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How to be happy wherever you are?

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  • #357879
    chezka21
    Participant

    Hi everyone

    When i was 12 (now 25) i  moved from the Philippines to the UK. It took me a while to adjust to the culture and everything. 2 years later we moved again within the UK but to a different city which i hated. It was a really small town and everyone knew each other so when i was 19 i moved back the first city we moved to as i didnt want to live with my family anymore plus i hated the town we were in.

    Here’s some backstory – sorry its quite long and confusing but i’ll try my best to explain

    1 year after the move from Philippines I found out that my sister is actually my mother. I was looking for bedsheets and found this box that had my birth certificate i read through it and down the mother section was her name and father section was someone i didnt know.

    So my sister took me to manchester with her husband along with their son who i thought was my nephew. At first i was confused but it made sense. I grew up with my grandmother who i thought was my mother then when i was 8 she left me to go to America with my grandad who i thought was my dad. I was left in the philippines with my uncle who i thought was my brother, also had an auntie who i thought was my sister but she was only home every now and then as she worked in a cruiseship with my sister who is actually my mother so she can sustain me. Anyway my mother (sister) met her husband while working and decided to further their career hence why we moved to the UK.

    My 13 year old self didnt know what to do when i found out so i hid the information to my self for about 2 years until i told them. In the 2 years i didnt say anything i was so unhappy and irritable which caused arguments between everyone. When i did tell them my mother told me everything and i understand their reason. It was basically a cultural thing where my grandmother didnt want our family to be frowned upon cause my mother is a single mother so they pretended i was my grandmothers last child. I know it sounds bizarre.

    I moved back to the small town where my family was after 2 years for 1 year to save money as i decided to do a gap year in sydney where i met my fiance who is also from the UK. My relationship with my family has been much better than before i left.

    So i was 22 when i travelled to sydney and at first i loved it then hated then loved it. We now live in Scotland to be with my fiances family as one of his members unfortunately had illness she is fine now thank goodness but we decided to settle here as it will be easier for us when we do want start our own family. I have a great relationship with him and his family are so lovely but my problem is the city?. I dont have a lot of friends here and i often feel lonely. Were getting married next year and i really do want to be happy here but i dont know what to do. I have felt this in Sydney and also everywhere i move to which makes me think its not the place its just me.
    My childhood history caused me to have anxiety and depression but travelling for me was great as i felt like i was running away from my problems.

    i know this is so long but if you are reading this thank you ! Any insight would be helpful.

    #357928
    Jan
    Participant

    Dear chezka21

    Wow, that’s a lot of stuff to get your head around, isn’t it? You must feel, subconsciously or otherwise, that the sand is always shifting under your feet and leaving you uncertain about things. And I can totally understand how moving from one place to another felt like you were running away from your problems (I did a certain amount of this in my own life, so I get it). Trouble is, your problems tend to travel right along with you, don’t they?

    I’m very glad to hear that your history has not prevented your forming a worthwhile relationship. Have your discussed your concerns with your fiance?

    There’s an old expression “bloom where you’re planted” which basically means to make the most of your situation, wherever you find yourself. I suspect you’re right about it being you not the place, it’s so easy to second-guess yourself and never settle to anything, especially with a history like yours. The important thing is that you have a good relationship with your family now, you have a loving fiance and you get on well with his family, you’re getting married and planning a family of your own. This is all good stuff, does it really matter where it all happens?

    Having said that, if, in the final analysis, you are really not happy about living in a city again, could you not compromise and live near the city, but in a smaller, quieter place?

    Hope this helps.

    all the best

    Jan

    #357983
    Mahesh
    Participant

    In life, we face so many problems, issues and we stay happy and blissful. We never think that we always have problems, God has given all the problem to me and all. How much negativity we think, we feel sad and lost. Budhha said, If we want to be happy, forget, and forgive. That’s how we stay happy in life. Also, meditation is very important to adopt to our day to day life. I will share some basic steps for Meditation. Meditation should practise for a long time, then only we realize the results of Meditation. Firstly, we should run or jog for a few minutes in the early morning before sunrise.  Then only you feel you are opening your chakras in the body. After that, sit in a calm, fresh, clean place where you get the fresh air to breath. Then start inhaling and exhaling the breath and most importantly concentrate on breathing. That’s how you gain peace, happiness and success in your life where you are:-) Please go through the blog why meditation is good for you and its effect.

