HomeโForumsโEmotional MasteryโMaking Friends
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March 6, 2016 at 3:05 am #98136LilyParticipant
I am a single mom, with one child in middle school. When he was born I was 19, homeless, and estranged from my unsupportive family. I had completed only three years of high school and had a GED, and it was the lowest point in my life. I felt so ashamed and alone and afraid for the future. Without exception, all of my friends and family had quit talking to me because they did not like the path that was unfolding before me. When my son was a year old, I began taking college courses and very quickly excelled in academics. Since then, I have become the first person in my family to receive a bachelor’s degree, and the only one in my family to receive a master’s degree. My current job pays well and I’m finally putting down roots in the middle class.
On paper my achievements look impressive, and my quality of life (and my son’s) has improved quite a bit, but I don’t have any friends and I don’t know how to make them anymore. For so long my focus has been on survival and raising a child in a better environment than what was provided for me growing up, and I never really had much of a social life. And none of these achievements really mean much to me.
Since I’m isolated and under a great deal of stress with a long commute and workday, I find that my moods are inconsistent from day to day, and I know that scares people off. Some days, no matter how strong my intention to stay in the present is on the way to work, I’m exhausted and distracted and withdrawn, and other days I’m happy that I have a job and a bit more talkative, although I always tend toward reticence. It’s like I’m stuck in this place where I can’t make friends, but I know that if I did have them, I would be more confident and consistent.
I’m open to any advice.
March 6, 2016 at 7:00 am #98140AnonymousGuestDear Lily:
I believe you want to make friends in person and fit them in your life as face to face friends. Well, here on this site, you can make a friend with me, if you’d like. In context of this website, maybe you and I can become friends. And if we do, we can communicate about all those things that need to be communicated, examined, explored and you will be closer to making a friend in your life outside here. If you are so inclined, we just met then.
You wrote that none of these achievements really mean much to you: the degrees and the material progress, you mean? Is it that you need what we all do: “To Love and Be Loved in return”- by another adult?
anita
March 6, 2016 at 9:57 pm #98237LilyParticipantThanks, Anita, that’s really nice. ๐ I would love to be forum friends! And thanks for responding to my post, I was worried nobody would.
Yes, my academic achievements and credentials are a bit disappointing in that they did not bring about the happiness and pride that I see affecting my peers. I guess that achievements are entirely empty and pointless if you don’t have anyone to celebrate with you at the end. Developing interpersonal relationships seems like it’s so easy for other people. Is that true, or is it my misconception?
I do want to have relationships, but I think that people don’t tend to like me very much, and I don’t ever feel like I fit in anywhere. I can relate to my coworkers in some ways, like when they complain about being tired or when they talk about their kids, but I don’t seem to connect with them very well.
March 7, 2016 at 1:28 am #98257AnonymousInactiveHello Lily,
“Some days, no matter how strong my intention to stay in the present is on the way to work, Iโm exhausted and distracted and withdrawn, and other days Iโm happy that I have a job and a bit more talkative, although I always tend toward reticence. Itโs like Iโm stuck in this place where I canโt make friends, but I know that if I did have them, I would be more confident and consistent.
Iโm open to any advice.”
You will have a companion/friends and it will be beautiful, even if it’s just 1 friend. As quality is better over quantity. You don’t need to have a bunch of friends, it’s less drama to just have a few friends honestly. You are beautiful just the way you are and a beautiful soul with a lot to give at that, spiritually. Always remember that. ๐
You will have good days and bad days, which is normal. As long as you have peace within yourself to feel comfortable. You will be accepted by others and the friends that you will make, just continue to keep your heart open to all the possibilities in life. As you already fit in with us, so you are doing something right. <3
Sending you lots of love, positivity and light your way!
M.
March 7, 2016 at 7:24 am #98280AnonymousGuestDear Lily, Forum Friend:
To get to know you, I ask:
You were 19, homeless (estranged from family), and with a baby: how did that come about? What happened???
anita
March 7, 2016 at 8:45 pm #98343LilyParticipantJust before my senior year of high school, my parents got divorced and I was put in the middle of their fighting and wound up missing a lot of school because I was home sick with stress induced stomach ulcers. I transferred to a different high school, and my mother kicked me out of the house when she found out that I had been skipping school. So I wound up pregnant and in a shelter when I was 18, and my son was born not long after that. No exciting story here, just slipping through the cracks. ๐
March 7, 2016 at 8:47 pm #98344LilyParticipantThanks, M. That brightened my day quite a bit!
I’m sending love, positivity and light to you as well!
March 8, 2016 at 1:05 am #98358AnonymousInactiveYou are very welcome Lily!
And thank you for your kinds words back. ๐
M.
March 8, 2016 at 7:35 am #98368AnonymousGuestDear Lily:
So your mother kicked you out of the house because you were sick with ulcers… as a reaction to her fighting with her husband in front of you and involving you in their fighting, is that correct? She kicked you out of the house when you were a teenager because you suffered the consequences of her mistreatment of you (putting you in the middle of her fighting and divorce)?
Are you in a relationship with your mother presently? What kind of a relationship is it? Did at anytime in all these years after she kicked you out, did she ever acknowledge with much regret the wrong she has done to you?
