Spork
Active member
Yeah, it was wanting something for myself but not feeling comfortable asking for it... coupled with my own special little asshole of an insecurity gremlin.
Like most people who try and project this self-assured, "cool" and confident and extroverted demeanor, underneath there lies insecurity and a fear that I'm actually not liked/likeable or loved/loveable. It's like...at first, people are pretty enthusiastic about me right? I'm new, they're new, we're all really excited about the new thing. I'm crazy cool and super fun. But once I've pretty much told all of my stories, done all of my tricks, I feel at a bit of a loss as to what I should be doing to keep people engaged and interested in me. The gremlin starts whimpering away and constantly wondering if people still like me or not, once they've had a chance to see what's under the surface. A regular person. Kind of boring actually. And not capable of sustaining endless amounts of high energy longterm. My gremlin drives me to seek all kinds of validation and ego stroking, which I then feel lame and needy for wanting, rinse and repeat. I'm my own worst enemy, and I know it.
So when I feel something weird, especially if it's at odds with what I believe logically is my stance, and how I know I want to behave in a relationship, I feel it's time to check myself. Self check step one is: Are there physical reasons contributing? Have I eaten and slept enough today, do I have hormonal nonsense going on? Step two: Did somebody poke the gremlin? Is it the gremlin talking? Do I need to shake my fondue fork at him and remind him who's boss?
Those self checks have to happen before I can even consider whether someone else did anything right or wrong. And usually, resolving those is enough to put the matter to rest for me.
What's kinda cool is that my lifestyle in the last year or so since the marriage ended is what brought me to a place where I'm consciously aware of this stuff. I didn't even have the space to THINK about my own needs before that. I wouldn't even, as a base example, recognize that I should eat until my blood sugar was crashing and I was trembling and getting a headache. The phrase "finding yourself" used to sound so trite to me...but I've only recently realized how lost I was. Making myself a priority in most ways is a whole new animal for me, and I'm still figuring out how to do it.
Like most people who try and project this self-assured, "cool" and confident and extroverted demeanor, underneath there lies insecurity and a fear that I'm actually not liked/likeable or loved/loveable. It's like...at first, people are pretty enthusiastic about me right? I'm new, they're new, we're all really excited about the new thing. I'm crazy cool and super fun. But once I've pretty much told all of my stories, done all of my tricks, I feel at a bit of a loss as to what I should be doing to keep people engaged and interested in me. The gremlin starts whimpering away and constantly wondering if people still like me or not, once they've had a chance to see what's under the surface. A regular person. Kind of boring actually. And not capable of sustaining endless amounts of high energy longterm. My gremlin drives me to seek all kinds of validation and ego stroking, which I then feel lame and needy for wanting, rinse and repeat. I'm my own worst enemy, and I know it.
So when I feel something weird, especially if it's at odds with what I believe logically is my stance, and how I know I want to behave in a relationship, I feel it's time to check myself. Self check step one is: Are there physical reasons contributing? Have I eaten and slept enough today, do I have hormonal nonsense going on? Step two: Did somebody poke the gremlin? Is it the gremlin talking? Do I need to shake my fondue fork at him and remind him who's boss?
Those self checks have to happen before I can even consider whether someone else did anything right or wrong. And usually, resolving those is enough to put the matter to rest for me.
What's kinda cool is that my lifestyle in the last year or so since the marriage ended is what brought me to a place where I'm consciously aware of this stuff. I didn't even have the space to THINK about my own needs before that. I wouldn't even, as a base example, recognize that I should eat until my blood sugar was crashing and I was trembling and getting a headache. The phrase "finding yourself" used to sound so trite to me...but I've only recently realized how lost I was. Making myself a priority in most ways is a whole new animal for me, and I'm still figuring out how to do it.
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