#reparenting

LIVE

solatenights:

a daily reminder to my need-to-be productive self.

canva for the win!

clever-and-unique-name:

On the Parents Days (Mother’s Day and Father’s Day) I spend most of my energy trying to be a good parent to myself. I listen to the younger parts of me when they talk about our parents–the good and the bad. I make us food. I treat us gently.

We were always more of our own parental figure, and the holiday doesn’t change that.

It’s easy for the day to be spent stewing in guilt and grief and anger and despair. I’ve done plenty of that over the years, and I try to hold space for some of it still, because those feelings never truly go away. But I want to turn the holiday into something beneficial. Honor your mother? I mothered myself. I will honor me.

brytning:

I think at its most basic, self-compassion is seeing what your needs are and then making sure they get filled. A reminder I need very often!

positivelyqueer:

There’s power in telling yourself ”no we don’t do that anymore” in response to self destructive urges.

Once you go no contact with the abuser, then starts the inner work of changing how you speak to yourself

trippy-lotus:

It takes a lot of mental/emotional energy that I just don’t have anymore… once you realize you can let the emotions flow and let them pass and move through them… you just let them flow… life is not as much of a fight anymore

It feels like I have to protect my inner child by keeping her from running into the arms of people who aren’t safe

If you’re recovering from a relationship with a narcissist and find yourself longing for the lovebombing, know that’s completely valid and to be expected (that’s why they do it)

At the time the love bombing was happening you believed it was real so it still provided healing soothing benefit to your heart at the time even if later it feels like it was all fake

They were mirroring you so it was like you were being love bombed by yourself which you can do now

Any tenderness they showed you, space they held for you, compliments they gave you- you can give these to yourself, I promise

You can keep your inner child safe ☀️

Your heart can heal ❤️‍

thedarklordsnicklefritz:

aqueerkettleofish:

bumblebeerror:

Hard truth that I’ve had to confront that I’m honestly not proud of:

Constantly voicing your abandonment issues lead to more people abandoning you.

I do not mean in Serious Conversations about what you need in a relationship or anything like that - I mean when your friend plays a video game with a different friend for a few days and you feel like your world is crumbling, that is not the time to talk about them.

I understand the fear that someone will decide they are done with you. I live that fear every single day, but here’s the rub.

If you tell people “you’ll probably leave me anyway” or similar things every time you feel that fear, people will leave you.

Not because they don’t want to be your friend, your partner, your roommate, whatever. Not because you aren’t deserving of friends (you are), but because it is exhausting to be constantly told by someone you like/love to go away.

Because that is how it feels on the other end. I don’t say this to make it worse, or to make you feel like you’re at fault. Your brain is hurting you, and it’s okay to feel things. But if you find that it’s hard to keep people around you, then you need to hear that outside of things like conversations about boundaries and triggers and such, it would be to your benefit to change your language.

Instead of telling people “you probably don’t like me”, try asking. “You like me? It’s much easier for them to reassure you when you don’t start with a negative, because it puts your brain in a different mindset, one that finds it easier to believe their response.

Sit with your issues. Parent them. And when they’re done screaming, hold their little hands and dry their little faces and try to remember that you are worth being loved. I won’t say it’s easy, because it’s really fucking not. I won’t say you’ll get it the first time, or that you’ll never fuck up. I still do. But you deserve friends and partners and love, it’s just that so do they.

Another thing about this is that you are waving a red flag.

Because here’s the thing.

When your friend plays a video game with a different friend for a few days, and you talk about how that hurt you? You’ve just created a situation where you’ve placed the onus of your emotions on your friend, who did nothing wrong. Now your friend has to worry about what other perfectly reasonable activities are going to get them accused of hurting you, which is what you were doing whether you meant to or not.

And here’s the other thing.

When you tell someone “everyone always leaves me”, they wonder why. And it’s very possible that they’ve dealt with someone who complained about this, then proceeded to demonstrate why. There is a particular kind of social parasite that will completely use up their friend group, then move on to new friends while shit-talking how they were treated by the last friend group.

If you’re always reassuring your friend that you love then and do not in fact secretly hate them, it can get tedious and feel like they don’t believe you when you tell them that.

That doesn’t mean they don’t need reassurance and support! Those feelings are real, and can be difficult to manage.

But if you are the one feeling those things, it’s important to interrogate them. As in, it may FEEL like someone is abandoning you, and those feelings are very real and color your perception. But that doesn’t mean they’re reality!

If they’re a long time friend you probably have some evidence that they care about you. A time when theyve said or done something to express that. Try to remember those when you’re feeling that way and take a step back to evaluate.

You can write them down. And if you don’t have many, look for opportunities to give them first. Say something nice about your friend, tell them you enjoy their company etc. They’ll feel more inclined to be do the same.

Work on retraining that internal (and external) monologue.

It’s difficult, anxiety is a bitch. But you’re going to have better results if you put your effort into being the kind of person your friends want to be around than if you focus on worrying that they’re going to leave you.

And I’m not saying you have to change everything about you or pretend to be something youre not. But ultimately you’re the one who gets to decide what kind of person you are, and you can golden rule this. Treat people the way you wanna be treated yknow. If you like getting compliments, be the kind of person that gives compliments etc

I think at its most basic, self-compassion is seeing what your needs are and then making sure they get filled. A reminder I need very often!

loading