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Unhappy

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  • #104014
    Josh Fleischman
    Participant

    Where to begin…

    I had a very turbulent childhood. My father was a rampant alcoholic and it was common for him to come home obliterated drunk and become physically abusive with myself and my mom, this happened for probably 12 years. Once he was out of the picture, my mom started dating again and my sister and I kind of took the back burner. (I distinctly remember a time where I locked myself in the bathroom, thinking my mom couldn’t leave without kissing me goodbye – I was wrong.) Another time she was with a guy for several years that was verbally abusive and she was finally going to move out (next door to my grandparents), we had everything moved in, I was so happy. She called me into the living room and there he was, the guy she had been with, and she looked into my eyes and said, “Don’t you believe in second chances?”. It crushed me and I just started running down the street, crying. That was the day I moved in with my grandparents – which are great people, they’re probably the only reason I’m not a huge piece of shit. During my entire high school career I was very introverted, all I would do is play World of Warcraft as an escape from reality, I did have friends although, that were like me. For now, let’s fast forward.

    Here I am, 25 years old and generally unhappy. I’m on a pain contract with my doctor because of chronic back pain and I constantly finding myself taking them because I want to be brought up to some level of happiness – any level of happiness. I smoke marijuana constantly because it takes my mind off of all the things that I don’t like. I have a great girlfriend, I graduated with my associates last December, and I’d like to think I have a pretty good head on my shoulders – yet I never wake up in the morning and think “Wow, everything is good right now.”. No matter what, I find myself staring at the ceiling waiting until the time comes for me to go to sleep so I don’t have to keep thinking. I’m already on pain medication and sleeping medication, I don’t need to add Xanax or whatever else “they’re” going to try to throw at me, I don’t want my happiness to be chemically dependent, I just want to be happy.

    Thanks,
    Josh

    #104021
    Prasanna Seshadri
    Participant

    Hi Exoid, Life is extremely turbulent or harsh for most of us. First of all, I would like to know whether you are seeking spiritual advice or just want to get rid of your present problems. If you are seeking spiritual advice, I am there to share whatever is known to me. I think medication is one of the best remedies that need to be continued till we get over our problems. You cannot quit medication without proper guidance. Well, coming to the point of other aids to help you out of your present condition, spirituality is certainly a good option. Spirituality is self disciplining and gaining awareness of the truth and Realities of life. It is simply making use of the right techniques based on well proven laws of causation, to change our life from misery to supreme undivided bliss. Service orientation, sacrifice, non egoism, non possessiveness, self control or control of the senses, self sufficiency or self reliance, forgiveness, humility, Non hatred towards all the beings, being undisturbed by the world and remaining without disturbing the world, etc. are all some of the spiritual virtues one needs to consciously cultivate or inculcate in one’s own personality to lead a dynamic and peaceful life combined with dexterity. The choice in life is either live a life of ignorance with misery and destruction of the personality as the result or living a virtuous life of self discipline where in you work your way towards your ultimate self development or self realization by gaining the wisdom of life. One is the path of the pleasant, where you ignorantly chase illusory and unrealistic instant pleasures of life, get enslaved by selfish egoism and desire ridden Mind and end up in unrecoverable troubles and problems in life. The latter is the recommended one called

      the path of the good

    , wherein the individual leads a self disciplined life of purpose and meaning by living in harmony with the designs and laws of Mother Nature. the first step in life to take up the truly evolutionary

      path of the good

    is to set a higher selfless ideal like Self realization and pursue it with dedication, sincerity, devotion, perseverance, consistency of purpose till the ideal is achieved. The general caution is to avoid developing result orientation and complacency in the chosen path.

      One may have to wake up in the early morning between 4.00 A.M and 6.00 A.M to study, reflect and contemplate on spiritual subjects or Vedanta philosophy, meditate optimally within one’s present capacity and practice introspection for not more than 5 to 10 Minutes before going to sleep.

    #104024
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear exoid:

    I think you’ve done pretty well functioning in life taking into consideration your childhood experience. Like you noted (in your words), your time with your grandparents may have been your saving grace.

    You want to be happy.

