Home→Forums→Relationships→suffering from 8000+ days of being single
- This topic has 16 replies, 10 voices, and was last updated 9 years, 3 months ago by Wendy.
-
AuthorPosts
-
August 22, 2015 at 6:36 am #82168deus ex machinaParticipant
So, I’m really alone. I know there isn’t much anyone can say but be stoic and proactive about improving yourself, don’t feel sorry for yourself, be thankful for what you have. But I go to the Gym three times a week; eat healthily; joined several dating websites (and messaged over 50 people); work on improving myself as much as I can (although some days just staying alive is an achievement); and nothing changes. I’ve tried going to nightclubs, volunteering, Gym classes. I’ve tried more anti-depressants than I care to mention. I am trying but it never gets me anywhere. It’s not being alone but being lonely / unloved that hurts – especially juxtaposed to the idealized serene happiness granted to many people I know, and millions(billions? of others). I know that I’m ugly, short, and have a lot of pain inside me from the past (I’m trying to do what I can with what nature has given me) – still I’m a lonely and confused human being, I’m suffering from all this time without anyone to share my humanness. So I know complaining won’t change anything, and I’m trying to make the most of what I can change, trying to not let these intense feelings destroy me. Yet the sadness, the contrast, the unfairness, the futility of constant effort for nothing, of having such strong feelings, of being a loving person, a compassionate and caring person, and having nobody to love, of having no respite from this solitary ordeal, is too much to tolerate at times. All this pain, the mind-killing misery of this endless torment that I endure, of being wired for love and having no outlet. I don’t know what to do about it anymore, I just needed to write this. Maybe someone can give me some advice, help, or suggestions for how to cope with this.
Thank you
August 22, 2015 at 7:41 am #82169AnonymousGuestDear deusexmachina:
My input:
1. Regarding the “serene happiness granted to many people I know, and millions (billions? of others”- not in my world. A very small percentage of people, VERY small, experience “serene happiness” on an ongoing basis, or often. This is what YOU see but not what is. This is what I saw before I woke up to reality and saw what is out there.
2. Many of the suggestions widely accepted by society are damaging to one’s healing process. One such is to not feel sorry for yourself. It is unhealthy to not feel empathy for one own suffering. Self empathy is necessary, not something to scorn.
3. You are suffering from the affliction of billions- not enough love. You did not receive the love you needed as a child and that unmet need, unmet valid need is what is hurting you.
4. Your intellect is good. You write like the intelligent person that you are, but your awareness of your emotions is what lags way, way behind your intellectual understanding.
5. What does your user name mean? deu- sex- machina???
anita
August 22, 2015 at 11:34 am #82176deus ex machinaParticipanthey Anita, Thanks for your suggestions.
I appreciate you took the time to reply.1. I know that people aren’t as happy as they appear. But part of my problem is the prolonged unending deprivation of various experiences so fundamental to the being human, such as: Love, relationships, and meaningful connections with other people. I know everyone has problems they have to deal with but at least many of them have someone help them get through it. I feel like this because of such a contrast in my situation with many people I know who are in long term relationships.
2. I try and love myself. In a non-narcissistic way that says: “you are deserving of happiness and love, you are a human being, you have been through a lot, and you are doing so well considering what you’re working with.”. But it’s so difficult to love yourself when it feels like nobody even cares you’re alive, and you feel completely invisible. Anyway I agree that society causes a lot of unnecessary problems, but think from my experience pity is a bad thing, and empathy and respect for yourself is important. But it’s a difficult line between not holding your emotions in, having respect and compassion for yourself, accepting you have serious problems, and not falling into sadness. I’m trying to work on this.
3. it is a common problem in this world to feel a lack of love, but most people at least have a partner, or friends – someone to help them when they are hurt. I don’t have anyone and that makes it much more painful. It’s good that you agree it’s a valid need, and that I’m not totally unjustified in being hurt by a lack of love. It is very painful but I have to live with it, maybe one day someone might see something in me.
4. Thank you for saying this about my intelligence. And I think you are right about my lack of emotional development and understanding it’s definitely a longstanding problem. I’m working on it, but it takes time.
5. Deus ex machina (God from the machine) – from wikipedia: “The term has evolved to mean a plot device whereby a seemingly unsolvable problem is suddenly and abruptly resolved by the contrived and unexpected intervention of some new event, character, ability or object. … it can be intended to move the story forward when the writer has “painted himself into a corner” and sees no other way out”. I used it as the idea that I’m hoping for a miracle, some unexpected intervention to resolve the emotional pain inside me. As if crying to the skies: “please some unexpected twist save me from this nightmare.” but also I know that as impossible as it seems I have to save myself.
