DogwoodTree
Platinum Member
My emotions are typically so locked down that I can't express pain or even happiness except through words...otherwise, everything is trapped inside and never really gets out. So of course I'm supposed to be doing a lot of writing (per my T). But...normal, everyday words don't do my inner experience justice. And using more colorful language (not cuss words necessarily, just more accurate and expressive words) feels like I'm being overly dramatic.
I don't want to dramatize my issues. I've watched way too many people...and fallen victim to it myself...turn into needy, velcro people who want everyone to notice their problems and feel sorry for them. So for that reason along with many others, most of the time throughout my life I've minimized my problems and emotions instead of acknowledging them, much less expressing them to others and trusting anyone to meet my needs.
I get that there should be a balance between minimizing and dramatizing...and that some of my stuff is legitimate...and that sometimes you just need to be needy for a while and throw yourself a little pity party and have someone validate what you feel even if it doesn't make rational sense. Then you get your head back into the game and make a mature, reasonable decision and move forward. So I guess my question is...how do I communicate these overwhelming feelings without dramatizing them, especially considering I don't seem to have normal outlets for this stuff (like crying or hugging someone)?
I wrote my T an email last night about something I'm struggling with in our relationship (I feel like my T doesn't like me very much and wants to shift me over to someone else, so I'm trying to express the fear I feel while still giving him the freedom to make whatever decision he thinks is best). I agonized over the thing, trying to make sure I genuinely made space for him to make his own decision, while also expressing that I still very much would prefer to work with him. I think I managed to not come across as too dramatic this time, but it's been a pattern over the past couple of years in working with various support people for my words to sound so crazy-dramatic when I read them later, even when I'm really trying to tone them down and sound like a reasonably sane human being. And yet...at times when I feel flooded with emotion, even the most extreme words don't come near to conveying what I feel, and it seems like I've "undersold" my experience by using inadequate words.
Not sure if any of this makes sense. I'm extremely disconnected from people emotionally, so I typically come across as muted and even cold, or just flat-out shut down. It's not that I don't feel, because I most certainly do feel things...very strongly (but often very delayed). There's just no other outlet besides words--but words don't do justice to what I'm feeling, and when they come close, it sounds so crazy and dramatic.
I don't want to dramatize my issues. I've watched way too many people...and fallen victim to it myself...turn into needy, velcro people who want everyone to notice their problems and feel sorry for them. So for that reason along with many others, most of the time throughout my life I've minimized my problems and emotions instead of acknowledging them, much less expressing them to others and trusting anyone to meet my needs.
I get that there should be a balance between minimizing and dramatizing...and that some of my stuff is legitimate...and that sometimes you just need to be needy for a while and throw yourself a little pity party and have someone validate what you feel even if it doesn't make rational sense. Then you get your head back into the game and make a mature, reasonable decision and move forward. So I guess my question is...how do I communicate these overwhelming feelings without dramatizing them, especially considering I don't seem to have normal outlets for this stuff (like crying or hugging someone)?
I wrote my T an email last night about something I'm struggling with in our relationship (I feel like my T doesn't like me very much and wants to shift me over to someone else, so I'm trying to express the fear I feel while still giving him the freedom to make whatever decision he thinks is best). I agonized over the thing, trying to make sure I genuinely made space for him to make his own decision, while also expressing that I still very much would prefer to work with him. I think I managed to not come across as too dramatic this time, but it's been a pattern over the past couple of years in working with various support people for my words to sound so crazy-dramatic when I read them later, even when I'm really trying to tone them down and sound like a reasonably sane human being. And yet...at times when I feel flooded with emotion, even the most extreme words don't come near to conveying what I feel, and it seems like I've "undersold" my experience by using inadequate words.
Not sure if any of this makes sense. I'm extremely disconnected from people emotionally, so I typically come across as muted and even cold, or just flat-out shut down. It's not that I don't feel, because I most certainly do feel things...very strongly (but often very delayed). There's just no other outlet besides words--but words don't do justice to what I'm feeling, and when they come close, it sounds so crazy and dramatic.