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How do you become your authentic self?

HomeForumsEmotional MasteryHow do you become your authentic self?

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  • #233413
    Olivia
    Participant

    I want to accept myself for who I really am. My entire life, I have moulded myself to fit the expectations of the people around me. Predominantly my parents, who never saw me for who I really am, just their idea of who they wanted me to be. Their fear and anxiety, though well-intentioned, conditioned me to believe that there was only one way I could live my life, and I feared departing from that vision.

    I kept seeking external validation. I defined myself by what I was good at, like art, academic success, or my compassion for others. My people pleasing tendencies, coupled with my social anxiety and shyness, is exhausting. I feel like I’m often performing who I am, rather than just being. In social situations I worry about not being interesting enough, entertaining enough, or just not even good enough, to even be acceptable to others. I am so afraid of rejection that I distance myself and withdraw and beat myself up in my head, ensuring that I feel rejected regardless of the reality. I create situations of rejection in my mind on an everyday basis. I’m constantly reading people so that I can modify myself to fit with them, to the point where it’s like I am multiple different people depending on who I talk to. The more people there are in a group, the more anxious I become – I guess because then I don’t know who to be, so I just keep quiet and withdraw.

    Who I am feels like a whole lot of projected images that the real me is hiding behind. I’m always striving to be like a certain person, or trying to make myself seem more interesting. I want to seem like I’m in control, but I’m not. It’s so overwhelming and I’m so anxious and it feels like everything is falling apart. I can’t keep up the pretence any longer.

    Therapy has helped me to recognise these deeply ingrained patterns. I suppose being aware of it all will help. I know I can’t push change and progress. I know it’s a long journey that will take years.

    I just want to know, if you experienced something similar, how did you come to accept yourself and live more authentically? What were the struggles you faced? How do you let go of the expectations and be true to yourself?

    #233445
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Olivia:

    Welcome back!

    Yes, I too had a relentlessly abusive inner critic, the mental representative of my abusive mother, criticizing me on an ongoing basis. My life has been very painful and dysfunctional as a result. Being authentic felt like a foreign concept. I felt uncomfortable, distressed and withdrew to daydreaming alone, as a way to escape real life interactions which were filled with that ongoing criticism.

    Within the last few years, as part of my healing process, I learned that my mother’s criticism of me was not valid. I would say that was an understanding that was necessary for me in the process of quieting and often silencing that inner critic. As long as I believed that my mother was correct in her criticism of me, correct in her disapproval of me, her mental representative was free to do its thing, every day,  ongoing, year after year.

    anita

    #233575
    Olivia
    Participant

    Dear Anita

    It’s good to hear from you again!

    Yes, I also felt uncomfortable and distressed, and withdrew to daydreaming alone to escape the anxiety of real life. Ironically the daydreaming is often about who I idealistically want to be in the future… feeding into my anxiety of not being “good enough” in the present.

    I’m embarking on the journey of learning to be present and accepting myself as I am today. I understand now that these things people tell me I am or should be, are not valid. I don’t need to feel anxiety about meeting their expectations to please them. Often these expectations are not even rooted in reality. It’s like I think I can read their minds, and they’re just things I perceive the other person wants of me and I strive to become this image. I will be happiest being true to myself.

    I think separating myself from my inner critic, the mental representation of my parents, is difficult as their voices are not so much critical as fearful and anxious. My parents had loving intentions, but their love was deeply ingrained with fear and anxiety, and their voice in my head causes me to simultaneously strive to please them and doubt my abilities. I am understanding that this voice does not serve me well.

    I find that I have difficulty being present with my feelings and emotions. My mind feels disconnected from my body. For example, in therapy and talking about my mother’s childhood emotional trauma and how that has played out in her expectations of me, I feel anxiety. Yet there is underlying sadness that tries to escape my body, which is stopped by anxiety strangling my throat. I realised that despite often thinking of my mother’s pain, I have rarely allowed myself to feel this sadness… instead it manifests as anxiety, resentment, guilt, distress. Often when I try to describe how I feel, I realise I don’t know what I’m feeling, or I don’t let myself feel. I’m glad I now have awareness of this problem and more awareness of my body. How do I stay present with my feelings and let myself feel them without judgement or anxiety?

    Olivia

     

    #233587
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Olivia:

    I am not focused enough and will be away from the computer for the next 14 hours or so. When I am back, I will read your recent post attentively and reply to you.

    anita

    #233663
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Olivia:

    You asked: “How do I stay present with my feelings and let myself feel them without judgment or anxiety”- to feel what you are afraid of feeling, to stay present and not escape (the Flight response to Fear), it will take applying emotional regulation skills over time and ongoing practice, so that eventually and gradually, your fear lessens and you build trust in your ability to endure the (reduced) fear and stay, not run away.

    You wrote that you “withdrew to daydreaming alone to escape the anxiety of real life. Ironically the daydreaming is often about who I idealistically want to be in the future… feeding into my anxiety of not being ‘good enough’ in the present”.

    I don’t dance, never did have a talent or a feel to dancing, was clumsy. But I used to daydream that I was an internationally known and admired dancer, dancing on the stage to millions of people watching and cheering, right there in the audience and in front of the TV all over the world. I used to daydream about being a successful and rich medical doctor. There was of course a huge gap between reality and those daydreams. In comparison to the images in the daydreams, I was even more less-than, more inadequate that I felt in comparison to peers in school, to cousins my age, etc.