No need to reply to this all, but one thing it would be interesting to know is if you have any suggestions for how to improve awareness of my emotions.
Anyway I will just keep fighting and growing from all these experiences. And try to keep improving myself as much as I can.
Thank you again,
DXMAugust 22, 2015 at 12:21 pm #82177JMDParticipantDear Duesexmachina,
I only just registered on this site so I can reply to your post. I found it as I was googling “how to get over heartbreak”. I write this to you now as I lay on my couch with a huge hole in my heart. The void, this loneliness, is unbearable. Loneliness has to be one of the most excruciating human emotions. You wear it day in and out. It can be with you everywhere you go, and in everything you do. You wake up with it, eat, work, and go back to bed and sleep at night with it. I want you to know, without doubt, that you are not alone in this. Loneliness is like a pandemic. A bi-product of these ‘independent’ societies we’ve built, when in reality humans were never meant to live alone or be independent of one another.
I am not ‘ugly’…actually, most people would classify me as attractive to one degree or the other, and while I’ve been lucky and blessed enough to have had love in my life, and more so having the love and support of family and friends, I too am lonely. Painfully lonely. Being physically attractive helps, but I promise you, it does not guarantee much less loneliness. Don’t put all your focus and despair on your physical appearance.
It hurts me to hear you call yourself ‘ugly’. Please don’t reduce yourself to a negative label of a physical appearance. Surely there is so much more to us than what our physical body looks like? I assure you I’ve known ‘beautiful’ people who are far ‘uglier’ than you say you are. People see in you what you see in yourself, and as such project. That is why, over time, some people become either more or less beautiful in each others’ eyes. Be careful of how you label yourself. Words matter.
It’s hard not to let this loneliness take over my life. So I too do as you do.. I keep trying. I focus on work, join clubs, try to reach out to friends. Try to keep busy and focused on the positive. That I am healthy. That I have a home, a job, time for myself, etc. That I dont live in war and am better of than most people on this planet living in dire conditions. At night, instead of letting this loneliness consume me, I started to meditate and practice gratitude. It worked for me. A lot. Gratitude started to slowly creep into my days as well and has made me happier.
There is not a solution to loneliness. It can only go away when you find someone to share your life with, and even then, only when that someone is right for you. Not common at all. Even millions of couples live in loneliness, each one trapped in their togetherness, uncared for, and not knowing how to get out.
I cant tell you how to become un-lonely. All I can tell you is to remind yourself how un-alone you are in this. How its the norm, and not the exception. And also to tell you that, instead of fighting it, I tried to find ways to make peace with it, and get through it. For me, meditation was one of the answers. Trying to connect with something bigger and more whole. Trying to find more peace. And gratitude for what I do have instead.
August 22, 2015 at 2:11 pm #82182InkyParticipantHi Deusexmachina,
I agree ~ don’t call yourself “ugly”, even in your own mind! God didn’t create “ugly”. That said, there are things we can do to become MORE symmetrical, which is where “Beauty” lies.
With Attraction, it all comes down to chemistry. I’ve known models who I was NOT attracted to. Then there were guys who looked more like Bridge Trolls that were so sexy to me! One time I went to my sister saying, “Why do I like him? He’s BALD!” You know?
I’ve noticed that the more busy you are, the more people come to you. The less you need ’em, and the more you give ’em, they will come! I would get a cat and run a group. Seriously. When you’re the group leader, especially of a spiritual group, you will attract people who see beyond the physical. What could be more alluring at a party than when you say you’re the head of a meditation group? Or a volunteer leader who wants to save the world? Well, it worked for me!!
Good Luck,
Inky
August 22, 2015 at 4:10 pm #82183deus ex machinaParticipantjoyd, I’m sorry about your problems. I hope you will recover. I felt like I loved people but they never felt the same, and I know even from such a one sided affection how painful having intense feelings for someone can be when relationships fall apart. Still regarding loneliness there are several things I think need to be separated. Firstly of the intensity of the subjective experience. Second the fact that the feeling of loneliness is separate from circumstances. Thirdly not ever being in love, and fourthly the duration of loneliness.
so one and two are connected – being alone / feeling lonely affects people differently. As you said you can be in a relationship and feel lonely. As Robert Pirsig said “Even in the presence of others he was completely alone”. This I think is true but my problem is not just that I’m alone, but that I have intense emotions, I have a high sex drive, and deep need for intimacy and closeness that is being completely unsatisfied for prolonged periods of time with no signs of any future resolution. These two issues of being alone and feeling alone are the crux of it, and there are many causes.
