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- References: <alt-support-depression/An-ASD-Sampler/part1_971342731@rtfm.mit.edu>
- X-Last-Updated: 1999/03/30
- Subject: An alt.support.depression Sampler - part 2 of 3
- Followup-To: alt.support.depression,poster
- Summary: This is a list of posts that I personally consider to be a
- small "sample" of alt.support.depression (ASD).
- From: metaphor@usaor.net (Stewart/sna)
- Organization: here @ home
- Newsgroups: alt.support.depression,alt.answers,news.answers
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU
- Originator: faqserv@penguin-lust.MIT.EDU
- Date: 12 Oct 2000 09:27:14 GMT
- Lines: 485
- NNTP-Posting-Host: penguin-lust.mit.edu
- X-Trace: dreaderd 971342834 5711 18.181.0.29
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu alt.support.depression:708306 alt.answers:51796 news.answers:193854
-
- Archive-name: alt-support-depression/An-ASD-Sampler/part2
- Posting-Frequency: bi-weekly
- Last-modified: 1999/3/29
- Maintainer: Stewart/sna <metaphor@usaor.net>
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- An alt.support.depression Sampler, part 2 of 3
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-
- spider <anon-12390@anon.twwells.com> wrote:
- Everything I say is so stupid, trite, and unhelpful. All I can do
- is say; "sorry you feel that way, here's some hugs". Hugs are good, Karent
- The Hugmaster knows that, but it's just so little, so stupid. I'm sorry
- here. I'm going to act like a child & whine; Do my posts make ANYBODY feel
- any better? Or should I just be quiet? I'm feeling really down and tense.
- Hubby is away for the week at a convention - every day I'm slipping lower
- and lower. Actually in a way it's kinda nice him not being here - one less
- body bugging me, but I'm lonely. SEE! I can't be happy either way! When
- he's here I get annoyed with him for not just letting me vege, but when
- he's not here I get lonely and slip down. I hate this shit. I hate my
- life. Sometimes I even hate this stupid newsgroup - takes up so much of my
- time. Sorry for all the ranting and whining
-
- <casey8899@aol.com> wrote:
- This is my first post after some time of just lurking and trying to
- figure out this newsgroup. Can't really say I have succeeded in the latter
- yet. What I am wondering is this: where does one find support? After
- years of appearing normal while dying inside I have a circle of friends and
- relatives and coworkers who do not know that I am depressed. I have kept
- up appearances for work and family. But now I am tired, I am lonely, and I
- wish I had somebody to just share with, someone who understands but doesn't
- think he has to fix things.
-
- arbra <arbra@eastky.com> wrote with all good intentions:
- Here is a scripture that may benefit you as it has me: "Have not I
- commanded thee? Be strong and of good courage. Be not afraid, neither be
- thou dismayed. For the LORD thy God is with thee whithersoever thou
- goest." (King James Version, Joshua 1:9)
- Pattybear <patty83753@aol.com> wrote in response:
- I actually do believe that God has helped me in my life. But for
- those of us with a chemical depression requiring medication, our belief in
- God is simply not enough. We have an illness, NOT necessarily a lack of
- faith.
-
- Christopher Wells <zchald4@ucl.ac.uk> wrote:
- Does anyone else feel like slapping a therapist who says; "and how
- do you *feel* about that?"
- Alan Harding <Alan@harding.demon.co.uk> responded with:
- There can only be so many polite variations of; "Will you stop
- blathering on and on about all this tosh as though it mattered! We are
- here to talk about your feelings, moods, and emotions. It's your reactions
- to this stuff that I need, not who did what to whom and with which garden
- implement. If you don't tell me what's going on inside you, then I'll have
- to poke you in the squidgy bits with a cattle prod every so often.
- <BbzZzt!>".
- I suspect they learn not to use *that* approach too often.
-
- sara <sarawriter@hotmail.com> wrote:
- Hi, I'm new here. Ummm, I get depressed sometimes. I'm in high
- school. I love reading all your posts. Guess I read too many of them.
- Really gotta go. I'll talk more tomorrow.
- river rat responded with:
- Welcome Sara. I'm new here too. Keep posting and let us know if
- you're okay. I had my first depressive episode at age 15 in the 10th
- grade, but nobody knew what was going on. If you stay down for more than a
- couple of weeks at a time, maybe you should talk to somebody who has good
- information and who can help. You know, I think I read too many of these
- ASD posts too.
-
- orcan <orcan@worldnet.att.net> wrote with self-depreciating humor:
- I would like to express my deepest and most grateful thanks to ASD.
