LovieDove24 Posted December 24, 2008 Share Posted December 24, 2008 I am mostly content with myself. Somedays I am happier than others. And I am taking quite a few steps to ensure my mental health like attending local Alanon meetings and setting up appointments through the EAP at my work. As a little background my parents were both terrible alcoholics and my childhood set me up to 'fail' as opposed to succeed. A little daunting, but it is my mission to succeed. Anyways, I am at a stage in my mental recovery where I KNOW all of my problems, I am no longer in denial and I can see them clearly BUT I havent the tools to fix them. Its like I'm constantly staring at a nail that needs to go in a wall but there is no hammer in sight, if that makes any sense. This is why I'm always second guessing what I'm doing. I'm trying to 're-train' some very bad learned behavior from my childhood. Since I was never shown the 'right' way to do things, how do I know when I really am doing it 'right?' Link to post Share on other sites
Ronni_W Posted December 24, 2008 Share Posted December 24, 2008 I can totally relate...a million therapy hours, 6 million self-help books, workshops and seminars...and counting! For myself, "right" has just become what helps me to feel good about what I'm doing for myself and others. I know my boundaries (dislikes & preferences), I communicate my wants, needs and opinions positively (for the most part), I detach myself from other people's outcomes, I get out of situations that consistently make me feel crappy (after doing what I consider to be "enough" to improve it.) I try to be understanding, tolerant and accepting -- but I ain't no namby-pamby, passive doormat, either. That is me, doing it "right" as far as I'm concerned. And whoever don't like it can kiss...me under the mistletoe Link to post Share on other sites
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