The third and fourth issues intensify the first two. They make it more painful, distressing, and tortuous. My loneliness is magnified by the weight of many thousands of days alone, a burden and misery that innumerable hours of exposition could barely scratch the surface of. And of never experiencing love: of having the illusion, dream and possibility that a relationship would resolve these emotions.
Maybe you will disagree, especially given your current situation, but I think that it’s better if you experienced requited love in the past than having never experienced it. At least you have some magical memories of moving moments of intimacy and connection to appreciate when things get dark. You got to experience love, and I know it can hurt, but what hurts more is never knowing, never even being wanted. Being so utterly undesirable despite your best efforts, of working so hard, and trying, of struggling and suffering and trying to repair your shattered mind into some vaguely socially acceptable non-damaged state. And constantly wondering whether finding the right person or people would be the cure for this sickness. I think it would, and that belief, really is the source of my sadness. but – “When you’ve never been moved it’s really hard to move on”, and well more than anything I want to feel for myself this central human experience, before I potentially dismiss it.
Anyway I have a troubled past and I’m trying to create something from the ruins of my mind. I know there are things to be grateful for but it all pales in significance to the feelings of love. For the quixotic optimist and lover inside me that never gets to express any affection or deeper sense of appreciation for another person, it is a fate worse than death to endure a life without love – yet that is precisely what circumstance, bad decisions, emotional problems, and depression have lead me to.
meditation is something I agree helps, and I think a quote by Victor E. Frankl is highly relevant here:
“Between stimulus and response there is a space. In
that space is our power to choose our response. In our
response lies our growth and our freedom.” – Victor E. Franklmindfulness meditation gives you an awareness of the space, of your choice in responding to stimuli. It liberates you from the tyranny of default, and from the unthinking response to the situation, and is of much help in taking control of your mind.
this I think is related to being lonely, and how you are not in control of your own mind and thoughts. Yet even here it is difficult, pain is necessary as it catalyses change if it’s intense enough it is a body’s response to a problematic situation. The problem is that often it causes too much pain and you can’t function or grow. So being lonely isn’t even intrinsically a bad thing, but the problem is how intense, prolonged, and unresolvable it can be.
Making peace with it is mostly what I have to resign myself to right now, accepting that nobody wants to be with me, and moving on with my life. I think connecting to social movements is a good idea, and culture is deeply connected in these feelings. The norms of monogamy, consumerism, individualism, capitalism, it’s all a toxic influence in the collective mind.
To conclude I would say that unless someone saves you, you have to come to terms with being lonely before you can function again.
Sorry I wrote so much, I still have much more to say, but think I wrote enough for now. Anyway thanks for your reply, even talking online makes me feel a little better, and gives me some suggestions for helping to cope.
DXM
August 22, 2015 at 4:13 pm #82184deus ex machinaParticipanthey Inky,
Yah know, part of me thinks that I’m beautiful and god is in every cell of my body. But I can’t ignore the fact I have been repeatedly called ugly, and that nobody replies to any messages I send on dating websites or even looks at my profile, that I never meet anyone in nightclubs, and never seem to find anyone who is romantically interested in me. I know my personality isn’t great (as in I’m not funny or confident) but if I was attractive then someone would be interested despite that.
I haven’t been to a party for a long time as I don’t get invited, but it would be cool to start a group I guess. I don’t know how I could start something like that, but it’s worth considering.
Anyway thanks for your help,
DXMAugust 22, 2015 at 8:15 pm #82187AnonymousGuestDear DXM:
You are a very thorough thinker and I would like to thoroughly read your reply to me and to others when my brain is up to the task. I am looking forward to that, will respond by Monday.
