| | |||||||
| Register | FAQ | Members List | Calendar | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read |
| Emotional Mastery Emotional intelligence, addiction and recovery, grieving, loss, fear, anger, guilt, resentment, frustration, anxiety, depression, happiness, joy, love, kindness, forgiveness, self-acceptance, confidence, escaping the pit of despair, EFT |
|
Welcome to the Personal Development for Smart People Forums, the place for lively, intelligent discussion of all personal growth issues -- physical, mental, financial, social, emotional, spiritual, and more. You're currently viewing as a guest, which gives you limited read-only access. By joining our free community, you'll be able to post your own messages, access many members-only features, see the new messages posted since your last visit, and of course remove this header message. Registration is fast, simple, and free, so please join today. If you arrived here from a search engine, you may want to explore the main site first, which includes hundreds of deep and insightful articles on a variety of personal development topics. |
| | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
| |||
| Pavlina's written about this; probably to a degree greater than I realize, but my stomach hurts in a way distinctly different from eating my first home-ec project, and I thing the gas-bill has something to do with it, so I'll at least vent. A plant and a cat; that's all that would die if I skipped town, and I can get them new homes, anyway. My roommates would be in a dire strait, but that argument's negated by my inability to consistently make rent in the first place. I don't like it here, and "there" wasn't too hot, either. So... what's keeping me in town, eh? Why am I still here? Heh; it's because I'm scared, friend. I keep taking walks out to the city-limits, but I can never stop myself from turning back. "If my apartment burned down," I say to myself, "then I'd be free!" Am I some sort of crazy for wanting to ditch this life I have? Hell; the only jobs I can qualify for to pay for it are warehouse-gigs a washing dishes, both of which are unpleasant. Logic says that I don't really need what I have, and my heart wants it less and less with each passing week. Should I just make my arrangements and go, or am I simply whining about nothing? Is the life of a vagabond really just instant death, or what? Weigh in and you will be thanked for your time. |
| |||
| These are questions we can't answer. No-one knows you as well as you do. Any advice we give is based on our own lives so while it may seem appropriate on the surface, it's made without all the relevant information. I mean, we haven't even met you or know what you look like. Besides, you are more likely to act with commitment if the decision is your own. I wish you the success you desire.
__________________ http://orbellcomms.wordpress.com - my new Communications and Marketing blog. |
| |||
| Quote:
|
| |||
| you should look for a place that you really love on the internet, have a look at what there is to rent there, and have a look what jobs there are there. when you plan out things that way you will get exited about moving somwhere else.
__________________ The perfect place to take A holiday! http://www.everythingcornwall.com My Bebo page http://www.bebo.com/dwizil |
| |||
| What are you running away from? My guess is that it's not where you are that you want to escape, but who you are. If you aren't comfortable with yourself, then it can manifest as a desire to get away from it all. I know this because I have a similar tendency. My primary reaction is to withdraw from the world. When that doesn't work, because you can't escape inward, my secondary urge is to get away from it all. To just go somewhere and to be all alone. But it's not the world that I'm trying to run from, it's myself. I'm frustrated or afraid, and it is the feeling that I want to escape, not the people that I blame for it. Because no matter where you run, there will always be somebody or something to be frustrated with or afraid of. So you can run. But you'll run a 4-minute mile before you outrun yourself.
__________________ We must conquer ourselves, and allow our selves to conquer the world. |
| |||
| I've gotta agree with you to a degree, Cloud. While I'll living without an apartment does not equate to instant death, that may not exactly be the heart of the issue. But I raise the question; why not begin to solve the problem externally? Tearing oneself away from their world takes effort and strength, much as banishing fear does. Internal changes grow out to change the outside world, so why not can outside-changes seep in to change the interior? |
| |||
| Quote:
__________________ We must conquer ourselves, and allow our selves to conquer the world. |
| |||
| What if the problem is solved not directly by leaving, but by having the courage to do so? From what I can tell, my dependence on those around me (as is evidenced by blaming them for my position) is the source of my misery. Cutting myself off from them seems like the quickest (most painful, messiest...) way of overcoming my dependence. I'm a bit calmer than I was when I started this thread, but this still worth contemplating. The worst part is that I'm not surrounded by bad people: they've offered to help me get out on my own, and even encouraged me to take up the path of the wanderer (both after our joint lease runs out, anyway). How ironic that the problem attempting to solve itself makes the process harder, eh? |
| |||
| Quote:
Plus, if you think about it, you would be allowing your entire life to be molded around an admitted fault rather than an inspiration or true desire. Running from a fault may seem like a good idea at first, but usually in the end it changes nothing. If being a wanderer is your calling, then answer it. But if this is just an attempt to escape dependence, you're better off surrounding yourself with those you depend on so that you have more opportunities to see how what you believe is creating how you feel. Why do you feel that being around people is causing you to be dependent on them?
