Not sure if this is best placed here, but wondering if anyone struggles with this?
I see moving forward (for me) as needing to (in no particular order and not an exhaustive list):
-Identifying Cognitive distortions and actively trying to replace them
-Being as honest as possible with myself & examining how I think, and the reasons why I react, or the 'why's' of my life
-Recognizing and naming emotions, and self regulation partly through accepting those emotions
-Trying to employ self-care and other-care
-Graduated exposure therapy to what scares me
-Acceptance
I hope to one day, or maybe each day, build a little on re-building simply a sense of greater calm, and also one day hoping I will be able to have a semblance of a sense of my life back. (Though I'm not sure- the older I get the less seems to be in my hands. :confused: ).
I realize a few things, for example:
- my emotions affect my perspective a lot
-I avoid a lot
-I mistrust others, or conversely, withhold communication because I cannot trust myself: that is, I cannot trust that my perspective of someone else being trustworthy is a sound one. I know I wholly lack self-confidence. (I don't think I always did to this degree but I do now).
- I try to be brave but I feel really bad about myself if I think I am a pest or drag or 'dead-weight'
-I probably have either attachment +/or even more likely abandonment or 'trust' issues (or maybe even most likely fear and avoidance issues)
-I know low grade anxiety makes for feeling one doesn't belong
-I know external triggers or even being required to 'rush' to figure out my thoughts causes me to draw negative conclusions that really have nothing to do with anything valid, just because of rushing
-I know asking for help or reaching out is destabalizing for me, but also pushes me out of my comfort zone. But I never know unless well received if I made a mistake to ask? Or should not ask again?
-I know (to strangers, people I 'shouldn't' trust) that I'm not obligated to disclosure, just because they ask questions
- I normally had to manage 'stuff' myself. (I mean, growing up. Or I chose to).
-I feel vulnerable because I am honest (or too worn out to be someone I'm not), but I also don't know how to read negative signs properly, to their detriment or my own
-I internalize my emotions
-I do not feel much self-empathy
- I have no 'emotion' for long about things past that didn't harm me (eg just about got hit by a car thursday night, but it only took about 30 seconds to re-group and 'forget', because I didn't). But other things that aren't so dangerous bother me greatly (not sure if mostly because of the past, or more so lousy self-esteem/ self worth)
I sincerely have no template to know what is 'normal': When is it 'right' to ask for help, and when is it 'too much'? What are the right indications to not ask? Or to ask? And when to give up asking? How do you know who to ask is the right person, or if they wished you didn't ask, etc ? Is help just a purchased commodity? Such as: therapy; repair man, contractor? And, if so, is the 'help' needed to manage day to day, or the courage required to do things just something you have to muster yourself, or deal with yourself (such as feeling afraid or down or worried)? And how 'low' or 'bad' is 'low enough', when asking for help is 'ok'? (And probably more factors or questions). Does anyone have an opinion/ experience/ internal compass to know such things? :confused:
(I know some rare times earlier in my life when I asked for help it was a disastrous experience).
Thank you! Hope this makes sense. I can't really wrap my head around teasing apart what is: avoidance on my part, being a pest and not reading social cues, cognitive distortions, being triggered, doing (or not) what I know because it's familiar, fear, and issues that include trust, or attachment or what-have-you. (I don't really understand those versus avoidance).
I ask for help here all the time, and am now too (and am thankful). I don't feel badly- I think because it's anonymous, and if I don't get any I don't feel like I've been a burden. :(
I see moving forward (for me) as needing to (in no particular order and not an exhaustive list):
-Identifying Cognitive distortions and actively trying to replace them
-Being as honest as possible with myself & examining how I think, and the reasons why I react, or the 'why's' of my life
-Recognizing and naming emotions, and self regulation partly through accepting those emotions
-Trying to employ self-care and other-care
-Graduated exposure therapy to what scares me
-Acceptance
I hope to one day, or maybe each day, build a little on re-building simply a sense of greater calm, and also one day hoping I will be able to have a semblance of a sense of my life back. (Though I'm not sure- the older I get the less seems to be in my hands. :confused: ).
I realize a few things, for example:
- my emotions affect my perspective a lot
-I avoid a lot
-I mistrust others, or conversely, withhold communication because I cannot trust myself: that is, I cannot trust that my perspective of someone else being trustworthy is a sound one. I know I wholly lack self-confidence. (I don't think I always did to this degree but I do now).
- I try to be brave but I feel really bad about myself if I think I am a pest or drag or 'dead-weight'
-I probably have either attachment +/or even more likely abandonment or 'trust' issues (or maybe even most likely fear and avoidance issues)
-I know low grade anxiety makes for feeling one doesn't belong
-I know external triggers or even being required to 'rush' to figure out my thoughts causes me to draw negative conclusions that really have nothing to do with anything valid, just because of rushing
-I know asking for help or reaching out is destabalizing for me, but also pushes me out of my comfort zone. But I never know unless well received if I made a mistake to ask? Or should not ask again?
-I know (to strangers, people I 'shouldn't' trust) that I'm not obligated to disclosure, just because they ask questions
- I normally had to manage 'stuff' myself. (I mean, growing up. Or I chose to).
-I feel vulnerable because I am honest (or too worn out to be someone I'm not), but I also don't know how to read negative signs properly, to their detriment or my own
-I internalize my emotions
-I do not feel much self-empathy
- I have no 'emotion' for long about things past that didn't harm me (eg just about got hit by a car thursday night, but it only took about 30 seconds to re-group and 'forget', because I didn't). But other things that aren't so dangerous bother me greatly (not sure if mostly because of the past, or more so lousy self-esteem/ self worth)
I sincerely have no template to know what is 'normal': When is it 'right' to ask for help, and when is it 'too much'? What are the right indications to not ask? Or to ask? And when to give up asking? How do you know who to ask is the right person, or if they wished you didn't ask, etc ? Is help just a purchased commodity? Such as: therapy; repair man, contractor? And, if so, is the 'help' needed to manage day to day, or the courage required to do things just something you have to muster yourself, or deal with yourself (such as feeling afraid or down or worried)? And how 'low' or 'bad' is 'low enough', when asking for help is 'ok'? (And probably more factors or questions). Does anyone have an opinion/ experience/ internal compass to know such things? :confused:
(I know some rare times earlier in my life when I asked for help it was a disastrous experience).
Thank you! Hope this makes sense. I can't really wrap my head around teasing apart what is: avoidance on my part, being a pest and not reading social cues, cognitive distortions, being triggered, doing (or not) what I know because it's familiar, fear, and issues that include trust, or attachment or what-have-you. (I don't really understand those versus avoidance).
I ask for help here all the time, and am now too (and am thankful). I don't feel badly- I think because it's anonymous, and if I don't get any I don't feel like I've been a burden. :(