RedLeader
Bluelight Crew
I've started to notice a common theme to a lot of the help I seek - that I am "too hard on myself" and that I would greatly benefit from "not being so hard on myself." I have been told this at in-patient, in meetings, therapy, by friends/family and even by fellow BLers. My gut-reaction is that oh that's just one of those formalities popular in advice-giving communities, but maybe there actually is something to it. My next thought becomes okay, great, but I have absolutely how to change that, and you make it sound like it's a switch I can flip!
A few reasons why I believe that I am hard on myself...
(1) I am extremely goal-oriented, and this inevitably gets corrupted by my obsessive-compulsive thinking. I need total structure or none at all, and with the former I end up making lists, am prone to making recreational things feel like chores and then get very upset when I fall short of something or have to deviate from my plan (with the latter, my life falls apart completely, so that's not realistic!).
(2) I am extremely hard on myself for the bad things I've done in the past. I guess I've always seen the whole "acceptance" thing as an easy-way-out, if not an enabling way-of-thought. This is not helped by those close to me, including family, telling me that it's an extremely selfish thing to say things like "I've forgiven myself for the wrong I've done." In my memory, the bad things I've done were really bad and I think it would be borderline bizarre to ever be able to be free of those mental beds I've made for myself. That idea seems completely foreign to me, no matter how many medical professionals and seasoned addicts try and tell me otherwise.
(3) I fell from a very high place and I feel like I've got more work than a lot of other people to regain a lifestyle where I no longer feel like a failure. I understand that it's not what you have that matters, but instead who you are. But I still cannot shake this feeling of somehow failing, no matter how healthy and well-balanced my life will ever become. It's probably those closest to me who judge me the worst for having lost the money, the professional life, the academic respect, the potential...it is those people who, in the back of their minds, are still going to be a bit perplexed with how my life turns out UNLESS I regain everything I've had. I feel like I have a pressure to establish myself in society to feel content with how my family sees me, and a pressure to find peace-of-mind for myself and for my intimate friends/relationships.
(4) I have an intense pressure to get everything back to normal sooner than later. First reason, because my mother is coming down with Alzheimers and I do NOT want her to fade away with her current image of me in her head. I do not want to be her son who lost everything to drugs and self-doubt, no. I want to be her son who climbed back from all of that and found some success and peace. But I need to do this quickly, given the situation. As well, if I ever want to make it in some of the fields for which I'm qualified, age does matter. If I want to achieve my physical goals, I want to do this sooner than later because of the whole biological clock thing. There are a lot of things I still want to do when I'm young, and I am going to put a lot of pressure on myself to pull this all of before it's too late.
To benefit me, and to benefit others like me, is anyone willing to elaborate on how they are hard on themselves, and any steps they have taken to successfully feel better about this? Things that actually work to "not be so hard on yourself," when that line once felt like someone telling you "not to blink so often"? I'm open to anything CBT to esoteric to practical to whatever works for you. I truly believe that if I could figure some of this out, I could become a lot more comfortable in my own skin, and in turn could minimise my chances of collapsing under all of the pressure. Can anyone relate to this at all?
A few reasons why I believe that I am hard on myself...
(1) I am extremely goal-oriented, and this inevitably gets corrupted by my obsessive-compulsive thinking. I need total structure or none at all, and with the former I end up making lists, am prone to making recreational things feel like chores and then get very upset when I fall short of something or have to deviate from my plan (with the latter, my life falls apart completely, so that's not realistic!).
(2) I am extremely hard on myself for the bad things I've done in the past. I guess I've always seen the whole "acceptance" thing as an easy-way-out, if not an enabling way-of-thought. This is not helped by those close to me, including family, telling me that it's an extremely selfish thing to say things like "I've forgiven myself for the wrong I've done." In my memory, the bad things I've done were really bad and I think it would be borderline bizarre to ever be able to be free of those mental beds I've made for myself. That idea seems completely foreign to me, no matter how many medical professionals and seasoned addicts try and tell me otherwise.
(3) I fell from a very high place and I feel like I've got more work than a lot of other people to regain a lifestyle where I no longer feel like a failure. I understand that it's not what you have that matters, but instead who you are. But I still cannot shake this feeling of somehow failing, no matter how healthy and well-balanced my life will ever become. It's probably those closest to me who judge me the worst for having lost the money, the professional life, the academic respect, the potential...it is those people who, in the back of their minds, are still going to be a bit perplexed with how my life turns out UNLESS I regain everything I've had. I feel like I have a pressure to establish myself in society to feel content with how my family sees me, and a pressure to find peace-of-mind for myself and for my intimate friends/relationships.
(4) I have an intense pressure to get everything back to normal sooner than later. First reason, because my mother is coming down with Alzheimers and I do NOT want her to fade away with her current image of me in her head. I do not want to be her son who lost everything to drugs and self-doubt, no. I want to be her son who climbed back from all of that and found some success and peace. But I need to do this quickly, given the situation. As well, if I ever want to make it in some of the fields for which I'm qualified, age does matter. If I want to achieve my physical goals, I want to do this sooner than later because of the whole biological clock thing. There are a lot of things I still want to do when I'm young, and I am going to put a lot of pressure on myself to pull this all of before it's too late.
To benefit me, and to benefit others like me, is anyone willing to elaborate on how they are hard on themselves, and any steps they have taken to successfully feel better about this? Things that actually work to "not be so hard on yourself," when that line once felt like someone telling you "not to blink so often"? I'm open to anything CBT to esoteric to practical to whatever works for you. I truly believe that if I could figure some of this out, I could become a lot more comfortable in my own skin, and in turn could minimise my chances of collapsing under all of the pressure. Can anyone relate to this at all?