anitaAugust 22, 2015 at 9:52 pm #82188StarpennyParticipantHello all. I,like joyd registered just so I could reply. I’m also suffering from complete loneliness. I was just dumped from my partner of 15 years. I’m currently moving to my own apartment, which is completely new to me. I’ve always lived with someone. I had been living with my partner and her dad for the last 15 years. we were a great little family. To top things off I’ve been in a falling out with my best friend at work. I’m quite an intorvert, so that was really my only good friend I could confined in. So over the last two months I’ve been so desperately alone. I keep telling my ex, that at least she had someone new to share fears with. I have no one. Don’t get me wrong. My family actually cares a lot about me, I’m lucky in that way. But I am truly struggling with finding someone to talk to about this deep eating pain inside. I like, DXM have been trying to see things in a good light, improve myself, you know everything this site talks about. I am currently trying to figure out how to make friends, like I said I’m an intorvert, really nervous about meeting new people and doing new things. But I’m trying to learn. Don’t they say if you’re scared, that when you jump. That’s how you grow. I’m trying. But I understand the pain.
Starpenny
- This reply was modified 9 years, 3 months ago by Starpenny.
August 23, 2015 at 8:48 am #82195Smruthi RameshParticipantHey DXM,
Much like some other people here, I signed up just to respond to your comment. I don’t really have a way with words as you seem to, and I’ve spent about two hours trying to phrase this better. I’d just like to say that you can feel free to completely ignore this if none of this applies to you. I’m kind of using this as a way to understand what I’m going through as well. It’s a letter to me, and anyone who might feel like me. It’s not very kind, I’m a blunt person.. I honestly don’t know how to make this sound nicer/prettier.
As I was reading your post and your responses, your way of thinking seemed to resonate with mine. I’m not intelligent enough to be fully aware of the way my mind works so I don’t know if I’m right about this. And I apologize if I’m not.
But it appears to me that some part of you feels as if the world owes you the happiness or the companionship that everyone around you seemingly has. That it’s unfair that you’ve been put through so many days of loneliness when you have so much capacity to love. You’re aware that you’re luckier than a lot of people in the world that have it worse but still, you’ve never felt love for all your life and it’s absolutely not for lack of trying. And almost every day something seems to drive that point home further.
I just recently happened upon the idea that fairness is a human construct. And that the universe is ignorant of it. There is no fair or unfair, there are just our lots in life. If you don’t believe in a God, this might be easier to consider: The universe owes you nothing. Some people find love and some don’t. Some people don’t have arms and some do. But it’s so ingrained in us that fairness is something to be expected. The universe doesn’t owe you love.
You’ve spent a lot of your days dwelling on the fact that you don’t get it while others do- at least in some form or the other. And you’ve built up all this resentment and channeled it into expectations and ideas of love. And you’ve set such high expectations that it’s making you unhappy to even think about love. You’ve been counting all the days of loneliness and keeping tabs on all the times you’ve felt bad because of it that if anything or anyone were to try and make up for it right now, it’d have to be a grand, grand gesture. You’ve been dwelling on this problem so deeply that the problem has sub-problems and you have complicated hypotheses as to the ways in which it affects you. And this now seems to be an insurmountable problem, and what chance do you have at overcoming such a complex situation? And even if you do, you’re still changed by it in ways that might never leave you to be in that socially acceptable non-damaged state.If you can resonate with any of this, my point is that it sucks. It sucks having to go through what you’re going through. There’s no denying how horrible it is. But life isn’t fair to anyone. Life isn’t fair at all, and expecting it to be is setting yourself up for disappointment. It doesn’t matter who’s found the love you seek and who hasn’t. It doesn’t change your life in any way. You’re hurting yourself by constantly dwelling on this issue and finding faults with yourself to explain it. You might be so used to making this problem a major part of your everyday life, or maybe even your identity. And in your situation, it’s very difficult not to. But I hope you can start to try and let go of how much resentment and sorrow and anger it has caused you all along, and how bleak it seems. And stop letting it define such a big part of you and what you think about. You are so much more than your lack of companionship. You must have other passions and joys in life to dwell on. And if you don’t, try finding them! The root may have been your loneliness, but a major problem now is how you’ve let it change you and your life. Maybe if you try and work on that, it will help you with controlling your thoughts and your mind. And maybe you’ll strengthen your love for yourself 🙂
Hope I helped at least a little.
SmruthiAugust 23, 2015 at 9:01 am #82196AnonymousGuestDear DXM:
In my previous comment to you I wrote: “Your intellect is good. You write like the intelligent person that you are, but your awareness of your emotions is what lags way, way behind your intellectual understanding.”
