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New Start; Finally ‘Okay’

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  • #453999
    Kane
    Participant

    Quick Note: This is a series of journals I’m making, personal to my struggles, so I may reference some things you may not have context for, apologizes, and fair warning, if you do look for them, they get pretty negative and hard to interrelate, heads up.

    Throughout my life, I’ve been lucky to see and understand the things I have, the things in this world that are beautiful only to the minds that sees it, the nasties that lie underneath our perspective and personalities, dragging anything: people, relationships, ourselves whole from being our best selves, regardless of the meaning, purpose, or emotional/physical contentment we have/or seek.

    My lessons, my truths, the things I took from my own, others, and the world’s life; they hurt me, they saved me, made me see how everyone deserves the proper love and guidance to live their best lives, made me question why they didn’t try to learn, and then I remember who I am- I love learning, I have reason, I have the personality luckily enough to like learning…no one tells you your completely on your own for the kind of person you grow to be-

    In weaknesses, in strengths, in what you need to hear, in what you need to do, in what you want to do, what kind of life you want, who you want in your life-

    You are left to figure yourself out, even with the proper guiding figures in your life, rarely will you have all the answers.

    How does this relate to “Purpose”? Cause in spite of knowing mine, I struggled…I suffered- while meaning might be what we are missing in life, it is far from all that we are missing from having a life we can be more than happy with, that we can be CONTENT with.

    I struggled to manifest mine not just due to its difficulty, but because everything in my life was teaching me how to reach for it better, how hard it would be, how to have the tools to keep myself steady in reaching for it, in being a person who doesn’t need to chase meaning to have a purposeful, MEANINGFUL, life.

    My obstacles built me as much as they broke me down, NOW, I feel authentic, I feel real, I regained almost all that I have lost and more, not in the physical, but in the mental, emotional, to a point the physical is not a problem anymore; and I’m still growing…learning, so I can better achieve better in my life and in others, cause that is what I determined my meaning, answer to life is, cause mine isn’t yours, that stranger’s passing by you, it might be similar or perhaps maybe it IS-

    That is for you to determine, your purpose is yours to determine, a lock to only understanding yourself will give you a key.

    The scars, the weight in my mind and in my soul from who I am I carry, how I choose who I am, I respect who I am in body and in mind; they still hold consequence over me, but I no longer let them shackle myself from living purposefully, for now I feel as I did as a kid, NOW, as someone who’s grown up.

    In control, awake, in this moment, to do EXACTLY, what I want, with meaning, with purpose, with freedom of choice; I am here, writing this, to tell you-

    It’s worth the fight, it IS possible, you need to apply the whole of who you are to understand what you are, who you are, if you want to even STUMBLE upon what will make your life meaning- PURPOSEFUL.

    I wish you luck and that I’m here if you’d like advice and/or simple guidance, from the easiest to the extremes, I’m here, and so is so many people; we struggle to initiate yet the resources can be there as long as you and the person you reach out to tries to understand and communicate, you’ll reach further than you’d realize, learning and getting closer to your goal even if you yourself don’t realize, that’s a key reason why you must learn, so you can understand the progress you make.

    For those from my previous journal entries, I thank you all, your support, no matter how small or much, meant a world to me, and I’m here to tell you I’m so much better now…thank you, truly.

    #454005
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Kane:

    Welcome back to the forums. Thank you for sharing a series of journals 🙏.

    And thank you for offering to guide and advise.

    I will read your whole message and reply Sat morning (Fri evening here).

    đŸ€ Anita

    #454013
    Thomas168
    Participant

    Hello Kane,

    That is a great statement. Saying you love learning. I have found that the way to learn is to suspend one’s own beliefs and take on what is being presented by others. Take it in and digest it. Roll it around and play with it. Then apply your own knowledge to what is presented. Do they work together? Is it something that would help you? If not then move away from it. Try not to dismiss the person due to the things being said. Time to move forward.

    It is good to hear that you are so much better now. Whatever the transformation, it seems that you are happier. And usually that is as much as we can expect from life. (For others, they may leave a legacy of sorts. Extreme wealth like the Rockefellers. Or extreme intelligence like Einstein or Newton. Or enduring companies like Microsoft or IBM or Samsung.) There are people who search for things and reasons. Some are religious. Some are not. Some becomes sages and Buddhas. Most are just regular people. So, for me, a little happiness.