I am asking this because there is a strong connection between those early relationships, those with parents, and relationships later on, with friends and partners.
Hoping we keep talking, Forum Friend:
anita
March 8, 2016 at 10:35 pm #98412LilyParticipantForum Friend Anita,
That is correct, although I hadn’t thought of it that way until you said it. Interesting to hear it back through a different perspective.
I do not have contact with my mother anymore. It was too draining.
Her accounts of my childhood have very little to do with reality and always star her in the perfect parent role. Anything she doesn’t want to admit to is denied and then she uses fights ir silent treatments to further avoid talking about things. She wouldn’t ever admit that she has been anything but wonderful, which suggests to me that she already knows it was wrong.
March 9, 2016 at 7:13 am #98428AnonymousGuestDear Lily:
I am not surprised you didn’t seer it this way because when we are children we don’t see what is too threatening to see. Children often do not see their parents as they are, and as a result we, children (and adult children) do not see us as we are.
I am glad you don’t have contact with your mother anymore. I don’t have contact with mine either. That makes you and i rare as most adult children have contact with their mothers … no matter how abusive the mother was.
As children we develop, our mind develops as we interact with the mother (main caretaker), not separately. So without healing from abusive interactions, we remain a certain way not knowing there can be another way, or ways.
I think that it can be useful for you to gain more insight into the relationship that was between you and your mother so to free some (what I call) knots in the brain that are causing your distress and lack of contentment. See, having had a relationship with a “perfect” mother had to make you Imperfect all the time. If she had to be perfect all the time, it means that whenever there was a disagreement, a conflict of any kind, she had to be Right and you had to be Wrong. This kind of relationship leaves a very bad taste in one’s mouth as to what relationships are about. If this is how it is to have a relationship, then a relationship is not something positive or comforting… or loving. Not with a friend and not with a partner. So no wonder you are not inclined for such.
What do you think, Forum Friend?
anita
March 9, 2016 at 10:10 pm #98509LilyParticipantVery interesting! I like the knots in the brain analogy, deep emotional issues need space to loosen and untangle. And I’m definitely accustomed to being wrong. ๐
And it is tough to be out of touch, especially when other people react like I’m some kind of spoiled brat or heathen for choosing not to be in contact with her (“But she’s your MOM!!”). I’m sorry you’re in the same boat in that respect, it’s really hard to emancipate yourself from those relationships, even when they are not healthy. Still, I’m glad to know that I’m not the only person in the world with these problems. Have you been able to forge meaningful relationships? How do you know when they are meaningful or worth continuing, or when you are with someone because they are familiar, and maybe not someone you want to invite into your emotional life?
March 10, 2016 at 7:53 am #98521AnonymousGuestDear Lily:
It is a social taboo to have no contact with one’s mother. I am very familiar with it. In this regard, you and I are rebels.
Regarding what is socially acceptable: it used to be acceptable for a parent to kill their children with no legal consequences. It was socially acceptable.Parents still get lots of freedom to severely damage their children, for life, with no legal consequences, so progress still needs to be made in what is acceptable and what is not.
How to forge meaningful, positive, loving, helpful relationship after … well, having no experience with such, is the question? A good one. I would say: look at the small interactions you do presently have with people, including here, on this thread. Learn from those and over time you get the very experience you need, starting small.
You look at the interactions you do have and pay attention: the interaction needs to be a Win-Win proposition. There needs to be something positive in it for you and for him/ her. It needs not be a Lose-Win, that is the other person is getting what he needs (be it a temporary relief of some kind), and you are compromising yourself, Losing. Interactions need to be such where you are authentically you, not compromised.
So here and elsewhere, stand up for yourself in any which way possible, indicate who you are, what you think, what you feel, want, need- state it unabashedly, at least for a moment: do it here and wait for my response.
I will not tell you that you are wrong. I will not dismiss what you say, minimize or deny it, but take it in respectfully. If you assert yourself, I will respect your assertion. As these things happen, you get to have the experience you need to proceed with in-person, more elaborate relationships.
So, will you tell me things you are not inclined to tell for fear of disapproval? Things that are authentic to you?
anita
March 11, 2016 at 7:40 am #98669LilyParticipantAnita,
I would SO love to talk about my actual thoughts and feelings without fear of judgment or dismissal! And I would love constructive feedback, too, if I seem off balance or one sided. I feel like generally speaking, people don’t tend to like me, like I’m kind of just unappealing. Or I say something and people react to it in a weird way because it’s not something that someone would normally say. And my only socializing happens at work and you really can’t talk about anything at work bc there are landmines in every conversation and I seem to veer into those zones workout intention.
And people don’t ever tell you why they are upset with you or why you bothered them so it’s hard to navigate work socialization too.
I’ll post an example in a bit.
March 11, 2016 at 9:45 am #98688AnonymousGuestDear Lily:
I think it is better to not work on interpersonal relationships with people at work- not the place, beyond the limited interactions conducive to the work itself.
I don’t know how much of the rejection you experience when talking to people is your inaccurate projection, that is: you believe that you are unappealing and when you talk to someone and there is a frown on their face, if you think it is a reflection of you being unappealing while it may be a frown that is always there, or they may have a stomach cramp at that moment.
Looking forward to your example!
anita
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