- I had intended to write to each of you personally. However, in another
- stunning display of catatonic tapioca brain, I managed to delete my entire
- list of messages.
-
- <mattsspot@worldnet.att.net> wrote:
- I am befuddled as to how everyone discusses their depression on the
- Internet. How do you go to or begin counseling when you are uncomfortable
- talking about anything pertaining to yourself, especially your depression?
- Everything is so complicated.
- dawn <marcel@commonlink.com> responded with:
- I can relate to that uncanny fear of trying to speak of feelings to
- someone who is right there physically, looking at you. If you are like me
- you can feel their eyes boring right through your soul. That very soul
- which you have taken great measures to protect and keep to yourself. I
- thought that your post to ASD was a tremendous start. I have found great
- power in the act of writing. I don't understand it myself, but this is the
- best outlet I have. Somehow that needed distance is there, and it provides
- safety to me. You could check and see if there is a therapist who would be
- willing to do some writing therapy with you. My therapist of a few years
- back did, and after a time that made it easier (I said easier, not easy) to
- see her in her office.
-
- CupOJoe <anon-10917@anon.twwells.com> wrote:
- Out of time concerns, I have to delete more messages than I can
- read. I just dip my hands into the stream of messages, scoop them into my
- cupped palms, and toss them into the air where they they break into a
- thousand droplets reflecting the glittering rays of the sun. I read as
- many as I can before they fall back into the river trickling at my feet.
-
- Kristen Jones <kjones@mbcnet.com> wrote:
- I want your personal story about how the Internet has become a
- valuable source of information and/or support regarding your medical
- condition/disease. The information will be used to help illustrate the
- Internet's potential for those seeking information and/or support. Please
- help others realize the value of the web as a communications tool by
- sharing your story.
- John Timothy <johntim@ix.netcom.com> wrote in response:
- It was a dark and stormy night. A few of us emotionally unstable
- ASD'ers were sitting in a car, debating what to do with the woman we had
- just kidnapped. Her muffled screams from the trunk were making it even
- harder than usual to concentrate.
- It had all started when we got ONE MORE REQUEST to write somebody's
- book/article/paper for them without compensation. That "somebody" was now
- curled up in the fetal position, her head resting on the spare tire, nylon
- cord cutting into the flesh of her wrists & ankles. The rain pounding on
- the car, the anxiety of the group, and the general lack of social skills
- all contributed to our irritable mood.
- "Pass that Nutella" came a voice from the back seat. "I vote for
- death by slow torture." [continued?]
-
- Simply Steve <nielsens@ccmail.orst.edu> wrote:
- I frequently post all sorts of total CRAP to this and other
- newsgroups. It is literally effortless!!!
-
- An ASDer wrote something along the lines of the following:
- Please indulge me one last time. I think I may be close to
- completely losing it. Right now I am doing all I can to stop myself from
- taking my own life. It is hard enough for me to remain calm and write this
- message, let alone to get through another day constantly pretending and put
- up with day-to-day tasks. This is not just me "ranting on as usual".
- Please don't send me "you're not thinking straight" type messages. Don't
- try to talk me out of this or help me get through it. I won't let my time
- be wasted by people's well-intentioned but utterly futile attempts to "talk
- sense" to me.
- Leah <Grydove@aol.com> responded with:
- I can't talk any sense into you, or try to talk you into or out of
- anything. I can't even do that for myself. You sound like you are in the
- same place I am. Either time to get locked up, or time to check out.
- Believe me, I'm hangin' by the same thin thread you are, and we both know
- there is nothing anybody here can really do about it. We can give you hugs
- and sincerely mean it, we can tell you to hang on another day and sincerely
- mean it, we can tell you we care and sincerely mean it, we can even tell
- you to get to a doctor (yesterday) for the meds/treatment you need. But,
- this is a support group. It only SUPPORTS the efforts that you and I are
- able to make on our own. I'm grateful for that support, cuz it's all I
- have at the moment. Nobody here can walk into your house, take your hand,
- and lead through each step of the day. (GOD I WISH SOMEONE COULD. FOR ME
- AND YOU BOTH!!!!) You and I are kinda teetering on a brink. It may be
- hospitalization for you, death for me. I don't know. Maybe both of us are
- at our bottoms now. Maybe hope will break through in some way tomorrow. I
- don't know. All I know is that this is the most painful, most unbearable
- time I've ever experienced in my life, and I think it probably is for you
- too. Is there any hope? Some people here say there is, but my stubborn
- gut tells me that I have further to fall before I see it. I don't know
- why. Maybe you're not as stubborn as I am. Maybe you can really scream
- out for help to the people and institutions and doctors and family and
- friends within your reach. Or maybe you will be stubborn like me and dig
- in a little deeper. I don't know. I think a lot about you. Been reading
- your posts since day one. What're we gonna do?