    My purpose or goal in life? I guess that would be just sitting and finding that perfect stillness or emptiness. Finding I am not separate from the world. Being consciousness and awake. It isn’t a lofty goal like opening a hospital or school. And some might find it downright selfish. But, if I don’t take care of myself then who will?

    #454014
    Alessa
    Participant

    Hi Kane

    I’m glad to hear that you are feeling better. đŸ©”

    I look forward to reading more of your thoughts. Of course, you are welcome to write on other members threads. I’m sure that you can share some unique insights. 😊

    I agree with what Tommy is touching on. I find it challenging to try to understand some of the unhealthy habits people have. But things that are hard are often worth doing. đŸ©”

    #454018
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Kane:

    In your yesterday’s post, you shared (at the age of only 19 or 20) that experiences—good and bad—have shaped you. They hurt you, but they also taught you that everyone deserves love, guidance, and the chance to grow.

    Your challenges taught you how to pursue your purpose better and how to stay steady while doing it. Your hardships broke you down but also built you up.

    Now you feel more real, more yourself. You’ve regained a lot mentally and emotionally, and you’re still growing.

    You still carry your past and your scars, but you no longer let them hold you back. You feel in control again—like you did as a child, but with the maturity of an adult. You want people to know that the fight is worth it. You offered support to anyone who needs advice and you thanked everyone who supported you before.

    Thank you for sharing all this and offering support and guidance to others. I am glad to read about your progress!

    In your first thread on Nov 1, 2024 (at the age of 18), you shared that you learned early on to shut down your feelings so effectively that you barely felt anything unless you forced yourself to, that your childhood situation pushed you to grow up fast. There, you learned extreme emotional suppression as a coping mechanism, that you tried to explain every feeling logically, to understand every cause and effect.

    You described your emotions at the time as chaotic: wanting to laugh, cry, scream, hurt yourself, hurt others, disappear, and you didn’t know what to do with those feelings.

    Your family situation was a major source of pain. You said you loved them, that you wanted to leave them, that they’re dysfunctional, that arguments hurt you deeply, and that you can’t live with them or without them. You were considering letting yourself feel anger fully for the first time, because you thought it might break the emotional “freeze” you were stuck in.

    In further posts you shared that the negativity in your home was “10 to 1” part of daily life, you had to tune it out to survive. You said you couldn’t handle emotional pain, so, you tried to understand the reasons behind your family’s behavior. You became “undecidedly obsessed” with analyzing everything.

    You cared too much and felt responsible for everyone’s happiness. You cared more than anyone else in the family. You felt you couldn’t be happy unless they were. You shared that when you tried to express emotions, your body flooded with stress, your thoughts became “crazed and rushed”, and you feared you might do something you’d regret. So, you built your “system” (Mechanical Morality) to contain it.

    You added detail about what your home life was actually like: the arguing was originally between your parents, and then they spread to everyone in the family. Your father was aggressive and cursed a lot, was in and out of the family home, and for much of the time, you grew up in a single‑parent (your mother) household with 7 kids. It was “a sole parent and her kids (7, me included)” Grandparents raised them early on but not during adolescence.

    Your mother didn’t know how to handle the situation and didn’t know what to do to be effective. Your family members didn’t reflect on their actions, didn’t understand consequences and had let problems grow for years.

    You felt forced to care for them more than they cared for themselves. You said that you didn’t choose to care this much but you did and it held your life back and adapted by becoming numb until the arguing didn’t hurt anymore and your “standard of living became like them
 unconscious”, feeling like a spectator in your own life.

    You wrote about your family situation: “no one to watch over, no one to teach, no one to listen”- which is what you offered readers in these forums back in your Nov 27, 2024, thread titled “Advice; Here to give it” as well as in your 5th thread yesterday.

    My input today:

    *** You adapted to a stressful, chaotic, unsafe home by becoming numb and analytical (same as I did). The two- numb & analytical- are connected. When someone grows up in a stressful or emotionally unsafe environment, the mind tries to protect itself. It has two main tools: shutting down feelings and thinking harder. Those two can end up working together in a loop:

    1. Numbness/dissociation is the body’s emergency brake. When emotions become too overwhelming, the brain can turn down the intensity of feelings, disconnect from the moment and “freezes”. This isn’t a conscious choice. It’s a survival response.