In response you wrote: “I think you are right about my lack of emotional development and understanding it’s definitely a longstanding problem. I’m working on it, but it takes time.”
i have a suggestion on how you can work on your emotional development on this very thread: let go of your very impressive intellect (“rational mind”) and write like a young child, simple language, short sentences, run on sentences, anything. Simple, let the little child in you do the writing, see what results.
that child in you needs to become visible to YOU before you become visible to others (or at the same time). You wrote about your physical characteristics not being attractive- and that may very well be so. But as you know there are physically unattractive people out there with partners who love them. So both may be true: you may be physically unattractive AND you can love and be loved.
Write again, like a child, like the child that you are inside?
anitaAugust 23, 2015 at 2:02 pm #82206deus ex machinaParticipantHi Smruthi
Thanks for your comment. You have a good point about feeling the world owes me happiness. I think it is a childish way of thinking, and something I know is unhelpful to my own development. It’s true that despite knowing it to be unhelpful I still in some way persist in this delusion. It’s difficult because it’s not totally nonsense. A few examples: Someone who works hard today is often rewarded tomorrow. If you have a job and work all day you expect to get paid – there is some correlation between effort and reward. Of course there are counter examples of CEO’s and rich people getting vastly disproportionate rewards for little work, and those on minimum wage working hard all week for no reward. I think love is the same way, to extend the analogy I’m working with very little reward, whilst others do ten times less and get ten times more. That’s the part of me that says: “this is wrong, this is totally unfair, and the world is unjust”. I work hard but it doesn’t translate into anything when it comes to relationships, and I feel like hard work should be rewarded.
To elaborate a little because I think the feeling of deserving is important in how I feel about loneliness: An idea I used to believe completely irrationally is related to my thoughts about this: Everyone has an equal life (not equal in terms of say 5 lovers each, 3 stable jobs, 13000 days of happiness – imagine it more like everyone gets 100000 tokens and each thing has a cost – requited love might be 10000 tokens, being attractive might be 7000, being intelligent 8000 and so on). Some get more love, others get security, others get creative talents, others get happiness. In the end all is weighed up and it would work out roughly fair. That’s what I thought. But there is no cosmic weighing scale that balances out good and bad events for every person, indeed one persons heaven is another persons hell. And the evidence of life in the past clearly contradicts this hypothesis. Someone is living the life your dreams as you are suffering, unwell, and unloved for potentially your entire existence. No cosmic forces are keeping track. There is nothing written down, just blank pages called the future waiting for you to write down the events of the novel of which you are the protagonist. In this sense there is no balance. It’s similar I think to the popular notion of Karma as “if you do bad then bad things will happen to you, and if you do good then good things will happen”. It doesn’t always work like that, but there is some correlation. liars will more likely get caught, people who steal are more likely to be punished, unloving people will find themselves unloved, and so on. Not always but often enough for there to be some truth in the idea. Same with this cosmic notion of fairness: it is sometimes present, but not always. Well, that’s part of the story.
The truth is closer to the statement by napoleon hill: ““Every failure brings with it the seed of an equivalent success.”. There is some kind of balance, but it’s not a cosmic law. For example someone who is suffering if they learn the lessons that suffering is showing them, they too will be rewarded in some way that someone who has not suffered would not be. Perhaps through a better awareness of their own psychology, a deeper understanding of the situation they are in, and the increased motivation to change or grow from the suffering and dissatisfaction.
But this is only part of the picture too. For sometimes accumulated advantage is at play. Essentially because you had opportunities in the past more opportunities come to you in the future. Because you were fortunate enough to be loved then you have a more developed understanding of being a couple, you have a better understanding of how to make love, and how to give love, how to care without being desperate, how to deal with compromise, how to be with another person, and how to be happy together. This is true either way: experience builds upon itself. But if you missed out on love then you might have learned something else instead.
My current understanding is that there are rules to follow in getting what you want, and that no amount of suffering in the past will de facto counterbalance itself and give you some future reward. The universe doesn’t care about how much you suffered, but if you know the rules and act on them you will get what you want. Still there might be a compensation for those who have suffered. That of contrast – someone who has lived and suffered for a long time, when they find a way out they will appreciate it much more than someone who never sank to the depths of despair. Those who know the pain of being deeply alone, will experience even more richly the feeling of love and connection. They will appreciate it more than those who have never known such intense loneliness.
