Home→Forums→Tough Times→My extreme feelings kill me
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December 13, 2019 at 1:03 pm #327443
Gaia
ParticipantThe compliments you made about my thinking were very much appreciated. I guess no one else ever called me “logical”my life lol. By the way, one method I’m implementing in my social interactions is paying more attention to what is being said also to understand when exactly telling a personal input and so not to talk over others. I also try to feel more connected to others by matching their voice tones, but I guess body posture is worth considering. I feel so incredibly stupid in social settings sometimes, if someone says something I have to ask them to repeat more than once.
Also during this time I’ve also accomplished another insight. I guess I’m unable to form real relationships because both my parents were somewhat distant in my early life. My mother used to work most of the time and my father is a withdrawn type. I was very talkative as a child so I used to bond with him more but it got lost with years. My mother was also present and physically affectionate when home but I was a detaching child, preferring to be on my own and daydreaming most of the time instead to be bothered with practical things others talked about.
December 13, 2019 at 1:42 pm #327447Anonymous
GuestDear Gaia:
Your thinking is excellent, really. You are making great, gradual progress with the following social skills:
-“paying more attention to what is being said”.
-“understand when exactly telling a personal input”.
-“not to talk over others”.
-“matching (others’) voice tones”.
-“if someone says something I.. ask them to repeat”.
You wrote: “I feel so incredibly stupid in social settings sometimes”, but you are learning, and learning undoes stupid! After all, stupid (better words are: ignorant, unskilled) is not a permanent condition if we are able to learn. I am ignorant and unskilled in the area of farming, but if I learn farming in class and in the field, I will no longer be ignorant or unskilled. I will be knowledgeable and skilled!
You wrote: “I was very talkative as a child so I used to bond with him”- you were sociable as a child, no doubt. It was because “both (your) parents were somewhat distant in (your) early life”, that you became “a detaching child”.
Excellent thinking and insight, a pleasure to read!
anita
December 14, 2019 at 5:51 am #327497Gaia
ParticipantThanks! My attachment pattern is definitely fearful avoidant. I’m both anxious at being accepted by others but at the same time I’d rather avoid them. I found attachment theory to be really interesting and insightful
December 14, 2019 at 6:38 am #327507Anonymous
GuestDear Gaia:
You are welcome. Fearful avoidant- we do avoid what we fear, naturally. Gradual introduction to situations we fear is key, isn’t it? When you fear social situations, you courageously get into one but for a short time, to start with, so it’s less scary, and then over time increase time. Makes sense?
anita
December 14, 2019 at 3:16 pm #327565Gaia
ParticipantMakes sense. Definitely what I’m doing lately. Exposing myself to more and more interpersonal settings but slowly.
I’m also considering I might have some mental illness since the way my mind can gets very dark and nasty (as well as my moods) disturbs me. When I get angry I get very verbally aggressive and vicious in my mind even when it’s totally uncalled for, I may also forgive someone pretty quickly or want peace but then randomly I will entertain mental scenarios of me attacking or fighting someone I dislike and it gets very vicious and I just am perplexed with myself-
This reply was modified 5 years, 4 months ago by
Gaia.
December 14, 2019 at 3:46 pm #327573Anonymous
GuestDear Gaia:
I will read your recent post (and anything you may add to it) and reply when I am back to the computer, in about 14 hours from now.
anita
December 15, 2019 at 8:47 am #327661Anonymous
GuestDear Gaia:
What you described is anger, strong anger. “dark and nasty” thoughts and moods, getting “very verbally aggressive and vicious in my mind even when it’s totally uncalled for”, “entertain mental scenarios of me attacking of fighting someone I dislike”-
– that’s strong, unresolved anger. I say unresolved, because you feel that anger “even when it’s totally uncalled for”.
You are “perplexed with myself”- the reason you experience a lot of this strong anger, even in situations where it is uncalled for, is not because you were born with a mental illness, but because you really had valid reasons to feel anger, as a child/ teenager. This is where the unresolved part of your anger resides, and why it is so strong and persistent.
I figure you kept your anger down all through the years, pushed it down at home, and like a volcano, lava rises to the surface every once in a while, surprising you. But the anger (the magma, that hot liquid before it reaches the ground surface of a volcano) is brewing underneath all along, all the time.
anita
December 15, 2019 at 1:49 pm #327697Gaia
ParticipantI don’t think you’re born with mental disorders, but you can develop them in your lifetime based on environment and predisposition to certain moods or thinking pattern. Said so, your opinion doesn’t really contradict mine.. in the sense that something like unresolved or repressed anger can manifest unhealthy in the mind or affect your thinking/attitude in toxic ways and to me that’s mental disorder. To be honest, I don’t believe mental disorders are chronic defined boxes so I’m not exactly putting a defined or specific label on myself neither but the way my mind can get detached or the way I can be very strayed from reality or the way I spend so much isolated time only thinking about my extreme moods or pacing around.. well definitely that isn’t very sane
December 15, 2019 at 1:51 pm #327701Gaia
ParticipantOn my anger:
I was prone to anger since I can remember. I so always thought of it as my defining trait. Others point out how sharp and brutally honest I can be, how argumentative I can be, its more easy for me to hate than love. I would not shy away from physical fight if it’d present itself and it happened sometimes.
December 15, 2019 at 3:02 pm #327719Anonymous
GuestDear Gaia:
I agree, that what I wrote to you doesn’t contradict what you wrote to me. I am less of a believer in predispositions than I used to be though. Therefore when I read: “I was prone to anger since I can remember”, I think.. you were hurt and scared long ago, and anger resulted. This is how animals get angry: first they get scared, or hurt (and scared of that hurt feeling), then they get angry. Emotionally, we operate like other animals.