    This is my understanding of Happiness following decades of misery and a healing process of over five years: when I was miserable, very anxious, depressed, troubled, I imagined happiness to be a “happily ever after” condition, as in fairy tale books, the sun always pleasantly shining, all is good, all is okay forever more. Fast forward, I learned that this kind of happiness is what a young child experiences at times, not knowing yet betrayal and rejection. I learned that this kind of happiness is a fantasy for an adult already hurt and exposed to the cruel realities of life.

    Now, I don’t use the word happiness or happy. I don’t like this word because to me, it suggests fantasy. What I am experiencing is less, way less distress and I feel stronger, in control of my emotions and at a growing peace-of-mind about all the many, many things about life that I can’t control.

    If any of this speaks to you, please let me know and we can continue to communicate.

    anita

    #104025
    Josh Fleischman
    Participant

    Hey counciousseeker,

    I guess you could say I’m looking to get rid of my present problems, I’ve never really been a “spiritual person” as far as religion goes. It’s hard for me to identify WHAT the problem is, and I think that’s the part that is driving me insane. It could very well be that I am the problem, as I’m unable to properly identify a specific channel where my unhappiness comes from. I guess the part that confuses me the most is that I wasn’t always like this, it just kind of seems that it came out of the blue.

    Thank you for replying and I look forward to our conversation.
    Josh

    #104027
    Josh Fleischman
    Participant

    Hey Anita,

    Yes, I desperately want to be happy. I like how you look at happiness, as kind of a “fairy tale” instead of an “end-all” feeling where nothing else can go wrong in the world. How would you describe your “feelings” now? It is just that you’re more content without trying to chase after the “happily ever after”?

    Thanks for replying and I look forward to our conversation.
    Josh

    #104030
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Josh:

    I am taking what I learned through over five years, daily, and putting it in the following, explaining what I believe is making you unhappy and what you can do about it. This is a scientific explanation and i believe it is the objective truth:

    When you were neglected, unloved and mistreated as a child by your mother, throughout all those incidents, days, months years, thousands of connections between neurons in your brain were made. These connections are referred to as neuropathways. These connections include logic and emotions. These connections do not dissolve just because time passes. The hurt, the fear, the anger of Josh the child are stored in those pathways and you experience them still, as an adult.

    It is possible to undo these connections. And it is possible to make new connections that will last. This is done by healing. It is a long process. As you read this sentence right now, connections are made in your brain, making it possible for you to read and understand what I am typing.

    When you lie in bed at night, after a good day, let’s say, and you feel anxious. You wonder why, perhaps: what is wrong with me? Why can’t I be happy?

    The answer is something like that (I don’t know the specifics, so this is an example of what it can be): when you were a child you went to bed each night wishing your mother was there with you talking to you gently, kindly, putting your mind at ease. But instead as you went to bed, you could hear her arguing with the man in her life, maybe you could hear them being loving and intimate. You felt distress then. Your distress in that experience was a result of multiple connections between neurons in your brain, making that experience as it was.

    As you lie in bed now (still the same example), those same pathways are activated, triggered by the very fact it is night time and you are lying down.

    What do you think so far?

    anita

    #104115
    Prasanna Seshadri
    Participant

    Dear Josh, Nothing to worry in life. If God closes one door, he opens many other doors for his people. It is for us to keep our eyes open and get to the open doors. The other thing in life is that if an arrow is pulled back in the bow, it means it is being prepared to get launched towards its aim. Similarly, when God makes you face troubles in life, it is just like pulling the arrow back, he has greater plans for you. Bhagavad Gita says that we are our own creators of our destiny. We can make ourselves through virtuous living or we can mar ourselves with indiscriminate, selfish, desire ridden and egoistic ways of living. We cannot blame anybody for our miseries and we must be ready to accept our sole responsibility of our present condition. I can see emotional abuse in your life, but a man is born to smash all the problems that he faces with the weapon called wisdom of life. As Anita has told in a scientific perspective, it may be a little hard to change our ways in life due to neural networks that have developed over the ages. I am certain that with the right perspective, with a right change in attitude and approach towards life, you can easily overcome those problems and lead an exuberant life of service, sacrifice, duty consciousness, universal love, kindness, compassion, forgiveness, self control, self sufficiency, humility, fearlessness, bliss, contentment and above everything a life of dedication to a higher cause like self Realization which is above selfishness, egoism and egocentric desires of the Mind which are the prime causes for the problems we humans face in life. You need to gradually take to methods that help in your own evolution or self unfoldment of the personality. This may not be very attractive to begin with, but I am certain this can help you out of your problem. Arthhur Schopenhauer, a German philosopher with interest in Vedanta philosophy says that

    “It is difficult to find happiness within oneself, but it is impossible to find it anywhere else”.