I studied the philosophical concept of justice quite extensively in the past, and the idea that fairness is a human construct is something I agree with. I think it has been documented in other animals too. Most human emotions are a throwback to another evolutionary time, and we carry the baggage of what worked for our ancestors. Fairness is deeply embedded in the human psyche. But it is not embedded in the universe. I agree the universe doesn’t owe me love – it doesn’t owe anyone anything. But I still feel like I deserve it considering what I’ve been through. I know this is not a good way to think as it leads mostly to reinforcing the feelings of bitterness and being cheated by life which are so detrimental to change and progress.
You make some good points and I agree with a lot of what you say about me, even if they are something like Barnum statements. But I disagree with the idea I have high expectations. In a sense my attitude is childish almost like saying: “I can’t get something I deeply desire so I’m going to sulk and complain about how unfair life is” but the problem is the negative effects of loneliness are well documented: Increased risk of suicide, increased risk of death / lower life expectancy, more prone to psychological problems, more prone to substance abuse, etc. That’s where the problem is. It’s not just that I really want it, but it’s a fundamental part of living a contented life. We all know it’s not money, it’s not having expensive things, or being a celebrity that will make us happy. It’s about doing something you enjoy, giving something back to the world, being in love, enjoying friendship, and having a genuine connection with other sentient beings. That’s why it’s so hard to accept, not because I have unrealistically high expectations but because my expectations are so low and even they are too high.
And that contrasted with the fact I see the most cruel, uncaring, unempathetic, philistines who are given someone to love. And a part of me feels bad that some misogynistic wife-beating aggressive brute gets a loving relationship whilst I’m alone. Just for way of context: I have lived this life for too long, ten’s of thousands of couples kissing in front of me, holding hands, laughing and in love. When I go out the few people I used to be friends with are with their girlfriends (two couples and me), them kissing each other and saying they love each other – whilst I sit there with tears in my eyes wishing I could feel that way for once. It’s the ubiquity of it, the caustic social influences, having to listen to people who start every other sentence with ‘my girlfriend and I…’ and having to just accept it for thousands of days without a break. Knowing you’re going to be alone night after night with nobody to tell you that you’re important or loved, or appreciated. It’s something you really have to live through to understand the severity of it. And I know that I focus too much on love, on finding someone to save me from myself. wishing to find someone to give me oxytocin, and dopamine, and for little things that are taken for granted by so many: holding hands, hugs, and prolonged eye contact, affectionate words, and the feeling of being valued. I have over-idealized it in the past, and perhaps I still do, but as I said I’m a caring, compassionate person, and I have human needs that are being ignored. My overvaluing then is the same as someone who was living in poverty might fantasize about winning the lottery, or someone in a wheelchair might dream about walking. Also yeah I have way too many interests but some days I just feel so acutely upset about this all that it’s hard to focus on them when I’m so alone.
Anyway I think my problem is surmountable, but it’s going to take a lot more work, effort, education, overcoming inhibitions, and transforming myself unrecognizably.
Also I have a lot of problems from various addictions which make my situation more difficult:
at times addictions to: Psychedelics, masturbation, procrastination, video games, Youtube, negative thinking. Plus I’m suffering from MDD, have little life experience, have underdeveloped social skills, I’m short and unattractive, have low-self esteem, low self-confidence, negative thought processes, lack of energy, don’t have any friends, I’m too susceptible to negative events, lack self-control, and live inside my head. It’s all connected and I am working on changing as much as I can.To conclude, loneliness is one of the most painful emotions a human can experience. Life is unfair, but a lot of unfairness you have to accept however painful it is, keep working on yourself, and keep trying to change and improve. Things become more fair when you make the most of the opportunities you have.
Sorry for writing so much, I still didn’t get to the root of what I want to express but maybe I explained a little about my understanding and development on the issue, and a little about the idiosyncratic problems I have.
Thanks for your comment though Smruthi, I have lots of things to think about.
DXM
August 23, 2015 at 2:04 pm #82207deus ex machinaParticipanthey Anita,
Thanks for your advice. I agree that often I am too serious, overly intellectual, and un-childlike. And that it would probably benefit me to be more like a child in some ways, such as not worrying about the future, not caring too much about what people think, and expressing myself simply. And it’s good to be reminded that even some people who might not be attractive sometimes get to be with someone they love.
So thanks for your comment again, and I’ll try and keep it in mind when I next get the chance to talk to people.
DXM
August 23, 2015 at 4:30 pm #82208CScripterParticipantI’ve kind of the exact opposite problem.
Well, I’ve been ‘alone’ my entire life, and never really understood the fellow humans around me and this method of cruelty, deception, and drama we’ve become accustomed to treating ourselves and one another with.