__________________ We must conquer ourselves, and allow our selves to conquer the world. |
| |||
| The dependence is a practical one: I simply don't know how to live on my own, since I never have. The more time goes on, the more I learn of basic survival, but there's always something about being without the people around me that freaks me out. I'm starting to think that I was overreacting to some stress I had built up, but this has been a recurring though even when things were going well. I've got alot to parse through. But back to the general idea, since that's more interesting. If dependence is the problem, couldn't travelling be therapeutic if done repeatedly? While I hope one'd not become a complete loner, the steady change would teach one to somewhat insulate themselves, right? |
| |||
| Quote:
To sum it up, it's easy to detach physical needs by physical separation, because physical goods come from external sources. It is nigh impossible to detach emotional needs in this way, since emotions are generated inside yourself, and any detaching you do is likely to be countered by further attaching since you don't need anyone's consent to attach yourself to them emotionally. Quote:
__________________ We must conquer ourselves, and allow our selves to conquer the world. Last edited by The Cloud : 07-21-2008 at 07:04 AM. |
| |||
| Quote:
You lack a sense of a mission in life and your masculinity is kicking you in the face for not indulging it more. Engage in more rigorously adventurous activities and then notice how you feel.
__________________ -Nicketas Licensed Personal Coach Personal Development is only hard if you don't have a map. Click Here, Then on the next page click on the LEFT HAND LINK to MINDOS. |
| |||
| Quote:
I have a wandering spirit and have travelled extensively. Travelling is very much about adventure, experience and people, well it has been for me at least. Travelling relationships are very intense, you meet, click, share an experience and when you part, it is without sadness. Some people you stay in touch with, others not. I've travelled with friends and alone. I enjoyed both, however, I met more people when travelling alone and was only alone if I chose to be. If you feel the urge to do it, do it. You always have the option of returning home. |
| |||
| It's been a week or so since this thread started. I've picked up a pleasant job, I've stumbled across some amazing stuff (a business-venture, a physics-engine for a game I'm working on, and some discipline I just wanted to give some closure to this. I'm not equating loss of material goods to instant death, and that's always a plus. Something I realized just a few days ago is that you hear about the great fighters in life, but the best flyers tend to be too quick for anyone to see how satisfied they are. |
| |||
| Quote:
I know I too myself lean more toward the latter of "fight or flight". I tend to also dislike conflicts a great deal, and I tend to much rather leave the situation then fight in it. I'm definetely no warrior.
__________________ “There never was a winner who wasn’t at some point a beginner.” - Denis Waitley |
« Previous Thread
|
Next Thread »
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
| |
| | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Good and Evil vs. Good and bad vs. Light and dark. | Theo77 | Steve Pavlina | 6 | 09-25-2008 06:09 PM |
| Why you should throw out your TV | dor | Personal Effectiveness | 69 | 08-22-2008 09:10 PM |
| If bad is needed for good to exist, isn't bad then good? | Erki | Spirituality, Consciousness, & Awareness | 41 | 08-08-2008 02:22 PM |
| Throw away my dream of being a volleyball player? | lightthecandle | Health & Fitness | 11 | 09-02-2007 03:03 PM |
| Good Night and Good Luck | Max Power | Intention-Manifestation | 18 | 08-29-2007 03:20 AM |
All times are GMT. The time now is 11:28 PM.

