fbpx
Menu

What is wrong with me?

HomeForumsRelationshipsWhat is wrong with me?

New Reply
Viewing 8 posts - 16 through 23 (of 23 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #149311
    Sam
    Participant

    You know when I first read your response I thought “my parents were always 100% supportive. They never did/said anything negative if I performed less than perfect.” But I stepped away and I’ve been thinking about it. While I do think that’s true (or really I don’t remember any reactions wither way) I think I felt like if I was not perfect, then I was not good enough or I was disappointing them.

    I see that now too as as adult. Didn’t make it to the gym when I had planned? I’m not good enough. Got a 75 on a test I expected to do better on? I’m not good enough. A guy isn’t interested in me? I’m not good enough.

    Obviously deep down I know this isn’t true but I realized I’ve been telling it to myself. So maybe as a child if I failed I felt as if I wasn’t good enough and I lost my parent’s respect.

    #149319
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Sam:

    What I will write next is going to be difficult for you to read because it will not feel good, not if you take it in and consider it. This is why the Emotional Mind does not proceed as quickly as the Rational Mind: we don’t want to feel badly. Yet, it is for our benefit to consider what initially feels badly, because long term, we will feel better. What I write to you next, as everything I write to you, it is up to your consideration and evaluation:

    The reason you felt not good enough as a child when you didn’t perform perfectly is because your parent/s taught you that you were not good enough unless you performed perfectly. And because it is impossible for a person (child or adult, including your parents!) to perform perfectly, what they taught you was:

    You, Sam, are not good enough.

    A child doesn’t come up with such core beliefs out of nowhere. Children are taught and parents always teach. Are they always aware of what they are teaching the child? No. But they teach nonetheless.

    Not only do unaware parents teach, but while the child experiences distress, as a result of their teaching, they fail to notice the child’s distress, fail to evaluate their teachings and so, they fail to stop teaching what is causing the distress.

    And so, parents keep teaching and keep reinforcing distressing teaching to a child who is already distressed, day in and day out, year after year.

    If what I wrote above is distressing, please take a break and come back to it later, or not. Such is always, your choice.

    * Soon to be away from the computer for a few hours.

    anita

    #149325
    Sam
    Participant

    It is hard to read but I understand and agree with it. I don’t think their intentions were ever bad but it is what happened. Both of my parents have anxiety as well and my dad has admitted they passed it to me.

    I just don’t know how to go about fixing all of this. I know being aware and mindful is the first step but I don’t know how else to change my way of thinking.

    #149341
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Sam:

    Maybe the book that got me started on my healing will help you too. Do excuse the adjective ‘dummies” in the title of the book. It is called Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Dummies. If I remember correctly there was a separate Cognitive Behavioural Therapy Workbook for Dummies. (English spelling). It started me on my way.

    CBT is about correcting our distorted thinking and thinking what is true. You can order these online (I just googled).

    Our thoughts and feelings are intertwined in our brain. When we believe something, for example: I am not good enough, it is not just a thought, it is a belief: a thought meshed, or glued with feelings.

    So let’s say you rationally understand that you are good enough. Problem is you don’t believe it (thought+feeling). This is why healing involves thinking and feeling (Rational Mind and Emotional Mind)

    If you get the book and workbook, you will have lots of info and exercises to do on a self-help basis. Let me know how it works for you and post again anytime.

    anita

    #149413
    sam
    Participant

    Thank you, I will look into it! I’ve been thinking a lot today about all of this.

    I’m realizing while I strive for perfection in all aspects of my life, I feel pretty complete in a lot of them. I have a lot of good things going for me and I feel at peace with a lot of things. However, I think some of the reason I seek out and get anxious about relationships is that in my mind it’s the one thing I do not have. I know I touched on this earlier but it is becoming clearer the more I think about it. In my mind, being in a relationship would complete everything going on in my life. So that is why I am happy when I meet someone or a guy texts me, because I feel like I am closer to achieving that perfection. This has been very interesting to think about!

    #149429
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear sam:

    You are moving soon. I hope you meet a good man there and start a relationship. First step would be to get to know a man before getting emotionally attached, while you are still objective-enough. You can prepare ahead of time, thinking and listing your requirements of a man, from most important-and-non-negotiable to preferable-but-not-necessary. You can “interview” men for the … position of boyfriend using that list.

    You can prepare questions to ask a potential boyfriend, questions that are likely to invite honest answers while not appearing like you are an employer interviewing an employee (or the police interrogating a criminal suspect…)

    You can study (there are books and online sources) interpersonal skills, such as the simple skill of listening to everything he says, not missing anything,  instead of no longer listening and thinking instead of what you will say to him.

    There is so much to learn and practice. Exciting!

    anita

    #150119
    sam
    Participant

    Anita, I hope it’s okay that I am checking back in. I was doing really well and trying to be more mindful of everything this week. However, this guy and I (from my original post) have still been talking. I am literally moving tomorrow. In the past couple of days, we haven’t talked as much. I know it is the right thing to do but I still can’t help but feel completely rejected. If I was staying here, there is no way I’d want to date him but I can’t help but still feel anxious and sad about the whole thing. He sent me a message this morning and I haven’t responded. I know I need to walk away but I can’t. I feel sad thinking about how much attention he’d been giving me (texting first thing in the morning, late into the night, asking me how my day was, etc). And now…hardly anything. How do I move on from this?

    #150127
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear sam:

    Of course it is okay for you to check back in. This is your thread and you are welcome to come back into it anytime, no time or length limit.

    You are not feeling too good this evening, the evening before you are moving, I understand.
    “How do I move on from this?” You asked. Since you are moving tomorrow, you just wait till tomorrow.

    Tomorrow is a new beginning. “In the beginning…The earth was formless and void, and darkness was over the surface of the deep…” I don’t normally quote from the bible, but I like the beginning of it, genesis. In the beginning it says, the earth was formless and empty and dark (a bit like how you feel)… and then there was light and order was made, plants and animals created, you know the story ..  a whole wide world, out of the emptiness and darkness.

    Go create, sam, one day at a time, one step at a time. Rest, sleep well, good night and please do come back to your thread. I would very much like to read from you again and again.

    anita

Viewing 8 posts - 16 through 23 (of 23 total)

You must be logged in to reply to this topic. Please log in OR register.