Growing up, I’ve been an outcast and abused by my own family in a variety of ways, which made me mistrustful to begin with. I was also overweight, depressed, never smiled..that kinda thing. Taking up smoking when I was 17 didn’t help either.
In my early thirties, (I’m now 34) I got a job as an EMT, lost about thirty pounds, took up gym, got a haircut, started a hobby in calligraphy, quit smoking for the most part and wouldn’t you know it: Women started to straight up stare and smile at me. I wasn’t even looking at them when I catch it.
Please don’t confuse this with braggadocio: I spent the previous thirty years utterly alone and very few friends. I have quite the stark experience to compare it too. I do not claim to be attractive, or that I am everything that is man, or god’s gift to women. I am *very much* NOT. That’s exactly the problem, I don’t know how to react, what to say, how to move forward, et cetera. I become incredibly nervous, and my years of experience in hiding myself while in plain sight renders me mute an having an uninterested air in those scenarios.
One might think that makes them lose interest. Quite the opposite.
Within these two years of this very much new experience, I am not grateful for it. It added on to my lingering depression and self-loathing, and a general frustration towards it. A sort of inner voice yelling at them: “NOW?” In a way, being a man makes it worse because we’re ‘supposed’ to make the first move and be in charge and know what we’re doing. I am none of these things. I have a self-confidence that I did not possess before, but not in this area.
Then, finally as I meditated upon the situation I came to a simple realization. No one needs anyone else for their happiness. I know this on an intellectual level, but could never feel it, understand it wholly. I can’t base my happiness on something I’ve never had. On something that was simply never there in my life. An absence can exist, in the sense that there was something once there. But, if I am whole no matter what, than what was the source of this discontent? Fear? Anger? Projecting my issues onto these smiling strangers?
No.
Though a broken tree is misshapen in the eyes of others, it is perfect unto itself, for it is in the form it needs to be. I was angry with myself because I was not accepting the form I was. If there is no such thing as perfection; at least from a human position, than there is no such thing as imperfection. Which makes everything perfect as they are…..sorry, if that’s confusing.
Since then, I have found it easier to smile back and go about my business. Instead of turning a simple jaunt to a Starbucks into a game of social dodgeball, I have been a bit more at ease, and have found my tension reduce dramatically. I have no plans of making new friends, and go on dates, and have relationships with anyone, but…I’m also not planning not too as well. These mental fictions were what were driving me up the wall. My projections of what a simple smile was ‘supposed’ to mean. The anxiety of not being able to meet what I assumed were the expectations of others.
Perhaps if there is something about yourself that you are having difficulty accepting, this may be why. Or I have completely missed the central issue, and I do that. I can’t really see things in plain sight.
Good luck!
August 24, 2015 at 12:28 am #82237AnonymousInactiveDear Deusexmachina,
A relationship will not save you or solve the other issues that you need to work on. Intellectualizing it is one thing and allowing yourself to truly feel the discomfort of your state is another. Your pain is far too deep-rooted for a relationship to fix it. Consider the problems you mentioned –
” Also I have a lot of problems from various addictions which make my situation more difficult:
at times addictions to: Psychedelics, masturbation, procrastination, video games, Youtube, negative thinking. Plus I’m suffering from MDD, have little life experience, have underdeveloped social skills, I’m short and unattractive, have low-self esteem, low self-confidence, negative thought processes, lack of energy, don’t have any friends, I’m too susceptible to negative events, lack self-control, and live inside my head. It’s all connected and I am working on changing as much as I can. ”These addictions, lack of life experiences, lack of social connections are leading to magnified negative thinking, arent they? I think you’re looking to fix the outside without really understanding whats bothering you on the inside. You’ve gotta let go of living inside your head and really understand what is there in your heart, what is the real issue.
PS: Dating websites and nightclubs are usually places where people are first judged on looks mostly. But we all know that there is more to people than meets the eye and secondly, beauty is in the eyes of the beholder. I have seen number of short and attractive men find partners while seen several highly attractive guys not get partners. The question then is, what really works and more importantly, what stays? I would say only you. Love helps you to experience newer emotions and its beautiful but it doesnt solve the stuff inside. Those burdens are yours to carry and resolve. Your partner could be incredibly loving and caring but they cant compensate for the old habits, imbalances and poor thinking habits over the years.
Regards,
Moon -
AuthorPosts