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  • #228129
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Niv:

    One more thing, if you would like to share more about your childhood, that toxic environment you mentioned, as well as your current relationship with your mother, if you have one, please do.

    anita

    #228141
    Niv
    Participant

    Anita, here are answers to your questions:

    1- to how many women did you clearly express interest in,  in your life so far: ughhh, directly like declaring feelings or asking them out, I think I’ve expressed interest in 25 or so, if I count the guys as well (from earlier in life). I need to point out that for the longest time I didn’t think about dating that much, and whenever I was rejected I just sort of died a little inside but moved on. With online dating I sometimes got successful in getting dates (mostly people that asked me out) and I didn’t count them on the above number. Within 1 year I went to about ~15 dates, all rejections.

    `

    2- Also, did you attend events or venues known as meeting places for lesbians? Yes, and most of my friends from outside the university are LGBT so my non-academic universe was very LGBT. Even the religious community and the volunteering activities I attend are full of LGBT folks. Let’s say there was no shortage of meeting LGBT people. Interestingly enough, many people I meet through my work are also LGBT, abnormaly. I just attract them haha. These last few months I have been more withdraw because I’m overwhelmed and need some time out (I just don’t have energy to invest in this anymore), but these past 4 years were well served in meeting people.  Ah, and again, I did invest some time in online dating as well as I mentioned.

     

    3-One more thing, if you would like to share more about your childhood, that toxic environment you mentioned, as well as your current relationship with your mother, if you have one, please do.
    I grew up with grandma and mom. Dad wasn’t in the picture as he was married to someone else at the time I was born and afterwards didn’t really try. Grandma is borderline so she has always been verbally and emotionally abusive and saw me as the enemy for my mom’s affections, mom was like a friend, or a partner, or a sister but not a mom, she never really taught me anything at all (stuff like values or how to take care of myself) but it’s because she doesn’t know for herself either. Family always excused my grandmother’s abused by either minimizing or saying we just had to be patient because she’s old (she was in her early 70’s when I was a child, now she’s 97 and still the same behavior). My mom’s sisters and their families are not super healthy either. I am still getting to know my father’s side of the family that has other problems on its own but it’s different because I am doing so as an adult.

    I was a very angry child because I was neglected emotionally by my family (again, my mom couldn’t provide basics for me including even my nutrition, not because of money but because she also doesn’t really take care of herself in that way), didn’t have anyone else in my family with the same age as mine so I was pretty alone too. I didn’t have a lot of social skills and had to develop on my own. My mom doesn’t have any friends and also barely leaves the house so I didn’t have a lot of other kids to play with other than school where I wasn’t very accepted. I also was a lot smarter and school-oriented than other kids and it was difficult to form bonds because of that. I never fit into the culture of the country I’m from.

    I live in a totally different country by myself so I only talk to my mom via facetime, but I do so quite often. We are more like friends than mom/daughter, she sometimes will listen to me but can’t/won’t provide me advice especially on very emotional matters. She complains a lot about my grandma (who also doesn’t behave like a mom to her) but I’ve been trying to cut it off, sometimes I try to explain to her all the things I’ve learned about life, to see if she wakes up and changes her reality too. I don’t talk much with other members of the family, just occasionally.

    #228191
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Niv:

    “Very Done with Life” is a powerful statement, very, not just done. “I’m the one that never got to be loved” is another powerful statement. And another: “The only reason I haven’t ended my life is because I still have hope of justice for me one day, that I have been there for so many people.. but the Universe has not been there for me”.

    I will repeat your story in my own words, including quotes (it helps me process information to do that):

    Your childhood home consisted of

    1. a grandmother who was in her seventies. She was “BPD… she has always been verbally and emotionally abusive” and saw you “as the enemy for my mom’s affections”. (Her abuse was excused and minimized by other family members).

    2. a mother who was lost, dependent on her mother for necessities,  didn’t know how to take care of herself, let alone you. She “couldn’t provide basics for me including even my nutrition, not because of money but because she also doesn’t really take care of herself in that way”. She was depressed and “emotionally absent in general”. She didn’t have any friends and barely left the house.

    To you, she was “like a friend, or a partner, or a sister”. Presently your mother still lives with her mother, 97 year old, in your original country.  You often talk to your mother via facetime. “We are more like friends than mom/daughter”. She complains to you about her mother, your grandmother. She “can’t/won’t provide me advice especially on very emotional matters”, and you “try to explain to her all the things I’ve learned about life, to see if she wakes up and changes her reality too”

    Living with the two, you were “a very angry child”, didn’t have anyone your age around at home, and at school you weren’t “very accepted” because you were “a lot smarter and school-oriented than other kids and it was difficult to form bonds because of that. I never fit into the culture of the country I’m from.”

    At 30, you are “totally alone in life”. You had dreams of “being a successful person in academia”, but you are afraid you  might “have to put down” this dream. You “never had a romantic relationship”.

    You expressed that you were “always usually considered as someone who doesn’t follow norms or the social and that is something that always sort of made me proud” and that in the past you were “trying to fight fights that weren’t mine or trying to be some sort of savior”, as well as being the “female version of a nice guy”.