-
- Jennifer Taylor <jaltaylor@cix.compulink.co.uk> wrote:
- Hi, I need somewhere to open up. I've been depressed for 5 years
- (I'm 20). Next week will be my one year Prozac anniversary, and things
- were going fine. Until now that is. My ever-so-kind father has just come
- in and told me in no uncertain terms, that reading and writing about
- depression will only make matters worse. Depression is there for everyone,
- but the better members of society manage to avoid it, whereas we
- weak-willed and stupid individuals are just too self centered. We enjoy
- wallowing in our sorrows and being "different". It makes us feel
- important. "Depression's like hayfever" you just have to do things which
- won't make you depressed. I knew he didn't have a clue, but really. Sorry
- about that, I just wanted to get it out of my head. Does anyone else feel
- guilty about being on antidepressants - like you've sold out?
-
- Peter Roest <proest@mindspring.com> wrote:
- I suppose that, in a way, it's something of an accomplishment to be
- too screwed up for a support group, and I seem to have managed to do it. I
- don't want to do it, but I need to escape from ASD for a while. It's an
- overload problem. I don't seem to able keep an emotional distance from
- what I read. In light or moderate doses, it's OK. But too much of the
- same thing and the cumulative effect gets greater and greater. On some
- occasions, I have left ASD far more depressed than I was when I got on it.
- So many people with so much pain, and I can't do anything about it. I
- think about just skipping some of the rants and whines (neither of which is
- usually an accurate description) and Help! messages just to reduce the
- load, but I can't. If there's anything I think I can say that might
- conceivably be helpful, I have to try and say it. If I look back and find
- something wrong with what I said (and I always do), I feel like a miserable
- failure. If I can't think of anything to say, I skip the intermediate step
- and go directly to the failure part. This certainly is not the fault of
- anyone on ASD. Some of the nicest comments I have ever gotten have come
- from people on ASD.
-
- Brad <jbbell@niagara.com> wrote about what he called "The Howard Hughes State":
- The complete implosion of significance and meaning. The
- disappearance of any trace of will or desire. The disappearance of all
- affect, no emotions at all. My body is virtually paralyzed. I am a
- shuffling zombie at best. I do not eat or sleep. I am beyond being
- suicidal, I no longer care. I lay on my back in a dark room for days. I
- am an invisible corpse, dead but still breathing. I no longer exist at
- all. I will lie there until something happens. I know nothing will ever
- happen. It is always 3:14 am.
-
- Michael Dietsch <mdietsch@iquest.net> wrote in response to an "is anyone
- out there" post:
- I don't have a lot I can say that will help you right now, and
- that's actually why I'm writing. I read this newsgroup with some
- regularity, and I often see postings here that are just heart-wrenchingly
- sad. I don't really feel like I can help anyone much, and that makes me
- even sadder. So I shy away from offering advice, because I know that,
- well, a lot of my advice is just no good. But I wanted you to know that I
- saw your note, and that there is someone in cyberspace who cares how you
- are.
-
- EMC <ellenmc@hotmail.com> wrote:
- I am hoping that just writing this will make me feel better. I've
- always been the one who took care of everyone else's problems. The one who
- always listened and gave excellent advice. I am used to being needed, and
- have never felt that I needed anyone else. Now, when nobody needs me, I
- feel so remote, so alone, so disconnected. When someone needed me I had a
- purpose. I felt loved and connected. I guess my seeking out of needy
- people was in fact an avoidance of my own problems. Whenever I think I
- should seek counseling, I always feel guilty, like I should count my
- blessings instead of feeling down. I feel down, very down, and I don't
- enjoy anything that I do. I can't concentrate. Work is a joke, school is
- a joke. I've felt like this most of my life actually. I know I have so
- much potential, but can never seem to reach any goals. I hate being around
- people when I feel this way, I feel like I can't contribute to anyone or
- anything. I am going to call the campus medical center and get some help,
- but there are many things I've done that I'm ashamed of, and I am so afraid
- to talk to someone with whom I would have to share these things. I am
- terrified. Sick to my stomach, but also hopeful.