    If a child grows up around conflict, unpredictability, or emotional pain, this can become a habit. The brain learns: “Feeling is dangerous. Better to shut it off.”

    2. Over‑analysis becomes the replacement for emotion. Once emotions are muted, the mind still needs a way to make sense of the world. So, it switches to the tool that feels safer: thinking.

    Over‑analysis becomes a way to predict danger, a way to understand people’s behavior, a way to feel in control and a way to avoid feeling helpless.

    For someone who grew up in chaos, analysis becomes a shield: if you can explain everything, you don’t have to feel it.

    3. The two reinforce each other. This is the loop:

    Pain → numbness → analysis → more numbness → more analysis

    Why? Because the more you analyze, the less you feel; the less you feel, the more you rely on analysis to navigate life.

    4. Why this happens in childhood? Because kids don’t have adult coping skills. If they can’t escape or fix the situation, they survive by shutting down emotions, becoming hyper‑aware and trying to understand everything.

    A child in a chaotic home often becomes: the “observer”, the “problem‑solver”, the “little adult”

    5. The cost: in adulthood (when you’re away from your family of origin) this leads to emotional numbness, difficulty knowing what you feel, overthinking everything, feeling disconnected from yourself, burnout, intrusive thoughts and a sense of being “mechanical”.

    It’s not a flaw — it’s a survival strategy that outlived its environment.

    *** Enmeshment and emotional numbness/over‑analysis fit together almost perfectly, like two pieces of the same puzzle:

    1. Enmeshment forms when a child becomes emotionally responsible for the family. In an enmeshed family, the child learns: “Their emotions are my responsibility.”, “If they fall apart, I fall apart.”, “I have to hold everything together.”, “I don’t exist separately from them.”

    This creates a deep emotional bond that isn’t healthy — it’s built on fear, obligation, and survival, not choice.

    For you, Kane (and for me) this started very young. You felt you had to protect everyone, understand everyone, and absorb all the pain in the house.

    2. Anger becomes dangerous in an enmeshed system. When a child is enmeshed, anger feels like betrayal. Or something that will be heavily punished. So, even though the family hurts the child, the child thinks: “If I get angry, I’ll lose them.”, “If I pull away, they’ll fall apart.”, etc.

    So, the anger gets pushed down. But it doesn’t disappear — it turns inward or leaks out as intrusive thoughts, resentment, or emotional overload.

    3. Emotional numbness becomes a survival strategy. When you can’t express anger, can’t leave, and can’t change the situation, the mind protects itself by going numb.

    4. Enmeshment creates a painful contradiction: “I’m furious at them for hurting me.”, “I can’t leave them because they’re all I have.” This creates guilt, confusion, self‑blame, emotional overload, fear of abandonment, fear of independence, fear of losing control.

    So, the person becomes stuck — unable to pull away, unable to stay without suffering, and the child never learned to exist as a separate person

    How are you doing at this point, Kane, in regard to enmeshment (or any of the topics I brought up right above that you’d like to share about)?

    Anita

    #454021
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Kane/ Anyone who may be dissociated, overanalyzing and enmeshed with family:

    We begin to break this pattern when we finally see it for what it is — a way we learned to survive, not a reflection of who we truly are.

    Once we recognize that we’ve been carrying everyone’s emotions, shutting down our own feelings, and relying on thinking instead of feeling, we can start separating ourselves from the family roles we grew up with.

    We slowly remind ourselves that other people’s choices and emotions aren’t our responsibility, and we let ourselves feel small emotions again without fear.

    We allow anger to exist as a normal signal instead of something dangerous, and we practice noticing it without pushing it down or exploding. Little by little, we reconnect with our own emotional world in ways that feel safe and manageable.

    As we grow, we start building a life outside the family — friendships, interests, goals — and each new connection helps loosen the emotional knot that kept us tied so tightly to the people who raised us.

    We practice tiny boundaries, like taking space or saying no, and each one helps us feel more like our own person.

    Over time, the overthinking becomes less necessary because we’re no longer trying to solve every feeling with logic.

    With support from people outside the family, we begin to develop self‑worth that isn’t based on fixing others.

    Breaking the pattern is slow, but every small step moves us from survival mode toward a life where we can exist as ourselves, not just as someone sacrificing themselves for everyone else.

    Anita

    #454394
    anita
    Participant

    How are you,Kane. I would like to read more about the progress you’ve been making, quite impressive given 👏 your young age.

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