Re: Something Bothering you?/Daily Doldrums
Posted: Sun Mar 29, 2015 5:30 am
What the hell are you getting at? I'm not sure how that makes me satanic, lol
> just browse the newest page, enjoy.Rayfist wrote:What the hell are you getting at? I'm not sure how that makes me satanic, lol
Don't try and delude yourself into thinking there's a certain person/place/thing that's not in your reach. Of course it makes perfect sense to want to find friendship through similar interests, but at the same time you also don't want to dream up some perfect situation where the similar taste guarantees good friendship.OldClassicGamer wrote:Video games helped me a lot, but considering all of my friends who are into gaming live very far away, it didn't help me to become more sociable IRL (although I did online which is still something). You are lucky that you are from US since there are many gamers there. Finding gamers like you and other RPC members in country where I live is same as finding a needle in a haystack. People just don't game here in general. It's just part of the mentality of the whole nation. They prefer nightlife and parties in crowded places instead, which is something I am not a fan of.
Me and OCG have talked back to back and I can guarantee you he would be a lot more accepted here and more social. OCG lives in a country that hardly gives much of a shit for videogames. I'm not saying OCG should set his expectations too high, I'm just saying he'd likely be more accepted here.Keane wrote:Don't try and delude yourself into thinking there's a certain person/place/thing that's not in your reach. Of course it makes perfect sense to want to find friendship through similar interests, but at the same time you also don't want to dream up some perfect situation where the similar taste guarantees good friendship.
Deviant Art is legitimate cringe. The root of all the terrible, annoying fandoms always spawn from that website or tumblr.Cairnie wrote:Comments though, mostly made little or no sense or are just like one word or emoticon. Nothing special.
Well yeah, you're absolutely right, there's plenty good moments. Like I said, things have been better than ever lately, and ever since I got out of the deeply anxious period I've regained a lot of appreciation for the things I wasn't paying attention to anymore. The problem I can't rid myself of though, is that whenever I'm enjoying myself I eventually hit a point where suddenly I grow extremely anxious again because I don't want it to end and fall back into my lesser moments, which is exactly what was going on earlier when I wrote all of this. It's a bit more complicated than I'm putting it, but all in all it's a very strange cycle of happiness that keeps coming and dropping.Shrooblord wrote:Hey Keane. It seems to me you are focussing a lot on all of the bad things in life and dismissing all of the good things as 'just not as bad things'. Why do you do that to yourself, man? Of course we all have ups and downs. I've felt shitty at times, but there are times I'm legitimately incredibly happy. I'm not saying that to make you jealous or shit on your depression or god knows what. I'm saying that because from your post I gather that you have completely abandoned everything that at one point made you happy, enthousiastic, inspired - as you put it - by life. Maybe your interests have changed? Go find out if there's something new that will spike your excitement. Then come back to your original hobbies after a while and you will learn to appreciate them once more.
I agree, and that's the mindset I encourage myself to have. But it's growing increasingly difficult to keep it up when I have such a long history of it failing, as I mentioned in my reply to OCG. The entirety of 2013 and most of 2014 I spend on trying every last thing to meet people from moving to switching schools to signing up for a new hobby to counseling sessions to joining online communities. Read every last article about friendship and how to get it, asked so many people for advice, tried to be open to anything, and well, now I'm even lonelier than I was at the start of it all. I see it happening to my mother too, who's been depending on the rest of the family for all her social interaction for like, what, six years now? She's not trying anymore either, and I don't blame her, you stop expecting good results, it's almost inevitable. I know I shouldn't be trying to drown myself in negativity, but what am I supposed to do? Sign up for yet another thing, wait for yet another school to come along, or another bunch of counseling? Like buying lottery tickets: Eventually you stop purchasing them because you might as well save the money you invest on it.Shrooblord wrote:You really don't have to beat yourself down like you do. You say you only see an endless downwards spiral ahead of you with only the slightest possibility for it to stabalise and not go downwards further. Why can't you see it going up too? Why don't you allow yourself to see that it may, if you let it? Of course life won't hand you things on a silver platter. Simply 'being there at the right time and meeting the right people' is just a thing people say to simplify what really goes on: life gives you an opportunity; these people have gathered at this one place maybe out of pure coincidence. But because they were all there at the same time, they found out they really liked each other and suddenly a great friendship was born. Was this because they were at the right place with the right people at the right time? In essence, yes. But more importantly, they seized the opportunity life threw at them: they went out to that pub and they were open towards each other, ready to introduce each other into their lives.
Nah, I just worded it kinda poorly. I'm still very loyal to my hobbies and I'd love to see it all go somewhere, but every time I try to make something happen my mind just goes sort of blank.Shrooblord wrote:You find your current hobbies wear you down? Find new ones. You suggest this yourself but say that you won't find another hobby or that it will be just another one of those things that becomes routine and makes you sad. You're dismissing any sort of new enjoyment you may find before you even look for it properly.
That's why I posted it here, and I appreciate it man. At the end of the day, I just think I need something to give a chance at all.Shrooblord wrote:I'm sad reading your posts because I feel I cannot accurately aid you in your problem. Maybe it's not my place to either. But I hope to trigger something in you with these questions, which are sometimes deliberately prying and provocative - at least maybe you'll think about what you're doing to yourself by hating everything in life because it may disappoint you before you give it a chance to not disappoint you. You're in a self-perpetuating negative spiral and you've just gotta break out of it. I understand that's not something that's easily done. But it's gotta happen man.