- Stewart/sna <sna@prophet.pharm.pitt.edu> responded with:
- This post helped me. However, ASD may not be a good place to come
- if you are mainly looking to feel good because you have helped others. On
- the other hand, IMHO, this is a great place to come if you are looking to
- help yourself, and if you want to feel that in the process of helping
- yourself you can also help others as well. At least that is how *I* feel
- about ASD.
-
- Tracy <lhime@okcity.tds.net> wrote:
- I will not be subscribing to this news group anymore. I came hear
- for a feeling of support. I have had very good responses from everyone,
- but there are new flame wars everyday. Name calling, bickering, and
- whatever. I'm leaving before I get flamed or sink even deeper into my own
- pit. My life is filled with hostility and anger in every aspect. I don't
- need it when I'm at home on my computer. Guess I'll just play solitaire
- from now on or something. To everyone who has given me support, made me
- laugh, and given me hope, I love you and I will miss you.
-
- Cindi James <Cindij@cris.com> wrote:
- I was thinking it might not be a bad idea to split up ASD. When I
- first started posting, there were only about 200 posts per day. Now, my
- server is showing like 500-600 posts per day. It's overwhelming! I want
- to keep reading/posting to ASD, but there are just too many posts. I don't
- have enough time to read them all, although I wish I could. What do you
- guys think about a split? No flames please, I'm just trying to figure out
- a feasible way to keep posting/reading ASD without going mad.
- Sue <matthews@digital.net> wrote:
- I need to post how hurt I feel by this thread. I am one of the
- "newbies" around here. I don't have any jokes, I've never tried nutella,
- and I don't write poetry. But that doesn't mean I don't enjoy those
- threads. It doesn't mean I can't laugh, vicariously enjoy nutella, or be
- deeply affected by a poem. I like the mix here on ASD. There is humor,
- pain, anger, and support. All of which I need to see at different times.
- To me, splitting up the group sounds something like: "Let's dump the
- newbies. They post the same boring stuff over and over again." I *know*
- this was never anyone's intention, but the feeling remains. I would hate
- to see ASD split into different groups. More than anything, I need a place
- to call home. A place where I can be accepted for who I am, depression and
- all. ASD (*all* of ASD) has been that place for me.
-
- Jim Schneider <jimsch@mint.net> wrote:
- It would be nice if someone would answer my cry for help.
- Sometimes (and I do understand) I feel this group is very self-centered. I
- want to laugh and tell jokes and live a productive life, but sometimes it's
- difficult and support is necessary. I wrote a similar letter months ago
- with the same gripe and though people eventually came around I'm starting
- to think it's me and not the group. Maybe I'm venting too much. After
- all, I do have a therapist to discuss these issues with. It's all right to
- tell me the truth, I'm not that fragile. Maybe I need attention and it's
- not fair to ask a group such as this to drop everything and say poor "poor
- Jim".
- Spider <anon-12390@anon.twwells.com> responded with:
- Welcome to ASD. Maybe this will help, maybe not?! Try to think of
- ASD as a large room. A *very* large room, with over 500 people coming and
- going every day. And every 3 seconds the door flies open and somebody
- walks in with a post like; "my wife is driving me crazy!" or "my effexor is
- pooping out again!" or "ya know, I REALLY hate myself today" or "Hi, I'm
- new here".
- Because we're human, we often respond most to the people we know.
- But new people might only get one or two people wandering by saying, "Hi,
- welcome to ASD. Come on in and stay awhile." Some newbies do come in and
- stay awhile. They post frequently, tell us about themselves, talk to us,
- and we get to know them pretty quickly and support them, and they support
- us. Other newbies come in once in a great while, and unfortunately, kind
- of STAY newbies. Yes, they may recognize US because they're standing
- outside watching thru the window (i.e., lurking), but since they only pop
- in the room every now and then, people haven't gotten the chance to get to
- KNOW them, or even recognize them! So the point of all this is, "I'm
- sorry, I don't recognize your name, so I don't recall seeing you here
- before. Stay awhile. Pull up a chair and let us get to know you. I'm
- sorry you're hurting. We all are hurting, and we all are sorry, and we all
- care. Welcome.
-
- John Underhay <junderha@peinet.pe.ca> wrote:
- Subject: Age Check Summary Stats
- Mean 33
- Standard Deviation 11
- Minimum 15
- Maximum 67
- Count 149
- Editors note: This was just a summary snapshot in time of those who chose
- to respond with their ages.