    The right method in life is to find out the real cause of our problem and then finding a solution. I have told you what generally is the problem for every one of us, human beings and the solution to get over the problem. The onus is on you to take it or leave it. Never lose hope, for there is nothing called perfection in life and even the richest and wealthiest people who seem to be enjoying the luxuries and comforts of life, do not have a clue about their true purpose of life. Most of them go through experiences which we think are pleasurable, but in reality they do not get lasting happiness or eternal bliss that we all humans seek in life. The simple reason is that they have no clue about the right attitude or right approach towards life. With proper sense of values along with appropriate sense of proportion, you can rise above your problems and even achieve perfection in life. Again the Bhagavad Gita says that “One has to elevate himself by his own higher/supreme Self within; let him not destroy himself. For, One’s own self is the friend of his own higher/supreme Self and one’s own self is the foe of his own higher/supreme Self”. My Swamiji (spiritual master) says that one must have the yearning, a burning desire within oneself to evolve to higher states of living, to better ways of living in peace, contentment and true happiness. Nobody else can help, but one has to do it himself. Right efforts shall bring the right results. As we sow, so we reap is the law of life.

    #104118
    Michelle Scott
    Participant

    I had a pretty bad life too. Neglect, abuse, etc. I had a child as a teenager, went through abusive relationships. Even some points in time when I felt that I was dying inside. There was nothing left of me but a kernel under a pile of ash and rubble. I was constantly ill.
    And then I got divorced. I found out that I could support myself, with my own money (in fact, I had more to spend on myself). I could do whatever I wanted to, like walk along the river,or just chill on my balcony with some hot chocolate.
    Do I need to get away from my thoughts and my memories? No.
    I have learned that depression is not an illness, but a way that your body is trying to help you figure out complex social issues. I didn’t have depression, I just had some issues. I also wasn’t getting enough calories sometimes, and other times I was severely dehydrated. There are also many other things that make you down too, like drugs, alcohol, and junk food. Monks don’t abstain from unhealthy eating for moral purposes alone. It really does a lot of good to drink more water, eat more plants (fruits, veggies, grains, nuts), do less drugs, and move around more often. That’s why a lot of athletes or military or people who run a lot aren’t as sick.
    Also, yes, the past can suck. Yes, we can develop bad habits because of it, but we can also let go of it and be a better person. I’m okay with my past, and I am that much more grateful for the awesome present I have now, because I know for a fact it’s been worse.
    So advice about dwelling on the past: a trick some cognitive behavioral people suggest is that you can dissociate your emotions from traumatic memories. You’ll always have the memories, but you can lessen the emotional response. You play the memory in your head, but backwards like you’re rewinding. It slows down, and loses its color, and gets smaller and smaller like you’re walking away from a black and white tv until it diminishes into a speck. Then you replay the memory with full color, but make up a better ending. This can help you with the emotional side.
    Also with dreams, you can make them better when you are just waking up, by making up stuff to finish the dream. And as weird as it sounds, a sleepy brain accepts more unrealistic stuff than realistic. For example, I have many bad dreams about abuse and cheating. But anymore, if I wake up from one of those, I make up that it was an alien body snatcher that’s purple and has six eyes and has to wear an atmospheric suit, but has to feed off of anxieties, so I tell it to go to Wall Street and make numbers go down (way easier than what it was doing impersonating one person). Then I just have to find my boyfriend who is in cryogenic stasis somewhere. It works.

    But I guarantee that if you continue to feel sorry for yourself because of bad decisions someone else made, you won’t change anything.

    #104200
    Catherine
    Participant

    Hi Anita-
    I am following this topic and read your reply about “Unhappy”. What techniques did you use to heal?

    #104202
    Anonymous
    Guest

    * Dear catinvegas: glad you are asking about my post. Because this is the original poster’s thread, will you start a new thread with your question? It can be a very short thread. I will be glad to elaborate there on what I wrote on this thread.
    anita

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