That kind of cycling is really difficult, and it must be exhausting for you, especially since you're aware of it. It's hard when you're on a low to envisage yourself feeling differently - further, to even see feeling differently as valid or accurate. The fact that you are able to find happiness, even if it's fleeting, is a great acheivement though. Hold onto those moments, nurture them, and remember that they are real - and that if they seem out of reach, they will come round again.Keane wrote:Like I said, things have been better than ever lately, and ever since I got out of the deeply anxious period I've regained a lot of appreciation for the things I wasn't paying attention to anymore. The problem I can't rid myself of though, is that whenever I'm enjoying myself I eventually hit a point where suddenly I grow extremely anxious again because I don't want it to end and fall back into my lesser moments, which is exactly what was going on earlier when I wrote all of this. It's a bit more complicated than I'm putting it, but all in all it's a very strange cycle of happiness that keeps coming and dropping.
Keane wrote:I know I shouldn't be trying to drown myself in negativity, but what am I supposed to do? Sign up for yet another thing, wait for yet another school to come along, or another bunch of counseling? Like buying lottery tickets: Eventually you stop purchasing them because you might as well save the money you invest on it.
When I get blocks like that or when everything feels like too much, I try to do things for myself which aren't totally necessary, but are nice, easy and as cheap as possible. For me personally that's drinking tea, spending time with my babies, going for walks - "go for a walk" can be such a patronising, dismissive piece of advice, so please don't take it like that!* The reason I recommend this sort of break activity is threefold. Doing something cheap or ideally free should be obvious, it means you don't feel guilty about spending money on something 'frivolous' - this can also be extended to other sorts of resources like time if that is a concern. Doing something easy, by which I mean completed in a small number of simple, familiar steps, can help to ease the brain back into effective executive functioning if it's struggling to compute other tasks. Doing something nice for yourself is self-care, plain and simple, and when your brain feels safe and loved it is better able to focus on the tasks you want it to focus on. I'm suggesting this because from what you describe you're experiencing something of an executive function overload. Not a cure-all, but it could make things a bit easier, as well as perhaps providing you with some side-hobbies. When you feel better, you might even find them helpful in meeting new people.Keane wrote:I'm still very loyal to my hobbies and I'd love to see it all go somewhere, but every time I try to make something happen my mind just goes sort of blank.
And I know you will, Keane, because even if right now you can't see these past few years as productive, you've managed a hell of a lot. You're self-aware, honest with yourself about what you need to do, and brave enough to be honest with us too. That's more than most humans. I never declare that things will 'get better with time', but I have every faith in you.Keane wrote:At the end of the day, I just think I need something to give a chance at all.
I think I'm doing good in that aspect, and I've thrown out a lot of prejudices regarding what "type" of person I ought to be spending time with. I never really think of it was trying to find a group to fit in with, more just meeting different people in general. That's what makes RPC incredibly attractive: Tons of diversity in personalities, and no feeling of needing to express certain views/opinions/interests in order to fit in.Shrooblord wrote:pushing away potential lads
Yeah, and that's what I want to do, but it's difficult in this area. I live in a very recent and still growing place where nothing is designed to be reached without a car. Unlike the Netherlands where you can find a nice spot that's got everything together, here you've mostly got small chunks of stores and things largely spread out. In other words, a car is an absolute necessity.Shrooblord wrote:going places
I make sure to keep my healthy habits up, though you're probably right about getting some fresh air.Shrooblord wrote:health
It's extremely difficult for me to explain my problems unless I'm at a breaking point. But I can try. I might go look for some previous writings first, though.Keane wrote: you mind elaborating more on the problem(s) that you're facing? I remember hearing bits and pieces of it, and being reminded of myself by a lot of what you've said/felt, but I was also going through a sort of awkward identity crisis period and never actually got to say anything very useful.
Try to embrace a change in personality. At your age you're starting to enter the most deep years of puberty, and you're gonna change a lot. I'm willing to bet that when you're 16 you'll probably think of you now as a different person, and again when you're 18. While this may be a very angst-ridden stage, it can also introduce new forms of maturity and confidence.Dark Lum Lord wrote:I feel like I'm not even a shell of the person who I once was. Just a flake, wedged between a crack;
A counselor can never solve the issue, only be a listening ear and hopefully offer advice that'll hopefully open your mind to something you might have overlooked. At the end of the day, there is no clear solution to your problem. At school though, things may seem worse because you're surrounded by people who don't seem to be lacking anything at all or may even seem almost carefree at times.Dark Lum Lord wrote:I've tried getting help but the counselors just dangle the floss in front of my face and expect me to climb out by myself. It's not going to happen. And I struggle to even explain this to them because my social skills and thinking patterns have deteriorated so much: I'm just a running drop of grey watercolor paint drowning in too much water.
You're blaming yourself for something that's you don't have much control over. I really dislike putting in it this way, but these years are more of a preparation for everything that comes afterwards. But that doesn't have to be a bad thing: You can take this time to really explore yourself, and get to the root of things, so when the time comes that life really starts to take its major turns, you know where to go. Especially with what I mentioned about changing often during the next few years, that'll really grow to become a relevant topic. I can feel myself growing ever closer to understanding who and what I want to be, and how I'm going to spend my life, and you will too.Dark Lum Lord wrote:I never have energy and when I do it's only temporary, and I still have trouble paying attention in those cases. My life is going nowhere and I'm doing nothing to stop it. Every single day is the same.