sun seeker
Diamond Member
Awesome idea.Actually I am going to try and do something about this. I'm going to go to school to learn n how to to be able to guide a person into being a well rounded person and be that person that helps people like us with these kinds of issues.
When I read the first post in this thread I didn't relate so much, but as I read more of the thread I get what you mean and feel this is a very important niche that has been ignored. The reason I didn't relate at first is I never thought about these skills as necessarily something coming after therapy. For me, I still haven't found a therapeutic relationship that feels like it's helping me a whole lot (not for lack of trying) but parallel to that I've noticed for decades that there are skills normal people seem to have naturally that I either don't have or have acquired through painstakingly thinking them through and observing what other people do. Even as a child I used to think everyone went to a special school before coming into the world, sort of a "Life on Earth 101" and I had missed it.
Two suggestions come to mind, if you are going to do this seriously. One is a parenting class for people who were abused or neglected as children and want to do better with their own children but aren't sure what normal parenting is supposed to look like. Lots of us, I think, end up in that situation with a good will having an idea of what not to do, but a hazier idea of what to do instead.
The other is a class in basic safety for people with hypervigilance issues. I think I'm not the only one with this problem: due to being on the lookout for danger all the time, my body is producing adrenaline so randomly that very often I am not sure when something actually is dangerous and when it's safe. I think there is also an element of not having had anyone take the time to explain things to me.
Are these the kinds of things you are thinking of?