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September 30, 2016 at 1:30 am in reply to: Soul Mates Are Real and No One Can Tell Me Otherwise #116733Nina SakuraParticipant
Fair enough Aiyana, good luck, may it work out well for you!
Nina SakuraParticipantWhat I want :
1) complete financial independence in the next 4 years – imperative need of self-suffiency. Do I have a path and plan chalked out for that – yes and I am making an effort to learn more about how that can be done through routes other than corporate job.
2) physical fitness and better health for life
3) better relationships with newer people through more patience, less overthinking and expectations. Deepen current relationships.
4) to retain a grey outlook on life instead of seeing things, people and situations in black and white.
5) travel the world during different points, overcome fears of public speaking and many fears for that matter.
6) To build a social organaziation particularly and start laying the bricks from mid 30s.
7) and last of all, to accept that what we want from life changes over time depending on circumstances and it’s better to move forward anyway instead of lamenting, brooding.
Regards,
NinaNina SakuraParticipantHey Prakashraj,
I suggest you regularly maintain a journal and start volunteering seriously in an NGO for a few days. I will be pretty upfront with you on this – there are more challenging events to come in life and losing hope like this, hating others will not help you at all. Right now, your mind is stuck in victim mode – your situation is bad and everyone is pissing you off but see things for what they are – you are 18, you have a family, a roof over your head, people who will care for you in case something really bad happens – but screwing yourself over because of loneliness and some girl rejecting you isn’t worth it. Rejections happen in life, people will disappoint you and you will have to bounce back – life goes on. I am not saying I don’t understand the pain of loneliness, heart-break and depression – I do and that is why I implore you to consider the alternatives.
Take baby steps to combat your own negativity – try counselling for free say on yourdost.com – a few of the counsellors there are really good and I can recommend a few to you.
This too shall pass – over the years this is what I have realised – people overcome grief, abuse and tragedy – God knows what – we underestimate our ability to heal over time and overestimate what we can do to change in a day
The first step you can start with is do one good thing, one thoughtful thing for anyone a day without trying to take credit or expecting anything…I remember that day I was supposed to treat myself to this awesome takeaway after studying hard for an exam but in the end, I ended up buying ice-creams for the street kids. Haha, the seller thought I was a bit nuts but I dunno, it made me happy..during that time, I was just recovering from a major depressive episode, suicidal tendencies and had stated to get a grip oon life again. The guy I had loved for 6 years had broken my heart into pieces and that betrayal in the relationship shook me so hard – meanwhile, college placements tanked too.
And no one understood or even wanted to help while i was in this state – they were too busy in their own lives to care. I realised how alone i was and i had to somehow live through this either way…but you know, despite all of this – life goes on. Better things come, we develop the means to survive and thrive despite the pain.
I am sure you will find the way too but please don’t neglect your studies and future for this. You might not see that a good future is out there but trust me, you will regret thinking like this soon. One life, one chance – don’t waste your oppurtunities.
Regards,
NinaNina SakuraParticipantLaura,
I am very glad of your resolve Laura and hope your experiences enrich you as a person. Though it was difficult to be alone often, the experience has helped. Please share and post again on how things are going for you at the workplace.
-Nina
Nina SakuraParticipantJackie,
Consider the following questions-
1) do you want a romantic relationship with him?
2) can you stay just friends with him? (minus the kissing and cuddling)If the answer is no to both, then limit contact with this person for your well-being and his. Sometimes the kinder way is the harder way.
Regarding him reminding you of your mom, all I can say is that you aren’t a child anymore. Make your choices. Figure your life out for your sake.
I hope the other posters will have more enriching insights.
Regards,
NinaSeptember 25, 2016 at 12:05 pm in reply to: How to practice non attachment? Advice,quotes,personal stories appreciated. #116217Nina SakuraParticipantNina SakuraParticipantHey Laura,
First of all, I want to say you are not alone in feeling alone – we all face this at some point in our life and more so, thanks to the new trend of concentration of jobs in certain locations, global trotter life-styles etc in particular. There was a time I used to feel something was wrong with me because I didnt have that many friends – I was introverted, selective and rather suspicious to be honest. Over time though, after several experiences away from home, outside my comfort zone, I have concluded the following:
1) Quality matters over quantity. However, quality takes time – a good relationship is like a plant that needs care and time. Trust is something that takes time. So one needs to be realistic about the connect they will have with new people – As Midnight says, go with an open mind and less expectations on intimacy, more on basic courtesies. Best friends take time, hell even years actually.
