How we change

1
Going through life I guess we change quite a bit. I've changed, but not always to better. Now I'm in therapy and trying to find myself and recognize all the unhealthy patterns and beliefs. I was just wondering if you sonewhat wonderful people had any insight to change?

I've noticed through out the years some trolls have turned into actual people and some have gone the other way.

Re: How we change

3
Good post suggestion.

I thought about this a lot this summer.

I'll assume you're asking about things subjectively, so I'll answer that way.

I had some behavioral shit about 18 years ago or so that I needed to adjust in a major way or I wasn't going to be able to live the life that I both wanted (in spite of my behavior) and that people who depended on me also wanted (namely, my eldest kiddo). It took a major shakeup, an ultimatum, and some sincere therapy to even get rolling on a different path. Typical male-in-modern-culture shit. Avoid therapy or addressing and issue, and instead bury it with booze and whatever else.

Booze was the big one.

What I learned that i would care to pass on at all is this: Take full responsibility for the dumb shit you do while ALSO recognizing that it does eminate from something you haven't dealt with. Yes, booze rules and it a shitload of fun (I liked myself when I drank to be honest; not sure others would have said the same), but when it slips over into that other amorphous area, well, that's a talk you have to have with yourself I suppose. I would never, ever tell anyone not to drink, but I'm also here if anyone wants to talk about it.

AA didn't do shit for me and honestly bummed me out, but I am so glad it is around for people for whom it really works. In short, or TLDR, I am a better person for fully accepting responsibility when I was behaving in a way that hurt people's feeling, and I think my closest people would agree. What a fucking lightbulb.

And all of that said, this is something you have to do in earnest and cannot be faked.

Re: How we change

5
In the last 5 years especially..

Prioritize things that:

-Get me active and outside especially earlier in the day
-Allow me to socialize with a handful of people vs. being part of a dense crowd
-Avoid hyper-stimulation (excessive loudness or visuals, limit device and social media time, etc.)
-Also avoid alcohol. True, bars have gotten better about NA stuff but it's still 'bar culture' and I sort of hate it.

These are not always positive, or at least convenient, changes especially being active in a music scene for so long, but this is where I've arrived and just have to make it work.
Music

Re: How we change

6
Isaac wrote: Wed Nov 20, 2024 10:22 am Good post suggestion.

I thought about this a lot this summer.

I'll assume you're asking about things subjectively, so I'll answer that way.

I had some behavioral shit about 18 years ago or so that I needed to adjust in a major way or I wasn't going to be able to live the life that I both wanted (in spite of my behavior) and that people who depended on me also wanted (namely, my eldest kiddo). It took a major shakeup, an ultimatum, and some sincere therapy to even get rolling on a different path. Typical male-in-modern-culture shit. Avoid therapy or addressing and issue, and instead bury it with booze and whatever else.

Booze was the big one.

What I learned that i would care to pass on at all is this: Take full responsibility for the dumb shit you do while ALSO recognizing that it does eminate from something you haven't dealt with. Yes, booze rules and it a shitload of fun (I liked myself when I drank to be honest; not sure others would have said the same), but when it slips over into that other amorphous area, well, that's a talk you have to have with yourself I suppose. I would never, ever tell anyone not to drink, but I'm also here if anyone wants to talk about it.

AA didn't do shit for me and honestly bummed me out, but I am so glad it is around for people for whom it really works. In short, or TLDR, I am a better person for fully accepting responsibility when I was behaving in a way that hurt people's feeling, and I think my closest people would agree. What a fucking lightbulb.

And all of that said, this is something you have to do in earnest and cannot be faked.
Yeah, subjectively, of course.

Taking full responsibility is scary. I try to own my short comings, but it's not easy.
I've noticed that recognizing your strenghts or anything good is also hard. Depression, for me at least, buries those things deep in me. I don't drink to bottle feelings, but I've yet to recognize what I do instead. Eating is one of those mechanisms, that's for sure.

It's weird to have those "yeah, duh" -lightbulb moments in therapy, when you've actually known that shit for years, but haven't really known it.

I'm at that point that I don't know what is me and what is trauma. Looking forward coming out the other side. Hopefully as a better person.

Re: How we change

8
Man! Great topic.

I think for me the biggest factor has been acknowledging that change is inevitable. The last few years, since finally bottoming out in many facets of life, I've become focused on being deliberately involved in that change, while recognizing I don't control everything. Being aware of who I WANT to be, but making the process the important part, not the destination. Quitting drinking, leaving the restaurant industry, applying for disability, making an effort to be an active member of all the communities I've found myself in. All I know is I'm a much more satisfied human now that I can actually let myself be present for my fellows.
Anthony Flack wrote: Thu Sep 19, 2024 8:05 pm kiss Joe Manchin's coal mine

Re: How we change

9
Agree - good topic - pretty on point seeing all the global changes happening now also…

I’ve learned to like change instead of feeling challenged by it. Now I’m middle aged I feel the most “whole” version of me yet - more sure of who I am, more confident and have learnt from experiences. Some of this poss due to some therapy, other aspects just from life and natural maturity. I can honestly say I really didn’t “grow up” until at least 45 - in the sense of just not being a well developed person with any kind of emotional intelligence - still a way to go there!
It’s an amazing feeling to be aware of confidence and knowledge- not in a smug way, just in terms of being a better rounded person. I think it also sharpens my perceptions of other people and helps general communication too…

Other important changes:
- be healthy and take care of yrself
- be more thankful for new social opportunities (I used to shun these or make no effort)
- no more alcohol

Getting older has definitely made me more determined about the person I want to be into the future, whereas in the past I just don’t think I ever really cared or even thought about it

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