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Trying to change but failing

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  • #63615
    Rhiannon
    Participant

    Hi

    I’m 32, nearly 33. I am in a very loving relationship so that’s good. I joined my partner as he took a position in a foreign country, I took the time to do a conversion degree so that I could change career when we go home. However, I have completely messed up my exams. It doesn’t matter how it happened. Just one shot and that’s it, over. I’ve spent all year unhappy, uncomfortable because I stand out and we live in a country where people stare all of the time, I’ve stayed in studying and never got that quite right either. My partner and his friends are brilliant, intelligent, high earners. I’m not, my family aren’t. I’ve been living away from my friends for years, this is just another one to add to the list, I haven’t made new friends, from the others I have drifted. Apart from my partner I have no one to confide in and he is great but doesn’t like it when I am upset so becomes awkward. I can’t speak properly any more, I have lost the words. I have no money of my own, no home, no possessions of any kind except a few clothes and I am told I don’t dress well and that I should find some different items. I am told to focus on my mind and body and try to work on my confidence but for years it has all been going wrong. I am trying to change but I keep failing, I am in a different time zone so have noone else to talk to, I have turned to social media to communicate with people. I had hoped so much that the degree would be my way into a professional career but I’ve messed that up, all on my own. I don’t know what to do next. I don’t have anywhere to go, literally. I don’t know what to do.

    #63648
    sgtducttape
    Participant

    Hello Rhiannon, I have been reading alot of posts here for a while and just listening and observing and felt compelled to reply to you after reading your post. The very first thing I would suggest is for you to stop and breathe. Reading your words gave me visions of a person spinning and flailing in a near sense of panic. So just stop, breathe, try to find some calm. You seem as if your emotions are wound very tightly and this is not good for anyone. Shedding our stress and relaxing for even just a moment can help to re-focus our energies. These stressers become noise clouding our thought processes and complicating our decision making process. So stop and breathe.

    Your wording sent a feeling of an impending time constraint when one was not mentioned. As time has passed it seems you have elevated your anxiety level and increased your expectations of yourself. Then you say “I have messed up” and “I keep failing” and “I stand out” and “I have lost the words” and “they’re brilliant and I’m not”. It seems for you that time is running out and you can do nothing right. This cannot be farther from the truth. The actualization of thought and words are manifesting themselves by command. You are in charge of yourself and the only person you need to be better than is yourself yesterday.

    I have the power, and so do you; so does everybody. The power is choice. When we are sad or happy or frenetic or slothful it is because we have chosen to be so. Understanding ourselves and loving ourselves is not conciet but being our own best friend. Many people will do nearly anything for others and ignore their own self to their own detriment. If you cannot be your own best friend, how can others befriend you? It is said that to have a friend you must first be one; and I believe that means being your own friend first. The person in the mirror needs you to be that friend. It doesn’t sound as if you like who you are at this time and if this is true it also contributes to overall negativity. That is part of the path; knowing yourself, liking who you are, being happy with who you are, and choosing happiness. It sounds so simple doesn’t it? Happiness doesn’t happen by accident. Looking inward, understanding yourself and actually knowing yourself is a hard thing to accomplish.

    Find the things you like about yourself and nurture them. Little things that bring you joy can become triggers to unleash hidden happiness. As an example, at one time I liked Hawaiian shirts; the colors and patterns made me feel brighter. I bought a new Hawaiian shirt every week to reward myself for being a good person. After several months I had a lovely collection of these shirts and just seeing the section of my closet litterally exploding with vibrant color and flowers made me smile. Did you catch that? Smile. Smile for no reason. Smile like you are about to burst out laughing when no one is near. Look at the person in the mirror and give them a smile. Sometimes I smile around crowds of people, a really idiotic grin, as I walk around I think about those people wondering what I am smiling about. Sometimes I end up cracking myself up to the point I cannot help but laugh. Then they really look at me wondering why I am laughing; which almost becomes a circular event feeding my frivolity. I smile when I speak to people over the phone, they can’t see it but I believe they can feel it. I’m smiling as I type this; I feel my words are happier that way. Happiness doesn’t happen by accident.

    So stop. Breathe. Begin to understand yourself and like yourself. Be your own best friend. Choose happiness.

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