2) What we are wired to seek are two things – company and the feeling of deep connection. What most people struggle with when they move to a new place alone is they no longer have that usual circle with whom they can do things with. The activities are missed and they feel bored – boredom causes more negative thinking to happen and judgments about oneself. The feeling of deep connection is something you already have with your sister and two friends – a connection that stands time and distance – whenever you get sad, remind yourself of that. There are some people out there who are truly alone, bitter and hopeless – you aren’t in that state thankfully.
3) Fill your days with activities and interests – learn to enjoy your company and that of others without excess expectations on them. Its good you know what type of people you want in your life – dont settle for shitty behavior.
And in the end, if you still feel alone, know you are not alone – what really matters is how connected you feel to yourself and to others, how satisfied you are with your life.
Of course, the most practical advice i can give you is to move back and be closer to loved ones or forge new friendships over time – 1 year is a very short time bdw, relationships take time and lighter, frequent interactions initially.
I hope you find a way in this new city.
Do post here sometime, would love to hear from you.
Regards,
NinaNina SakuraParticipantXenopus,
I sense a lot of pain within you – work has given meaning to things, helped you cope and escape but has it really healed things for you? Your view about the world is skewed from the start thanks to negative experiences, your mind is suspicious of others – if they are spontaneous and even if they aren’t. The world you see more than half of your day is one where the most messed up people come and it just gives you reinforcement for what you already hold true anyway. Part of you wants to break free and yet you don’t because you have never seen the gentler, emotional side of things – unconditional love at its best. I wonder if you think it actually exists?
I know i might be sounding like one of those dreamer types but i do have one question to ask you – are you really happy or even peaceful from inside? Everyone has their own demons but have you really dealt with yours?
Endless work, critique, a negative view-point, warrior-like stances – all very useful in the profession but are they the entire story in your life? Have you wondered why you can’t sleep peacefully still? Where do you want your life to be 10 years from now non-professionally?
Ask yourself these questions sometimes.
Regards,
NinaNina SakuraParticipantDear Xenopus,
A thought for the day:
βTo overcome the anxieties and depressions of contemporary life, Individuals must become independent of the social environment to the degree that they no longer respond exclusively in terms of its rewards and punishments. To achieve such autonomy, a person has to learn to provide rewards to herself. She has to develop the ability to find enjoyment and purpose regardless of external circumstances.β
Use your critical abilities to find “ways” towards happiness within rather than a critique of your ever move and that of others all the time. The balance point is missing right now – it’s too much about work and serious things – when was the last time you really relaxed and enjoyed yourself?
Regards,
NinaNina SakuraParticipantDear midnight,
Were these worries always there when you started dating him or they happened more after the bad times started?
I have often observed that anxiety is more a learned response to a past incident – our mind and body are on high alert though we logically know that this response isn’t the appropriate one to the situation.
I see this anxiety in myself a lot too – especially in relationships – Its like my mind has some interpretation of me as the “victim”, the snubbed and God knows what. The irony is in the long distance situation, one day he behaves a bit distant (doesn’t reply to my texts, seems too busy etc), the Pandora’s box gets opened.
What i am afraid of is feeling like i am not needed, that i am a burden of some sort and to avoid feeling this, i have often been distant about my feelings to people – i hate appearing needy in any way but i cant stand being away from my partner either.
In essence, “I want to be needed but i dont want to need.”
See how these are contradictions which are inter-related too?
A good way to understand your inner contradictions is regular journaling – recording those raw thoughts, voices in the head and then objectively seeing what they commonly look like after a while and then to sort of work backwards and understand what are the specific moments that trigger this – sort of reaching the core belief behind it.
And then to question the core belief – sometimes its done by going into one’s childhood and sometimes its by a process of direct rationalization through various techniques. The childhood way didn’t work me, so rationalization it is for me – Having a critical mind has its blessings and curse.