-
- Jana <missg@mtco.com> wrote:
- I'm so excited!! I made it through this day, made it through the
- conflict with my ex with only a few brief thoughts of finding some way to
- end my miserable existence!! O.K., I know that sounds kind of
- contradictory, but that's the way I feel. I just love this place! (Of
- course, I'm really on a high right now, I'm sure I'll be crashing soon.
- Things don't go right very often without something bad slamming into me!!)
- The whole time I was with the ex, I kept thinking that I could always come
- back to my computer and RANT about my feelings. That is what kept me from
- actually doing any self-destructive things. Thank you all so much!! Even
- though I still want to DIE and just get it over with, you guys pulled me
- through another day. Now I'll get to spend Mother's Day listening to my
- parents gripe about how I never do anything right. Oh, well. I guess
- they'll learn someday!! Thanks again - I'm going to keep trying to hang
- on!!
-
- Veronica <veronica@compu.net> wrote:
- I'm new here (as you probably know). Been reading your posts for a
- couple of weeks. I think you people are the best (except the spammers and
- scammers). Anyway, my name is Veronica, I'm 46, and I just wanted to say
- "HI". When I get depressed it's awful because nobody wants to listen to
- me. It seems like I need the most love when I'm least lovable. Seems like
- I can help others when they are feeling depressed, yet I cannot help
- myself. Why is that?
- Tnardin <tnardin@aol.com> responded with:
- Maybe because you can identify with the feelings of a depressed
- person. That is good! It's not good that you are depressed. But since
- you are, this facet of your being makes you a valuable person to someone
- else who is suffering. Even when the depression has lifted, you will still
- have that keen sense of what a depressed person is feeling. Here is a
- newsgroup full of people who can relate to just about anything you can
- throw out. It's the benefit of a community. When there is no one in "real
- life" to talk to (probably the best thing is to do it in "real life", but
- that's not always possible), you can always come here.
-
- Just Me <andrewkl@cris.com> wrote:
- Subject: Re: An Open Message To (other) Newbies
- OK, so this is your first visit to A.S.D. Mine was just a few days
- ago, and it was made with a good deal of apprehension. Allow me a moment
- to put your minds at ease. I initially posted here simply to get some
- "stuff" out of my system, to unload, if you will. I suppose I didn't
- expect anything in return, other than the satisfaction of knowing that I
- had said what I wanted to say, and didn't place a burden on my friends or
- family, many of whom just don't care to listen (again). The response from
- the people at ASD has really been overwhelming, and, well, touching.
- Seem's that these folks CARE about you. They offer advise from personal
- experiences. they give you hugs and they give you support. At times, you
- even get a laugh thrown in for good measure. There are also some pretty
- scary experiences shared here, but that's part of recovery. So, to those
- of you that are "veterans" of ASD, I wish you God Speed for healthy, happy
- lives. For those of you just entering, don't be timid, don't be afraid.
- Say what you wanted to when you signed onto the group. This group really
- cares.
-
- E Jeep <anitan@community.net> wrote:
- Subject: Re: This is scary, but lets try...
- This is my first time posting, so please be patient. (Actually, my
- first posting anywhere!) I have suffered from severe depression for the
- last 20 years. Other than the initial occurrence, the worst episode was
- from Fall 95 to Winter 97. Starting to get better now, but "it"
- (depression/anxiety attacks/fatigue/ennui) still comes and goes. "It" is
- the whole reason I wanted to get on the net. There is no one whom I can
- talk to. Friends/family/spouse are uncomfortable with the topic, or give
- me newspaper clippings or spiritual advice. It all seems to come down to
- "put a smile on your face, tell yourself you're happy, and you'll believe
- it." I think their main view of depression is that I not do anything that
- would make the neighbors talk - I don't have to be happy, just act happy.
- So, is this the place where I can vent, wail, bitch, kvetch and kvell? Is
- there another group that I should be using? Am I doing this all wrong? I
- know these question sound stupid or frivolous. But I have tried posting
- here before when I was in the depths, and didn't know how to post or
- respond, or the proper way to do it. It's hell going through 30 minutes of
- newbie fumbling to try to reach *anybody* just to find out nothing
- happened, and you don't know how to make it work. And I can't ask my
- spouse to help me post to this site. Just let me know if this is a safe
- place to come when the shit hits. And if I promise not to blather anymore,
- can I respond to others when they feel crappy? It helps. The feeling of
- isolation is one of the worst parts of depression. And the isolation just
- feeds the depression.