    #358114
    chezka21
    Participant

    Hi Jan

    Thank you for the response! Yes I’m so glad to have found a good relationship with my fiance, before I met him I was a mess I had no direction in life I just wanted to travel and runaway. My fiance knows everything and he is very supportive, we have both decided to settle here as he made a very good point saying if we move elsewhere and start a family it means no family for both of us so at least here we have his family to look after the child or just spend time with it. You are absolutely right, I need to try my best and just make the best out of whatever i have.

    One thing I didn’t mention is my fiance is very close to his grandma, he sees her quite often. We are a 15 minute drive away from her and often times she would ask him to go and do stuff for her which I know I shouldn’t be annoyed but it’s too much sometimes. An example would be turning on a laptop, she just needs to press a button and yet she asked him to go and do it for her. I did express all of this to my fiance and he told me he will tell them to back off a bit but I feel bad and I don’t want to upset his grandma as she is also so very nice to me . Most of our arguments is because of her and I don’t know how I should deal with it. When we first moved here we saw her at least twice a week and after my work sometimes we would go up to her house to do stuff for her and after a while it took a toll on me where I spoke to my fiance and he understood. Its been better but everytime she texts him or calls him I get a little bit annoyed/paranoid because she might go and ask him to go to hers. She also has a lot of opinions for our wedding but my fiance has told her it’s our wedding not hers so she has calmed down a bit. She has paid for a part of it so this is me now again feeling bad because i feel like i owe her something.. i dont know maybe im losing my mind?!

    I’m not sure I’m feeling like this maybe because I wasn’t as close as he is to my family? Im so used to doing my own thing and my family let’s me do whatever it is that makes me happy. They would text me once in a while but not everyday which i’m totally happy with. I really feel bad about feeling this way towards my fiances grandma because i know she doesn’t mean bad but yeah..

    Thanks for listening

    Iris

    #358375
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Iris:

    I will retell your story using the information you knew at the time, not correcting the information to fit what you found out at a later time:

    You grew up in the Philippines with your parents. When you were 8, your parents left you in the Philippines and moved to America. You then lived with your older brother and with one of your older sisters who worked on a cruise ship with a second older sister.  Your second older sister married a man with whom she has a son, and you lived with her and her family.

    When you were 12, your second older sister took you with her and her husband and son out of the Philippines and to Manchester, UK. At 13 you came across your birth certificate and found out that your second older sister, he one you were living with, is actually your mother, and that you didn’t know your biological father. You kept this new information to yourself for two years, during which you were “so unhappy and irritable”.

    At 14 you moved with your redefined family out of Manchester and to a very small town within the UK. You hated living with your redefined family in that small town. At 15, you finally told your former sister, now mother that you found out that she was your mother two years earlier She told you that she was a single mother when she had you and your grandparents pretended to you and to everyone that you were their daughter, their “last child”, because they were ashamed, afraid of being negatively judged by society for having an unmarried daughter with child.

    At 19, you moved on your own back to Manchester. At 21, you moved back to the small town and lived with your redefined family, the relationship with them was better than before. At 22 you moved to Sydney, Australia, where you lived with your UK born boyfriend. You “loved it then hated then loved it”.

    By the age of 25 (your current age), you and your boyfriend, now fiancé, moved back to the UK and currently live in a city in Scotland, close to his family. One of his family members is his grandmother whom he sees often. You are annoyed about her asking him to do simple things for her, things she should know how to do on her own, like turning on her laptop. You have arguments with your fiancé regarding him attending to her too often, for simple things. “every time she texts him or calls him I get a little bit annoyed/ paranoid because she might go and ask him to go to hers”. She paid for part of the wedding you plan to have next year, and she is nice to you, but you feel that she is overinvolved in the wedding planning, and you feel indebted to her and guilty regarding how you feel about her.

    You feel lonely, somewhat anxious and depressed, and lack direction in life. You wrote: “I have felt this in Sydney and also everywhere I move to which makes me think it’s not the place, it’s just me. My childhood history caused me to have anxiety and depression but traveling for me was great as I felt like I was running away from my problems”, and regarding meeting your boyfriend, now fiancé: “before I met him I was a mess I had no direction in life, I just wanted to travel and runaway”.

    I don’t know if you are still following your thread and therefore, I don’t know if you are reading this. If you are here, reading this, please let me know if I retold your story accurately and if you would like, we can communicate further.

    anita

    #358376
    chezka21
    Participant

    Hi Anita

    Many thanks for the response i really appreciate it! You have retold it quite accurately apart from the second older sister bit. She is actually the eldest and she has two siblings (younger brother and sister).

