, anita. My team mates did that initially. I am still the junior most. When I had joined a year ago, I was very afraid and it definitely showed. My mentor especially liked to be rude and critical and extremely disinterested in guiding me. I don’t blame her but for me it added to existing stress. I had to add her to a list of people I needed to please.

    I also realized that fear comes out of being attached to external things. I still am in the same financial situation as before but I can’t seem to be afraid of losing my job anymore. I actually met with my manager and told him a few things about perhaps why ” the up and down ” was happening and he seems to be really philosophical and told me that losing a job will need a lot of things to go wrong and I just have to keep working and not worry about that. I don’t even know how I found the courage to do that. And it may seem like I set myself up for my manager to play with my fears but I sincerely don’t care anymore. I also realized that I had to have this meeting to let him know the real reasons for my under performance, which made me also realize that I cared more about what people would think if I lost my job than the consequences of losing the job because even I know I’m not hopelessly unemployable and only a year old as an engineer. Even the explanation I gave him was to “correct his perception” of me as a person, not as a team member. In fact, I’m able to approach other people for help now because I realized that this fear of judgement runs really deep and I need to step out of my comfort zone to overcome that. I want to know if that makes sense and if you have advice on this for me because my goal in writing here was not just to “fix” things at work but better myself as a person. There are so many people that do brave and courageous things, I want to at least break out of these fears which tend to nag me daily.

    #198117
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear gj:

    I think that you did an excellent job becoming aware of these two separate fear: the fear of what others, like your boss, think about you and the fear of losing your job. Reads like the first fear is greater than the second and I am not surprised that it is.

    I am not surprised because the reason for the first fear is that you received criticism already, as a child, correct? So that danger is something you are familiar with, as it already happened many times.

    On the other hand, I don’t know if you lost a job before, so that danger may not have happened yet.

    It is my experience that although we do fear what didn’t happen yet, we fear the most what already happened.

    What do you think?

    anita

    #198331
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Yes. I associate failure with being a let down. I have never been ambitious in nature but often find myself chasing things I don’t need and I guess that’s from being told that I must do so. It makes me feel like a failure when I disappoint those around me but I have to now distance others idea of happiness and findmy own.

    But honestly I don’t think I’m meant to have a passion. I don’t feel that way about anything. I’m most happy when I’m by myself and calm. So, I guess in a way the only thing I must absolutely do, I do – like going to work. I wonder if this is wrong, that there is nothing I want to work towards. I’m working to do a good job each day but not really aiming for a promotion. I just hate the concept of growth = acquiring more things. Have you ever faced such a thing? They say you should be better tomorrow than today but in what aspect and what should the end goal be? I have no desires and this often makes me feel isolated like I have nothing that I want to achieve. I also feel extremely lonely and depressed if I have to fight for things “I must get” but don’t care about . I feel like my life has no where to go. How should I grow? Where am I going wrong?

    #198343
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear gj:

    I think you are anxious, suffering from ongoing fear, for many years. So you stay away from what increases the fear, or what feels like fear.

    To feel passion for something, that is feeling excitement, an emotional/ neural stimulation. Fear is an emotional stimulation and a very unpleasant one.

    I have suffered from a lot of anxiety for decades. So much so, that anything that causes excitement/ stimulation, like eating something tasty, also causes me anxiety. One neural excitation increases the other- a taste excitation increases anxiety, so does physical discomfort. Anything but calm has been difficult for me to experience.

    What do you think?

    anita

    #198371
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    What you just said brings up a few questions for me –

    What should we be doing to have passion that is positive? Is it really okay to not feel passion?

    Also, anxiety doesn’t always need fear to get triggered, right? Even boredom can do that. Have you done anything that has helped with your anxiety?

    Lastly, I’ve realised that whenever there could be a conflict, like with neighbours, about their noisy pets , instead of choosing to stay away right away, knowing they don’t change – having spoken to them before, I think for a really long time as to whether I should be doing something otherwise I’m being taken for granted. My mother rationalises that some people don’t change and let’s it be  but for me I often feel like I’m acting  out of the need to feel like I have power. To be honest, it isn’t even about what the pets are doing now, it is anxiety over how they may get nastier in the future and how I will have to feel bad then about not doing anything. I feel really  powerless as a person, so I try to avoid challenges and don’t think I can face them. So in this case, my fear of the future makes me want to do something when what I am actually experiencing in the present isn’t even the true problem I want to solve. I basically want to predict all the things that could go wrong and prevent them, because somewhere deep inside I’ve decided I won’t be able to handle things going bad. And I don’t know how I decided that about myself. DO you have any insight?And, I think this feeling of powerlessness is coupled with wanting to be acknowledged as competent and respected. Does that make sense? Does this tie into anxiety as well?

    #198387
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear gj:

    Feeling powerless, or believing that you are powerless is tightly connected to anxiety. When you believe you don’t have power to take care of yourself, to be effective, you are afraid because without the power to take good care of yourself, who will…?

    This is why a child needs to see his parents as strong, powerful, so to believe that they can take good care of him and feel safe. An adult has to see himself as powerful enough, adequately powerful, so to feel safe.

    To experience passion that is positive you have to learn to endure the anxiety. It takes a long time and work, and quality psychotherapy may be required- it was in my case. My therapist at the time started his work with me on what is called “emotional regulation”, the skills and practice that I desperately needed to reduce my own distress when distressed, guided meditations were the first in such practice.

    There is no easy solution to anxiety (my definition of anxiety: an ongoing fear, unsettled fear that gets triggered again and again). Fear is very powerful. You cannot settle fear by rational thinking. It takes work and lots of discomfort along the way, lots of it.

    But much progress there has been for me and there is hope for you too, if you take on the healing process. I am still at work on the matter.

    anita

    #198411
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    I will have to start working on my anxiety. It has actually started spilling over to everything I do. Thanks for the advice 🙂

    #198415
    Anonymous
    Guest

    You are welcome, gj.

    anita

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