    My input at this point:

    1. You clearly expressed interest in about 25 people and rejected by them. At 30 year old, I don’t think there is a woman in the modern world who was not rejected by at least 25 people. You were rejected by 15 people in one year of online dating. I was rejected by many more than 15 during my time online dating. I should have asked you how many people you rejected. People rejecting and being rejected is a normal part of dating. For some of us being rejected in the dating world is devastating. For others, it is a necessary and normal part of dating. During my online dating I expected rejection and aimed at meeting as many men as possible (for coffee, in a public place), knowing out of a dozen, maybe one will be interested and maybe I will be interested as well.

    I am inclined to think at this point that you are one of the people for whom any rejection is devastating and very painful, so much that you don’t see rejection as a normal part of dating. Each rejection activates your childhood experience of rejection.

    2. Congratulations for surviving your childhood! It is interesting how so many of us don’t thrive there, in our childhood, we survive it the best we can. I had a BPD mother myself, and it was horrific.

    You were formed during your childhood in the context of the interactions between your grandmother, your mother and you. The emotional experience you had then is the same that you keep experiencing, including the rejection, depression, loneliness, and including your love of school/  academia.

    Looking closer at those interactions, based on the very little information available to me (and I am sure the following is simplified, but basically, it may be true nonetheless): your grandmother was the enemy (you wrote that she considered you her enemy, your word, so I figure you considered her the same). Your mother, on the other hand, was your friend. Again, it is a word you used. I understand that your grandmother was the loud, aggressive one and your mother was passive. In this context I think that your empathy is with your mother, you want to help her. But you don’t want to be passive like her. You want to be strong (what appears as strong), like your grandmother. Thing is, in that context you were not attended positively by either one: negatively attended to by your grandmother, as competition for your mother’s affections, and not attended to at all by your mother. All your efforts as a child to help your mother did not bring her attention to you, did not make her love you.

    Alone and lonely, I think school was were you thrived, academia. Later you made it your life. You even want to date a woman in academia. Recently you’ve been discouraged about your academic career and I suppose that intensified your depression and desperation.

    I will stop here and hope to get your input regarding what I posted to you. Remember the simplification here- it will be impossible to figure out everything, not here and not even in 10 years of excellent psychotherapy. There are simply too many neuropathways in our brains to be able to map. I am looking for the basics, the basic neuropathways within the complex massive webs of pathways.

    anita

     

    #228217
    Niv
    Participant

    Anita,

    yeah I am aware these are powerful statements, and also that they are nonetheless true. I have endured 30 years of this crap, I am tired, and I expected some justice (I believe in the Universe, and guides, and all that — but they seem to ignore me).

    I don’t think the rejection I’ve been through is normal, particularly when I see how it goes with people around me. I saw my friends also go through the experience of online dating and they were not rejected by all the people they dated. While true that not all first dates become second, or a relationship, it definitely wasn’t 100% rejection. Not to mention the people they dated within the friend circle.

    The 25 were the people I approached for dates/feelings sharing. I have liked way more people than that, but whom I knew wouldn’t work out because of whatever reason.

    My opinion of rejection is true for my academia friends too. Super common to see people dating within the workplace, like the story I just told in the other post. High school/college was the same, so many couples among my class (they are still together!). Yet for me that never happened. Nobody ever looked at me as a potential anything. At least now I am respected and have friends because back then it was much worse.

    When it comes to online dating I haven’t rejected people unless they had a couple traits that were unacceptable to me. But it wasn’t that often at all. I am not saying that all the people I went to first dates with (the 15) were a match, but I was willing to give them a chance if they were interested in me. I would have forced myself, sincerely.

    About my childhood my grandmother wasn’t the enemy to me. I just wanted her love, and to be fair despite all this crap she did way more for me than my mom ever did. It sounds so absurd to write it, but still true! I think she was the only person that knew me and saw me, even though she only paid attention to my deficits/flaws and I didn’t get appreciated for the good parts.

    It’s a catch-22, depression affects ability to care about academia which in turn makes me more depressed. To be fair that’s not the only problem with academia (the competition, the judgement, the uselessness of studies, how people can’t find jobs afterwards).

    I’ve been on and off therapy (mostly on) for the past 18 years. I am definitely someone else from when I started but still with no light at the end of the tunnel…

    #228241
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Niv:

    I sure hope you see the light at the end of the tunnel very soon. You are focused on having not have a romantic relationship yet, and you are thirty. I agree, it is uncommon. Why, is the question, correct? You don’t understand why and you fear that the answer is because you are rejection worthy, unacceptable, someone or something not worthy of being wanted and loved.

    No wonder suspecting such a thing depresses you. Having believed the same myself, I was depressed too. It is not a motivating suspicion, or core belief about oneself.