I fit several mental diagnoses myself, and I was officially diagnosed with several, I suppose you can call them mental-illnesses. The diagnoses themselves did nothing to help me, none whatsoever. You get a diagnosis and you think it gets you somewhere.. but no. At best it is a starting point to therapy, as in: what do we- the therapist and patient- tackle first. Healing itself has to do with basic elements, raw emotions and the basic principles of the workings of our brains, not with the many, many categories of collections of symptoms aka diagnoses decided on in psychiatric conventions, people sorting out symptoms, basically.
Tell me more about your anger, if you want, express it here verbally, with some self discipline of course, such as using *** for profanities, and avoiding descriptions of most terrible violence imaginable. Still, expressing some of it here, can be a lot of expressing, and it can help. I will read attentively and respectfully, and reply to you.
anita
December 16, 2019 at 1:54 am #327897Gaia
ParticipantSometimes I feel like I could kill people with words or I feel like I am possessed by some evil cruel energy. If I am provoked, I like to be mean or sharp with others
December 16, 2019 at 5:00 am #327911Anonymous
GuestDear Gaia:
It takes a lot of self discipline to not act on anger when it is not called for or when the situation does not call for this much anger. It is a form of suffering to experience this much anger and to not act on it. This is something I still suffer from, anger when the situation doesn’t call for it.
I want to look more into your anger by reading your previous posts over time, looking for that anger.
Here is a question you can answer if you want, based on your recent post: what kinds of mean things do you say to people when provoked?
anita
December 16, 2019 at 7:40 am #327939Gaia
ParticipantThere’s not something particular I’d say but I can be very mean or go cut people where it hits them more or where they go suffer more. I’m afraid that one day someone will make me snap and I’ll threaten their or my safety in some way. Sometimes I am really scared of what I am able of
December 16, 2019 at 8:31 am #327953Anonymous
GuestDear Gaia:
I just accidently deleted the study I did this morning, collecting quotes from your threads since summer 2016, which I re-read, copied and pasted, and then the collection disappeared. What I am going to do now is write to you my understanding from memory, without adding the quotes which are very revealing of what I am about to express. The good part of this disappearance is that this post will be much shorter than otherwise.
First my premise, my belief: there was nothing wrong with you when you were born, no predisposition to anything more than any human is born with. All humans are predisposed to anger, for example. So nothing inherently wrong with you.
Second, I see mental problems like this: it is like a ball of wet mud at the top of a hill, that small ball of mud is the original problem that you experienced in your life, the beginning-of-trouble. Then over time, this ball of mud rolls down the hill, and as it does, more and more mud is added to it, and the ball grows bigger and bigger. For example, what you referred to as having been mildly bullied in school, that was mud added to the Original Ball of Mud (I’ll call it OBoM, for simplicity). Every rejection or perceived rejection in school was added to that OBoM. OCD- that was a huge addition to that OBoM, a very unfortunate addition. And then, your very intelligent abstract thinking didn’t help you, and instead it added more and more mud to OBoM.
Third, I will jump to defining that OBoM: having re-read this morning, once again, your posts since you were 18, 3.5 years ago, this is the OBoM to the best of my understanding at this point (warning: I don’t think you will like it, because it has to do with your mother):
OBoM: we can’t see ourselves, our faces that is, we have to look in a mirror to see our faces. A child can’t see her nature, can’t see who she is, her identity, unless she looks in the mirror. A child’s mirror is her parent (or a combination of parents, depending on their roles in her life. But because you shared only about your mother, I will refer to her only).
Your mother was your mirror, your self identity was your reflection in her, the image staring back at you from her. What did you see in that mirror: someone very wrong, something that had something very wrong with her.
This is the image of yourself that she projected out to you. This is why you felt, as a young adult, so repulsed to be in her company, fearing she will ask you questions. No one likes to see an image of themselves that is so faulty and wrong and unacceptable.
Your mother saw the dark side in everyone, including you.
This is why you wanted to be someone else, to come with a different identity- someone who is not wrong. Also, your fantasy about being watched by a crush while you have light hearted fun and being seen that way, light hearted, that is in contradiction to how your mother saw you: dark and heavy, like her.
This is it, this is the original ball of mud- being seen by your mother as a dark, heavy, something-is-very-wrong-with-me kind of person. All the other mud was added later. As a result of that growing ball of mud, you suffer a lot, and when we suffer, feeling stuck in that suffering, seeing no hope, we get angry. Anyone who is stuck in an unpleasant situation, suffering a lot, gets angry.
Let me know what you think, if you want to, of course.
anita
December 16, 2019 at 9:11 am #327959Gaia
ParticipantSeeing a reflection of self in my parents wasn’t something I quite much considered. What confuses me is that when I was little I didn’t really have a bad consideration of my mom, even thought I’m revealing flaws or bad aspects in her parenting that I really didn’t in my childhood. Definitely I already sensed heaviness and toxicity in her so that might have definitely influenced my moods and sense of self today. Don’t know if I already told it, but in my inner healing journey, I came to the conclusion that what my inner child/child self lack(ed) was joy and lightness. Something pretty much never granted from such a melodramatic mother but that should be a basic right/need for every child, cause children need to be light-hearted and carefree. Even thought inside of me I don’t feel like an adult yet, despite being physically adult, I neither see myself and neither saw myself as carefree or light-hearted, not even as a child
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