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LeeP

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Viewing 8 posts - 1 through 8 (of 8 total)
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  • #279835
    LeeP
    Participant

    Dear Geraldine,

    Forgiving yourself for what happened when you were babysitting is difficult but important.  Might help if you can understand that you were doing the best you could do with what was available to you at the time.  In my opinion, the child was too young to remember the incident, and it sounds to me that you stopped yourself before any real damage was done.  “What type of kid does that to another?” Maybe the type of kid who had her curiosity about life ignored or shamed and had to satisfy that curiosity on her own in the only way she could think of?

    #231091
    LeeP
    Participant

    Hi, Wanderer,

    One thing that jumped out at me from your post:  have you thought about bartending as a career?  Sounds to me that bartending was the one job you seemed to enjoy, and that seems to be a position where you can use your communication skills without the anxiety of standing up in front of a classroom.  Hope you find your way.

    Lee

    #229373
    LeeP
    Participant

    Hi, Katie,

    Please do not believe you are stupid.  You have quite a bit of evidence to the contrary right in this post, and I’m sure you can think of much more without trying very hard.  Is it possible to limit time with your cousin?  She sounds like a damaging influence on your self-esteem, and that is one of your most important attributes.  Emotionally speaking, you sound very wise to me.

    Yours, Lee

    #228143
    LeeP
    Participant

    Hi, Anita,  I guess you answered my question with “When suspicion is there, it is there. . .”  If he gets suspicious about innocent questions about what he was doing and how it felt to be working with his father, his very suspicion would indicate that he felt threatened by something which would also be cause for concern.  Thanks for clearing that up for me.  Lee

    #228017
    LeeP
    Participant

    Wow, Anita, you offer such great insights!  But 0ne thing I would worry about if I were Hannah:  what if his response is to demand why she is questioning him or act hurt and ask why she doesn’t trust him (that last always got me, and then I would turn it on myself and believe it and feel shame and give in)?  Hope I’m not making trouble by asking, as I would like your input on this for my own “toolbox.”  Thanks, Lee

    #227995
    LeeP
    Participant

    Dear Hannah,

    I also wanted to say, but forgot to in my previous post, that being concerned with your body image isn’t shallow, especially when it was a source of ridicule during your formative years.  Wanting to look your best, and feeling that you like how you look, is important when trying to retrain your perspective.  I wish you success with overcoming this.  Wish I had some suggestions to help, but I’m still working on it.  Baby steps is what I was told.

    #227979
    LeeP
    Participant

    Dear Hannah,

    Thank you for your condolences.

    First I want to say that I read your post to Anita, and what you said about the comments from your mother and sister and how they still color the way you look at yourself really resonated with me–I have the same problem (I’m still worried about my “pointy chin”).  Part of why I feel that I don’t know who I am is that my “authentic self” was so unacceptable to me that I created an “ideal persona” (to which I didn’t fit), and when I realized that it no longer served me, I couldn’t seem to find who I really was in there.  Or maybe it was the unacceptability of who I was (to family and, later, to classmates until it felt like the whole world reacted negatively to me).  Andy was the first and most consistent in accepting me, but I had things that I couldn’t open up even to him about.  Some were because of the shame I feel and some were because he was very vulnerable and couldn’t accept some things in himself–I guess maybe there are some things about all of us that we can’t face.  I’m trying now, though, to at least face these things and come to accept them in myself.

    Thanks, Lee

    • This reply was modified 6 years, 1 month ago by LeeP.
    #227503
    LeeP
    Participant

    Hi,

    This is my first time posting here, but Hannah, you sounded like you were describing me, and I have read posts before and always enjoy reading Anita’s responses because you always sound so encouraging and empathetic.  At 60 years old, I’m starting (again) to work on finding my place in the world.  Lost my husband to cancer almost a year ago, and I didn’t know who I was when I wasn’t his wife any more.  But even before that, all my life in fact, I didn’t really know who I was.  Been reading self-help books since I was a teen, and they help me feel inspired, but I don’t seem to keep at it and get depressed again.  I think learning to love, or at the very least like, yourself is the key, but how do you do that when you don’t know yourself very well?  I also think I’m afraid to look, but I’ve been trying, and I think I can see some progress finally.  I don’t really have any advice for you Hannah, except to keep your head up and keep trying.  Best of luck!

Viewing 8 posts - 1 through 8 (of 8 total)