    So I understand that within the context of your childhood home, you felt closer to your grandmother because although she saw negative things about you, at least she saw something about you, at least she looked at you while your mother saw neither good nor bad, simply didn’t look at you. Did I understand correctly?

    anita

    #228261
    Niv
    Participant

    Anita,

    as a mother figure, yes. I did feel closer to my grandma (and an aunt, actually, as well, but it wasn’t super positive too, because I was never a priority at all to her). Particularly during my teenage years it was so obvious how my grandma knew me (particularly when I was doing something wrong) but my mom was completely oblivious to everything. I mean, this is somewhat true even to this day. I think my grandma even at 97 and not really in touch with me anymore is more in tune with me than my mom whom I talk to every day. She just does not know me!

    No, I don’t understand why I never had the chance to have a relationship, long or brief, good or bad, with anyone. It destroys my soul. I think that having religious beliefs (the spirits, guides, etc) make it worse because then it sort of feels like a punishment, or that it’s my fault, or that I’m being ignored…

    #228273
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Niv:

    You believe then in spirit guides who ignore you, or punish you? My goodness! It is true, isn’t it, that we see the gods we imagine in the image of our parents?

    It is probably not a good thing for you to be talking on a regular basis to a person who just doesn’t know you (she just doesn’t know me!).

    You went to therapy on and off for many years, so you talked about a lot of things, I imagine. It might get tiring to talk about those things again here, I wonder. I hope not.

    Basically, your experience as a child was living with a person who paid attention to you but disapproved of you and another person who did not pay attention to you/ was oblivious to you. The third option, that of living with a person who paid attention to you and approved of you, that would have saved you a whole lot of misery in life. That would have been that light in the tunnel all along.

    anita

     

    #228331
    Niv
    Participant

    Anita, you are right, if I had that, it could have been the ideal thing for me except that it didn’t happen. I have been living on what ifs for so long that it’s just not productive for me to think like that. Reality is that I was all by myself then, and now my family won’t spontaneously combust into being great… I have to accept them as they are.

    About the guides and all… yeah you might have a point there. The same is valid for people who repeat that “your guides just want what’s best for you”… maybe it’s just because they think that’s what their parents were doing for them…

    But hey, how can I believe that Spirit Guides are good folks if they see my suffering and do absolutely nothing? I have been asking for a partner for LONG. And all I get are rejections, rejections, and more rejections, and no one to express interest in me…

    #228357
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Niv:

    You wrote: “now my family won’t spontaneously combust into being great… I have to accept them as they are”- I love the way you put it. Yes, you have to accept them as they are as in not trying to change them, not trying to make them know you or approve of you. But you don’t have to have a frequent contact or any contact with any of them. In my experience, I had to cut all contact with my mother because the contact itself kept me inferior to all, ashamed and distressed. It was automatic, hearing her voice, seeing her, sooner or a bit later, activated my distress and maintained my sickness.

    As far as the rejection from women, from potentially romantic partners, that is unusual for a 30 year old woman who is interested in a romantic relationship, to never have one by this age (but it happens, I’ve been communicating with such one woman, much older than you, for months on these Forums).

    What if we focused on this issue- you mentioned race, body size (being overweight) as two possible factors to explain why you were rejected. Thing is, women of all races, of all body sizes have romantic relationships, as you must have observed yourself. So that doesn’t explain it. Is there anything else that is physical that you think may be a reason, something that is very offensive to the sense of sight, sound, smell?

    If not, then it can be that a very uninviting and unwelcoming attitude is showing in your behavior toward potential partners: angry voice, angry look, extreme nervousness (looking away from the person, twitching, non-stop talking, not talking at all/silence, etc.) I wonder if you received any feedback from others regarding how you look/ sound to them?

    anita

     

    #231403
    Niv
    Participant

    Anita,

    sorry for not coming here for weeks to reply to you. I have been sort of just brainlessly moving on with life and trying to meet my graduation deadlines.

    I don’t think I have ever heard anything in that sense — of having something outwardly repulsive about me. I have never really received any feedback in that sense from my dates, in fact, many of them, despite only 1 date, have sent me messages to let me know they had no chemistry and/or that it wouldn’t work out for them. I’d say it’s 50/50 between that and ghosting.

    I think my asexuality plays a role because when I tried to set up my profile as being asexual absolutely no one wrote to me. I think probably my nervousness about kissing or something might look like I am not into them or something. My friends have never said anything about there being something blatantly wrong with me. In fact there was one close friend who would get really upset with me for thinking it was my fault.

    I don’t know what else to do. There are days I am more accepting towards being single for life. But most of it I just don’t see the point of being alive if I am meant to be alone (I think if I had family around, it would be a bit different). As I said, I wish I was brave, I just don’t see any point. I used to have such a strong religious belief and now I just can’t support myself off of that because if God or Universe exists, they clearly ignore and hate me.

    #231479
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Niv:

    At first, in your dating profile, you indicated you were asexual you got no responses. So you changed that, but once on dates, you reject any sexual sentiment on the woman’s part, such as a kiss. Maybe you reject any touch, her hand touching you and you move your hand away, is that correct?

    On your dating profiles and online communication, and during dates, how has your asexuality expressed itself so far?

    anita

    #232877
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Niv:

    How are you these days?

    anita

Viewing 12 posts - 16 through 27 (of 27 total)

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