Home→Forums→Relationships→Improving self esteem weakens your attachments and improves your contentment
- This topic has 24 replies, 9 voices, and was last updated 8 years, 1 month ago by Brav3.
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October 19, 2016 at 11:37 am #118502MiaParticipant
Ashley,
That’s an interesting question. While I sometimes do feel regrets for all the things I didn’t do (getting a higher education, travelling), these are things that I deep down inside know that I didn’t have the guts or the energy to do at the time anyway. If anything, my husband have given me a sense of that more is possible than I believed before. While I’m a dreamer, he is a person that gets things done. I think that how much a serious relationship takes away from our youth depends a lot about what we wish for our youth to be. The part that I feel a bit that is missing is a time to have nobody but myself to take into consideration, if you know what I mean.
In the end I believe that for whatever choice we make we sacrifice something else and that most of the time there is no truly wrong choice, as we gain/learn something either way. I honestly think I would have been alright today no matter which choice I would have made at that point in my life. Not that I don’t have issues, I still battle a lot with insecurities and self esteem issues, but I know that I’m the one who is keeping myself stuck in that swamp and I’d probably be in it anyway.
The question you need to ask yourself is which path is more likely to give you the sense of self worth and self esteem you seek and deserve.
October 19, 2016 at 4:09 pm #118514Brav3ParticipantHi Jay-me,
What happened in your past, is your past. You made mistakes, like every other human being does on this planet. Its gone, its over. Do not look at your past and think ‘If I could have done this or that’, you cannot change your past and you cannot get rid of it either. You basically see your mistakes as something very normal, nothing more and you stop every single time when your inner voice critic beats you down for your mistakes.
When there’s a cycle of dating wrong people again and again, there’s something we are missing that’s meant to be learn. What we feel about ourselves, we project out to this world. When we do not value ourselves or have poor self worth, we project that to the world and attract certain people. Similarly, when we are happy with ourselves and have higher self esteem, we project that out and attract certain type. What you perceive in your external world is just a reflection of your inner world.
So, solution is simple. Give up the idea that there’s something out their that will make you happy or make you feel worthy of love. Look deeply inside, work on your mind so that you feel worthy and loved without anyone or anything. When you start getting close to that, you will break the delusions. Then, everything will falls into its place on its own.
Source of your happiness and your suffering is inside you .
October 19, 2016 at 4:39 pm #118516Brav3ParticipantPrakashraj,
Yes, there are millions and millions of people going through the same issues, regardless of their age. I remember watching a documentary on loneliness where I saw a teenage girl in school, a guy who moved to new city for studies, a young girl going through breakup, a young lady who’s been single for a long time, and few old people feeling loneliness and were suffering.
In eastern philosophy, loneliness is an expression of ego/self where one assume himself/herself as ‘poor little lonely self pity me’ and look for meaning externally. If instead of looking externally, we sit with this feeling and look inside our own very mind, we will be able to see that it disappears very fast. If we go further deep, we will find sacred silence or peace.
Coming back to higher self esteem or worthiness. When we value ourselves highly, we do not feel desperate to find relationship, we definitely do not stay in unhealthy relationship. Why? Because we feel more content just by valuing ourselves. Therefore, our feelings do not take over from our reasoning and we take smart choices in life. Also, when we value ourselves highly we see no need to fit in or others.
Can you see, its all attached to each other.
October 19, 2016 at 4:45 pm #118517Brav3ParticipantAshley,
Interesting quote.
Who are you? Who are you without them?
Who are we without our Bf or Gf or kids or parents or friends? Are we just someone’s something? Someone’s partner, someone’s blah blah….is that all?
You are only defined by you not by the people around you.
Brav3
October 21, 2016 at 1:05 pm #118650FayeParticipantI’ve reached a similar conclusion to my way of approaching relationships, but I think I may have gone too far! I love going on holiday by myself, going to music gigs and doing sports. I have so much freedom to do whatever I want. But I have great friends and a beautiful girlfriend, but I either forget to invite other people or I don’t want to in case they flake out or ruin it. When working on accepting loneliness I never thought I’d have to also work on accepting company! It’s a tricky balance.