    I would like to hear more fom you.

     

    #358381
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Iris (chezka21):

    By “second older sister” I meant one of the two (or more) sisters, not referring to the order of your sisters’ ages. You had two parents and three older siblings: an eldest sister, a middle sister, and a bother for thirteen years. At 13, you found out that all along, you were your eldest sister’s daughter, and your two other siblings were your aunt and uncle. And that your parents were your grandparents. You later found out the reason: that your grandparents were ashamed of the evidence of their daughter having had sex outside marriage, and that evidence.. is you.

    This is not an uncommon happening. I personally communicated for years with a member who also discovered that her sister was her mother, her siblings were her uncles and aunts, and her parents were her grandparents.

    I imagine that when your parents (grandparents, that is) left you behind in the Philippines, you were upset and you missed them. You lost one home that you had by the time you were 8. Then you lived with siblings, one was often absent working in the cruise ship- no stable home for you. Four years after you lost your first home, the one with your parents, your eldest sister, took you with her and her family (husband and child) when they moved to the UK, and then moved again within the UK, still an unstable life for you.

    And then, more of your stability was taken away from underneath  you: the shocking discovery that everything you thought was true.. was not. For as long as you thought that you were your eldest sister’s sister, it made sense that you were somewhat of an outsider to her nuclear family of husband and child. But when you found out she was your mother, I imagine it hurt and angered you that you were not a part of her nuclear family, that you were an outsider all along.

    The results of this discovery and keeping it to yourself for two years were more anxiety, anger, depression and loneliness. I imagine the extent of the loneliness involved in keeping this shocking information to yourself for two whole years.

    When you traveled you are distracted from the anxiety, anger, depression and loneliness. When settled in one place, you are not distracted, so you feel these things sometimes acutely.

    Regarding your feelings about your fiancé in relation to his grandmother, here is a possibility for you to consider and let me know if it is true: you want you and your fiancé to be The nuclear family, a family of two (you and fiancé) and future child or children.  You no longer want to be on the outside looking in. You want to be central to your fiancé. You don’t want anyone to dilute your nuclear family. (?)

    anita

    #358390
    chezka21
    Participant

    Hi Anita

    Thank you for your insight. I have honestly never looked at it that way before but what you said it makes a lot of sense. Is there anyway i can do to stop myself from self sabotaging? I really do not want to feel what i feel towards my fiances grandma as i can see in the long run it wouldnt be good for our relationship. 

    #358394
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Iris:

    You are welcome. You say that you “never looked at it that way before”, what specifically in what I suggested to you in the last post, did you not look at before in that way?

    anita

    #358396
    chezka21
    Participant

    Hi Anita

    Sorry i should have been more clear, it was about what you said “Regarding your feelings about your fiancé in relation to his grandmother, here is a possibility for you to consider and let me know if it is true: you want you and your fiancé to be The nuclear family, a family of two (you and fiancé) and future child or children.  You no longer want to be on the outside looking in. You want to be central to your fiancé. You don’t want anyone to dilute your nuclear family. (?)”

    When I was living with my mother and her husband plus son I felt left out  and i felt like i didn’t belong. Me and my brother do get on though which is good. My stepdad and I had a tough relationship as we never really spoke.

    #358400
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Iris:

    I understand. You wrote in your post before last: “I really do not want to feel what I feel towards my fiancé’s grandma as I can see in the long run it wouldn’t be good for our relationship”- here is an idea that may work for you. It will not be easy but in the long run it can be helpful to you and to your relationship with your fiancé:

    – instead of trying to discourage your fiancé from seeing his grandma, do the opposite: encourage him to see her, and spend more time with his grandma yourself. I imagine you will feel resistance doing so, but if you ease into it with time and practice, you will eventually feel more and more included and like you belong with your fiancé and his grandma.

    anita

    #358664
    chezka21
    Participant

    Hi Anita

    Just wanted to say thanks for all your insights. It has really helped me figure out what i have been feeling. At least now i know what i have to deal with. I will encourage him to go and see her for sure and i will try and stop overthinking things.

    #358666
    Anonymous
    Guest

    You are welcome, Iris. It is kind of you to return to your thread just so to thank me, I appreciate it. I hope you post again anytime, if you need to.

    anita

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