Home→Forums→Relationships→Just when I thought I was making progress…
- This topic has 3 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 11 years, 2 months ago by Buddhist Wife.
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September 2, 2013 at 8:25 pm #41580AnonymousInactive
When I posted here last, I was in a really negative place…emotionally, spiritually and physically. It has been two weeks since I’ve had any contact with the guy I was dating. With time, things get better and I have made a tremendous amount of process thanks to the great wisdom I’ve gained from a few members of this amazing forum (community). I’ve gained more control over my negative emotions (anger) and thoughts about him, myself, my faults and my future post break up. I’ve been physically active and keeping busy with the help of school, spiritual practices and a few good friends.
I have good and bad days. I normally stay away from drinking alcohol because it makes me very emotional and I tend to have constant thoughts about him (positive thoughts and negative ones)…I get the urge to contact him even though I feel this would be unnecessary, meaningless, and pretty stupid and contradictory considering I am trying to move forward and reconnect with myself again. I am in the process of receiving some self help books on codependency and self nurturing and I hope I’m able to practice the tools given or receive some insight on the root of my pain, anger, attachment and sensitivity issues.
This is all I know to do to become a better person, get over the past and move forward. I often think there is something wrong with me…that I should change things about myself, maybe I don’t deserve respect or love or honesty. Maybe I don’t love myself so there is no way any other can love and appreciate me. I may seek counseling to figure these things out. I am desperately trying to make sense of the bazar emotions and thoughts I often have.
Why do I still want to reach out to him and reconcile or make peace even though he hasn’t attempted to do those things? Why do I even care? Did I really love him or is the universe teaching me a lesson? Do I love myself? I feel helpless and weak and alone. Am I in search of something? My identity?
Words of encouragement…insight…shared experiences…
September 2, 2013 at 8:43 pm #41582AnonymousInactiveThe aspect of this that bothers me the most is that there are so many things I would like to pursue and experience. I want to help other people, possibly become get my 200 hr. yoga certification soon, but how can I help others when I am unable to help myself…unhappy and lost. This crisis I am experiencing has caused me to be withdrawn and insecure around everyone I meet. I have a fear of being inadequate. I feel like a misfit…awkward and like I am instantly overlooked or hated by others.
These negative feelings weren’t as strong and or as noticeable prior to the failed relationship.
September 3, 2013 at 5:09 am #41619MattParticipantBritt,
You ask some really great questions, and I appreciate the skillfulness with which you capture your confusion into words. Breakups are difficult, and produce a grief that takes time and continued self nurturing in order to heal. Don’t despair, you’re healing, and there is always a path to joy.
Sometimes when we are in emotional pain, we get the false sense that this is just “who we are now”. So we start scrambling for ways to understand, diagnose and repair ourselves. As though we are at fault for our emotions, and so we desperately try to change. This can help distract us from the pain, but doesn’t really help it very much. You sound as though you are grieving, which is emotionally turbulent. There is self blame, fear, anger, regret… a huge plate full of difficult emotions. Those emotions color the view of the world around you. For instance, in your grief, when you notice the separation between yourself and a stranger, your regret reflects back at you as a feeling of being unlovable and forever alone. That is just grief, dear sister, and heals over time.
The solution is really to just accept that right now there is grief, right now there is pain, and stay alert in the present moment. You ask some big questions that make total sense, but they are also better left alone until the grieving subsides. For example, you have confusion about the pain, its causes, and how to heal. This confusion can easily propel the mind to ask “who am I? Is the universe trying to punish me? Is this a big lesson? Why am I so broken?” Those questions need no answer, they unfold with time and healing. They’re good, because they tell you that you’re alive, but the answers won’t really provide the relief you’re looking for.
Instead, perhaps consider being patient with yourself. Britt is bold, beautiful, and caring… and also, in this moment, filled with grief. Its like looking in the mirror with a mask on. There is a beautiful woman standing right there, but as you look at yourself, it is through a veil of painful feelings. So you don’t really see you, you see the mask… and say “who is that?” If you can accept that there is beauty and pain in your self-vision, then “fixing the errors in self” can take an obvious back seat to “caring for the girl in pain”. Slowly, patiently, the hurt of the past settles as we continue caring for our body and mind. Then many of the questions we’ve been asking answer themselves… because as we care for ourselves, the heart becomes strong again, and leads us home. Did I mention being patient?
Consider it like this: if you broke your ankle, would you be pissed at your body for not healing after two weeks? That in two weeks you say to yourself “every time I try to run, I feel pain and limp… what is wrong with me? Why is my ankle so stupid? Is my body just broken from now on? No one else is limping, they must see my limp and think I’m stupid and broken! What is wrong with me that I would break my ankle, I must not love myself. Is the universe punishing me for being such a bitch? I hate this dumb body.” Etc. Something tells me that you would not do those things, but would be gentle, stay off it, put a cast on it, and give it the time it needs to knit. Because the emotional body is less understood, and less tangible than a bone in the leg, it is often overlooked as a real wound.
So, stay off the ankle for awhile and just let yourself heal. Said differently, don’t seek the causes of who and why and what, just self nurture. Do nice things for your heart, feed it special fuel such as soft music, laughter, bubble baths, meditation, walking in nature, creating or viewing art, and so on. You can figure out who you are along the way… as you notice what actions fuel your happiness, and which drain it.
Patience, Britt. The feeling of “lost” and “unhappy” will settle… its all part of the game of love. You’re not a misfit, that part actually made me smile. You’re human, and do human things like feel pain… and just because others don’t appear to be limping doesn’t make you a misfit, it is just you limping. Time and space, sister, is often the greatest gift we can give ourselves. Well, time, space and chocolate chip cookies. Yum!
With warmth,
MattSeptember 3, 2013 at 5:16 am #41621Buddhist WifeParticipantHello Britt
Sorry to hear you are going through pain.
I think it is still possible to help others without being emotionally ‘sound’ yourself. I think helping others can be incredibly strengthening – provided you look after yourself and give yourself plenty of self care.
I like to visit Tiny Buddha because as a stay at home mum to a little one, it’s hard for me to get out into the community and do any ‘good’. However I’m not by any means perfect or emotionally secure. I have my own issues and baggage.
I still feel I can help people however because other people’s problems are always easier – because I have some emotional distance from them. Because I can look at them dispassionately it’s much easier to help others then it is to help myself!!
I think it’s possible that you might feel the same. Why not go for the certificate after all, you don’t know how much good you might do for someone.
I wish you peace and happiness.
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