ILoveLife
VIP Member
The theme lately in therapy is to how connect to others in meaningful ways.
I've been known not to choose the best of people to have around. Not their fault really, but they are usually people who also can't form meaningful healthy connections and I end up in awkward positions. I think they're just not the best people - for me to have in my life, not that as Person they aren't okay.
It does take two to tango, and due to a lot of reasons I've been dropping here and there, I'm also a part of not being able to form that meaningful connection.
One thing I noticed in people (friends, family, acquaintances) is that there are genuinely very few meaningful connections. Even inside friends' groups, people I knew were generally closed to talking about their feelings and issues, afraid to show weakness or whatever.
This issue spans out through different generations.
For instances, one group of friends is very intrusive in asking questions about my mental health (in a judgy way), another is ashamed of it so it doesn't even come up. So I'm "Mental Health Issues" label girl in my current circles, and that's really not who I am.
So I close myself to anyone and everyone and T says my goal now should be to connect to others so I can connect to myself and move on from past mechanisms. I really don't know how to do that.
I'm not a spiritual person, and there's a lot of spiritual communities around (Buddhist, yogis, meditation circles) that would be cool to participate if I were more open minded about that stuff, which I'm not and don't intend to be.
T talked about me joining a hiking group, I've been looking around but folks are really much older and I'd rather form meaningful connections to people around my age - not that it isn't okay to have older friends, but I think it would really be best for me to find healthy age appropriate people to have around, since my experience with people my age revolved around the use of drugs and drinking to oblivion. The drinking I'm sort ok with, depending on the oblivion, but the drugs I really don't accept around me.
University will have a few events that will be cool in terms of getting to know folks, I'm sure. The people I like best in the classes live far away and won't be attending, but I'm willing to meet new ones that maybe aren't as participative.
I can meet people if I start hanging out with people more, I go to bed way too early and don't always have the best availability to meet folks, I've been focusing so much on cutting off unhealthy relationships that I ended up isolated and it sucks.
It's really not easy to make friends as an adult, people have all sorts of habits and quirks that I don't want around myself.
Maybe I'm the judgy one.
Is it too much to ask for healthy though? Maybe not.
Option B would be to accept my isolation and learn how to live with it.
Any thoughts?
Thank you!
I've been known not to choose the best of people to have around. Not their fault really, but they are usually people who also can't form meaningful healthy connections and I end up in awkward positions. I think they're just not the best people - for me to have in my life, not that as Person they aren't okay.
It does take two to tango, and due to a lot of reasons I've been dropping here and there, I'm also a part of not being able to form that meaningful connection.
One thing I noticed in people (friends, family, acquaintances) is that there are genuinely very few meaningful connections. Even inside friends' groups, people I knew were generally closed to talking about their feelings and issues, afraid to show weakness or whatever.
This issue spans out through different generations.
For instances, one group of friends is very intrusive in asking questions about my mental health (in a judgy way), another is ashamed of it so it doesn't even come up. So I'm "Mental Health Issues" label girl in my current circles, and that's really not who I am.
So I close myself to anyone and everyone and T says my goal now should be to connect to others so I can connect to myself and move on from past mechanisms. I really don't know how to do that.
I'm not a spiritual person, and there's a lot of spiritual communities around (Buddhist, yogis, meditation circles) that would be cool to participate if I were more open minded about that stuff, which I'm not and don't intend to be.
T talked about me joining a hiking group, I've been looking around but folks are really much older and I'd rather form meaningful connections to people around my age - not that it isn't okay to have older friends, but I think it would really be best for me to find healthy age appropriate people to have around, since my experience with people my age revolved around the use of drugs and drinking to oblivion. The drinking I'm sort ok with, depending on the oblivion, but the drugs I really don't accept around me.
University will have a few events that will be cool in terms of getting to know folks, I'm sure. The people I like best in the classes live far away and won't be attending, but I'm willing to meet new ones that maybe aren't as participative.
I can meet people if I start hanging out with people more, I go to bed way too early and don't always have the best availability to meet folks, I've been focusing so much on cutting off unhealthy relationships that I ended up isolated and it sucks.
It's really not easy to make friends as an adult, people have all sorts of habits and quirks that I don't want around myself.
Maybe I'm the judgy one.
Is it too much to ask for healthy though? Maybe not.
Option B would be to accept my isolation and learn how to live with it.
Any thoughts?
Thank you!