    In August you wrote regarding your mother (and I am back to your mother/anyone’s mother, because we are formed in those years during our observations of her and interactions with her):

    “The existence of my problems threatens her fragile identity as the ‘good mother’… I could not express weakness or faults without being attacked, as though my imperfection was a threat to her… she tearfully attacks me until I surrender, apologize and reassure her that she is a good mother, and then I am a good daughter again… I think over the past few years I had wanted to shed the pretense of perfection around her… I wanted her to see me as I was”.

    You needed safety as a child. As a child, you were not a separate mental entity from your mother. The two of you, in your young brain, were one. If you expressed a problem, an imperfection she attacked you. So you cleared from problems and imperfections best you could, but failed because that task is impossible.

    Do you agree with me so far, and if you do, will you develop this thinking I just expressed, or otherwise tell me what you think regarding my quote of you from August?

    anita

     

    #233731
    Olivia
    Participant

    Dear Anita

    Yes, I agree with you so far. In my young mind, my mother and I were one. I felt the need to care for her emotionally and fulfil the dreams she could never achieve. In this way, I could be close to her. I saw how coldly she resented my father for all his perceived wrongdoings, how she kept hateful grudges against others whilst silently fuming. She would disclose this all to me. Her moods were unpredictable and she would often snap angrily without warning. In my young mind, it felt as if she hated me, for I knew she hated all these other people. I desperately wanted her to always treat me warmly. To mould myself to her would ensure her “love”. I see now that I lived with fear, feeling unsafe and insecure in my own home.

    I have internalised these voices of my parents, and though I am aware, it is difficult to separate myself from the voice and accept myself wholly. Sometimes I imagine holding my young self, telling her all the things I needed to hear as a child, feeling all my love in my heart and sending it to her. I feel sad, but it is as though the sadness is choked in my throat. I suppose it will take time for me to learn to become more present with my body and my feelings. How do I develop the emotional regulation skills and the trust in myself to stay with the fear?

    olivia

     

     

    #233801
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Olivia:

    You wrote: “I felt the need to care for her emotionally and fulfill the dreams she could never achieve. In this way, I could be close to her”- notice this: you were already close to her, as close as you could be. She was not close to you. It is that mental unit that needs to be… reorganized.

    “How do I develop the emotional regulation skills and the trust in myself to stay with the fear?”- you are studying to be a psychotherapist, correct? Years into it, if I remember correctly. You already know about emotional regulation skills and have been practicing those, haven’t you?

    anita

     

    #233803
    Olivia
    Participant

    Dear Anita,

    Yes, I understand now, that she was unable to be close to me and understand me the way I wanted. That is something I have to continue working on accepting and letting go.

    Actually, I’m not yet studying to be a psychotherapist. I’m a medical student. My experience in psychotherapy has been limited to two month’s worth of placements in psychiatry, and discussions with various clinicians as both teachers and therapists. It is something I have a keen interest in, and I wish to understand myself before I begin training in a few year’s time. Currently I am working on my awareness of the thoughts and avoidance behaviours that lead me to the same unhealthy patterns.

    Olivia

    #233821
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Olivia:

    You are a medical student and you want to be a psychotherapist in the future, then. I see.

    “How do  I develop the emotional regulation skills and the trust in myself to stay with the fear?”- guided meditations with the theme of Mindfulness, Other Mindfulness exercises and practices (abundant information available, including on the home page of this site under Blogs), physical daily exercise, distractions that are not harmful, a list of those to fit different circumstances so that you can pick and choose depending on the circumstance. Also, CBT exercises (workbooks available in bookstores).

    Medically, all of our communication, you typing away and I typing to you, all that  is made possible by the brain which is a mass of flesh, cells, organic material. In that brain your fear is stored in thousands of neuropathways involving thoughts and fear, as well as other emotions.

    Your childhood experience with your mother is recorded in many thousands of neuropathways all in between your ears. When you currently spend time with her, and if she continues, as she did in the past, to keep “hateful grudges against others whilst silently fuming”, if she still “disclose(s) this all to me”; if “her moods (are) unpredictable and she (still) often snap angrily without warning”- then you don’t have much of a chance to loosen the emotions in those pathways, that is, to regulate your emotions.

    No matter how many mindfulness exercises you do, if you are still exposed to what is fueling what troubles you, keeping it going and going, how can you possibly move forward?

    “In my young mind, it felt as if she hated me”- that young brain is still there, your brain now.

    anita

     

    #233879
    Prash
    Participant

    Dear Olivia,

    Good to read from you again.

    Acceptance of self and authenticity is something that I have been chasing after for quite some time. I have struggled to understand and define what my authentic self is. Sometimes I wonder if there is something like that. Sometimes I feel it when I am immersed in something that interests me to the core.

    My struggles in this area of self knowledge have been related to knowing where the possible source of beliefs are but not being able to gain much traction despite knowing the possible causation. Intellectually knowing that certain thoughts are not helpful yet feeling helpless when they seem to dominate.

    The most helpful way that I have found to being true to myself is in those moments of absolute concentration in moment to moment activities in the present without the burden of thoughts.

    PS: A lot of what you wrote resonated with me. Paradoxically causing some relief knowing that the struggle is common.

    • This reply was modified 5 years, 6 months ago by Prash.
    #233881
    Prash
    Participant

    Dear Olivia,

    With regards to staying with a difficult emotion, I read this book based on Acceptance and Commitment therapy – Get out of your mind and into your life By Steven C Hayes. There are some useful exercises in this book that may be helpful in developing skills that help you stay with your fear.

    Take care

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