-
- PitWithAVu <pitwithavu@prozac-moments.com> responded to someone who asked
- if this is the right group:
- If you're depressed, then you're in the right place. Welcome to
- our humble abode. There is no entrance exam, and there are no "correct"
- causative factors. There is no required level of depression. Once in
- you're in the pit, it ceases to be relative and becomes relevant.
-
- Waynsville <waynsville@aol.com> wrote:
- What do you do when your pdoc says "you should be happy?"
- John Timothy <johntim@ix.netcom.com> responded with:
- First you look right at him with the Clint Eastwood squint (with a
- hint of Nicholson in "The Shining" thrown in) for several seconds. Then
- say: "YOU...should be AFRAID....VERY afraid." Wait a few seonds more,
- then as fast as you can, JUMP up out of your chair and LUNGE at him, waving
- your arms, holding your eyes open really wide, and yelling "BLEAGH!!" at
- the top of your voice.
- Of course, this won't really *accomplish* anything...but it's a
- hell of a lot of fun! Good luck! Let me know how it works out for you.
-
- sara <yu150952@yorku.ca> wrote:
- I just had somewhat of a revelation. In therapy I was talking
- about how I've always envisioned myself as this romantic depressed
- character who broods alone, quietly, writing poetry, becoming one with the
- earth and the trees and the grass and the moon. My therapist asked what it
- is about depression that I think is so romantic. I talked about all the
- imagery that surrounds us in films and books and folklore, about these
- romantic brooding desperate woe-begone characters that has infiltrated my
- psyche. But I just thought of something else. It is so important for me
- to be good at things. At school, at playing instruments, at knowing idle
- bits of information. It has always been crucial that I excel, especially
- at school. I have never been an athlete and have never had the best social
- skills, and have always been tremendously shy. There are many things that
- I have wanted to be better at. So I hold those things that I *am* good at
- very close to me. They define me. So, yes, my revelation. Depression is
- something that I am GOOD at. I know how to brood, how to mope, how to pour
- out my heart. I have had lots of practice. I have had so much alone-time
- trying to get the attention of my parents, friends, lovers...desperate
- attempts to get noticed, so often in vain...that I am good at it. I don't
- succeed, but I am good in my attempts. I am damn good at being lost and
- desolate and abandoned. It's what I do best. The revelation is gone. I
- don't know what I mean anymore. It doesn't make sense to me as much
- anymore. This happens to me more and more these days...losing the thread
- of what I was thinking/saying. I'm convinced it's the meds. Either that
- or law school. So yes. I still believe in this myth of the romantic
- depressive. And she is me. And I'm still waiting to be rescued. But
- that's where the illusion is realized, where the myth falls apart. Because
- I can never be rescued from it. Not by anyone else. It has to be me that
- does the rescuing. And I don't know how long that will take. Nor if I can
- eve manage it.
-
- Skye <gullah@ix.netcom.com> wrote:
- Hi, asd'ers. I want to thank you for your posts and/or e-mails
- that got me through a rough day yesterday. It really helped me stay
- grounded in reality and go easier on myself for perfectly normal human
- reactions to what I was going through. This morning, I went out to get the
- newspaper and noticed the chirp of every bird, could swear I could see
- *every* blade of grass shimmering with dew...it seems life was telling me
- it was all there waiting for me if I but stopped and took it in. That
- means participating in life. The good and the bad. It means feelings are
- part of life, and because I accept that, I don't want to off myself
- anymore. I had felt my suicidal ideation was two great giant steps
- backward. Quite the contrary. It's a step forward into affirming my
- passion for life. I feel...therefore, I am.
-
- stacy <stacy@connix.com> wrote:
- I have started to think that I may be having feelings for another
- person. What happens now though is that every time they want to move to a
- higher level of closeness or intimacy, I start to back off. And I am *not*
- nice about it either. I think that being mean and hurtful is my way of
- protecting myself from eventually being hurt myself. This is becoming all
- to common of a behavior of mine. I am missing out on experiencing many
- people because of this. I work on it and work on it to no avail. This is
- what will keep me alone. Part of me feels unworthy of someone's love.
- Part of me feels that I will only ruin it eventually so why try? What is
- the matter with me? Why if I want not to be alone am I always setting
- myself up for it?
-
- BGumm <bgumm@aol.com> wrote:
- How do you handle not feeling anything at all?? Life is just a big
- gray haze that seems to never end. And my emotions and feelings are dead
- just as I feel dead. I am dealing with to many memories and to much pain.
- How do you folks handle the feeling of being dead to anything except pain
- and anger?? I am on meds and am in counseling. Not sure how far it is
- going to get me though.
-
-
-