October 21, 2016 at 11:55 pm #118682Nina SakuraParticipantBrav,
Thanks for the post. I want to add that I have learned immensely from the previous relationships that didn’t work out – I have a poor estimation of my abilities as a person still but I never felt I wasnt entitled to respect and proper treatment. Having a good sense of boundaries also helps I think. Wouls never settle for foul language, infidelity, lies and a host of other stuff. I left my first serious relationship after 6 years when he disrespected me and things fell apart. I still loved him but I knew I deserved better than this. Maybe that’s the self esteem you are referring to.
The biggest lesson from a current long distance relationship is support and understanding – you both have to work as a team and trust eachother, help eachother grow as people.
Loneliness is inevitable in life due to various reasons – with or without people, it isn’t a bad thing though, just our mind’s way of signalling that something needs to change within us – our view point or the activities we undertake.
Regards
NinaOctober 23, 2016 at 5:06 pm #118773Brav3ParticipantFaye,
Yes, there’s a whole alot of difference between being self centered and seeking solitude to find center within. This is where things get tricky as one has to find balance according to values what is acceptable and what is not.
For instance, if you think that you and your friends have similar values and you feel relaxed around them, where you are allowed to do mistakes, be fully authentic, be vulnerable, where you aren’t seeking their approval than whether you invite them or not, it actually shouldn’t matter. But if you are not inviting them because you think they will ruin it then the question comes is why? Are they negative and draining people? Or do they get negative sometimes only?
We all get negative sometimes, we all ruin things sometimes. So, accepting people of who they are with healthy boundaries will be a good approach. But if acceptance is based out of fear of loneliness or people pleasing or seeking approval or feeling unworthy than it will only bring resentments later.
Brav3
October 23, 2016 at 5:28 pm #118774Brav3ParticipantNina,
Thanks for adding.
Yes, what you said is the ability to value yourself, self worth or self esteem is what I am referring to.
Hats off to you for valuing yourself and saying No to the mistreatment.
What I’ve learnt from my last relationship is that I took too long to say ‘NO’ to the poor treatment. Why? Because I afraid to be alone. I had this need to be loved. I was looking for my worth in my ex’s love for me. So, out of fear, I put up with repetitive mistreatment/crossing healthy boundaries for a long time. It costed me to lose my sense of worth further. And when she left me, I felt like I am the most undeserving person on this planet.
I didn’t see the fact that I attracted my ex to be in my life, because I didn’t see my worth. My poor sense of worth brought her to my life. And by not saying ‘No’ to the poor treatment, I caused further infliction to my self esteem.
We can avoid such prolonged suffering by learning to be alone and finding our self worth within us.
If we do these two things, we will feel contented because there’s nothing out there that will make us worthy and we can let go of those people who we attracted because of poor self esteem, far quickly.
All the best
Brav3October 23, 2016 at 7:32 pm #118780humourParticipantGod bless your heart for writing this post. Yes, all I care about is contentment. It has been so terribly hard for me in this regard. Right now this is trickling down to all areas of my life, example, at work.
Take care. All the best to you brav3.- This reply was modified 8 years, 1 month ago by humour.
October 23, 2016 at 10:50 pm #118791Brav3ParticipantHi Humour,
Thank you and I wish the same for you to. Here’s something I learnt from a Buddhist Nun.
We think of happiness is of something we have to find like a needle in a haystack. We think it is out there, somewhere. Jobs, dollars, Bfs or Gfs etc. Buddha disagrees. He says that’s not practical because of unreliable and impermanent nature. He says that if you seek happiness through them, it won’t last.
It doesn’t meant that you stop enjoying them, it only means that you should try and change your interpretation of these objects.
All the best to you to
Brav3 -
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