I wont say that the insecure me is gone – she will always be here – that critical voice is there still, its just that I choose not to give her that kind of power anymore.
An analogy, albeit a strange one: It reminds me a bit of Josh Nash in a beautiful mind with those people he keeps seeing -Charles got created when he craved a friend, Marcy got created as an offshoot of Charles. The military man got created when he felt snubbed by the military for his ingenious contributions. they talk to him but over time, he knows they aren’t real and after a point, he learns to ignore them and gives them less power. There is more to his mind than these shadows, there is more to his life than what these doubts tell him.
My apologies for going off on a different tangent on this post – i hope that my experiences may have provided you with an idea or two.
Regards,
NinaNina SakuraParticipantDear Midnight,
I dont have much to say except watch this video once and reflect on it:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1G371JiLJ7A
My thoughts on relationships and love:
1) A leap of faith to a huge extent. Sometimes we need to let go of judging every detail, of trying to control the situation by understanding everything – it means getting comfortable with not having that perfect explanation for imperfect people and situations.
2) No story is perfect, you aren’t perfect or broken – neither is he.
3) We only have a limited amount of time left on this planet and more so with the ones we love
4) Imagine he is gone and you will never talk to him again or see him, hug him again…10 years from now, would you regret losing your husband because of these doubts?Regards,
NinaaNina SakuraParticipantHey Charlotte,
I went through your other posts and all I can say is: Its okay, do what is right for you.
You are hurting, you spent 5 years with her emotionally invested, you had physical relations with her – she wasn’t committed to you in the relationship but you were. I am not surprised she moved on like this with that guy – if she couldn’t acknowledge you two in so many years, what future were you expecting anyway?
And you don’t have some damn switch like a robot without feelings where you can be like “sure, be nice to me and break my heart while caring for me. i love you too much to hurt you but you can” – i am sure she has other friends in her life too for this emotional support and loneliness problem. It is not your duty to deal with hers in any way.
I agree with Inky, maintain space from this person, let it hurt her but please stop letting this situation hurt you.
You aren’t happy – you are heartbroken and guilty over feeling what you feel….Get ahead with your life. You deserve someone who wants to be with you for real, not this ambiguous blurry line…think about it, would you have continued your whole life doing this?
Maintaining this association of ambiguity while she moves on…think about it, she gets married someday while you are still in love, still angry at her and yourself for not moving ahead…
dont you deserve better?
Regards
NinaSeptember 14, 2016 at 3:32 am in reply to: How to cope with memories and sentimental moments after breakup #115106Nina SakuraParticipantGive it time, cry all you want when you need to and the best way though would be to get totally immersed in something else – like a trip with friends, an event to manage which will keep u super busy – isolating yourself completely isn’t a good idea though during this time. Write down your feelings regularly when you need to and then shut the book, go outside for that walk, go meet that friend for shopping…eventually, the pain becomes bearable and things become easier.
September 13, 2016 at 8:19 am in reply to: Boyfriend forcefully married by his family, still loves me and want us together. #115062Nina SakuraParticipantDear Kk,
When deciding what to do next, consider what you would like life to be like after 3 years, 5 years and what could it be based on the current situation. The facts are (as per my understanding):
1) He wont leave his wife right now.
2) His financial position isn’t strong.
3) He doesn’t have any relationship with his wife.According to you, 1 will change when 2 does – what about 3 ?
And what about you? Will you keep waiting for a married man to become financially stable and then leave his wife for you?
I know that from an emotional point of view, you can’t imagine a life without him but there is more to life than him and holding on to this is crushing your spirit.
What would you advice another friend in this situation?
Regards,
NinaNina SakuraParticipantMahia,
This tendency to stay in contact so frequently after breakup is very normal for guys especially. You both had daily connection but truth be said, being friends isn’t that simple. The feelings are still there and one needs to learn how to move on from it. Staying so much in touch with him will not help any of you – I know you feel bad but trust me, it’s for his own good that you do stay friends but keep limited communication for a while after the breakup. He is a grown up and needs to tap into other sources for support – going to you repeatedly right now will mean he will never be able to move on with his life.
Be kinder by taking the harder way.
I was forced to do the same with my ex…time heals but first that space is needed.
Regards
Nina -
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