Quote from: DownwardSpiral on December 30, 2016, 03:17:18 AM
I really don't know any more. It's not a question I ask myself much. Suppose all my hopes and dreams, all my ambitions, have been crushed over the years. But I would like to be happy, content, feel appreciated.
And what would allow you to feel those things? In an ideal world, what do you think would let you be happy? Just for now, allow yourself to ask that question. Free of "but I can't because..." and "I'm not allowed to because...". Visualise a place in your mind that you'd like to be at. Who you'd like to be and what you'd like to be doing. Tell me about it.

QuoteI suppose patience, attention to detail and a certain amount of logic come into it... Sometimes I can't fix stuff, but then I frequently end up taking it apart to see how it works anyway...
So, curiosity too. Inquisitiveness. A desire to learn and understand. These are all good traits, hon. Things about you that you can be proud of, and embrace. Maybe you can use them somehow, hmm? To give you a little bit more confidence in yourself. Have you thought about learning something new? Maybe taking a local course somewhere on something that interests you? It seems to me that you have the aptitude for it.

QuoteIt gets tiring to be told that I'm hard work. Two people I was close to, who I classed as friends-real friends, not Facebook friends, told me straight that they couldn't cope with me any more. I've been slated for my perceived negativity, it seems to happen a lot, people slate me for being negative which just feeds the negativity. I feel worse about myself and I just go a little bit further down the spiral.
There's a little trick people sometimes use when they're trying to be more confident. It's basically "if you can't make it, fake it." Which, on the surface seems a bit of an odd thing to do, huh? How can you be something when you don't feel it. But the thing about it is, as you've really just shown, we feed off other people's reactions to us. Whether we know it or not. And if you're feeling shy and timid, then people treat you as such. Ignore you, overlook you. And that makes you feel worse. It reinforces that belief about yourself. As you say above, it feeds the way you already feel about yourself.
So, hypothetically, how do you think folks would react to you if they saw you as positive and outgoing? And how would those reactions make
you feel? Do you think it would actually make you feel more positive?
Something else to consider is that low self-esteem will always make you feel that way. Because you blame yourself. Even if those friends you're talking about are just having a really off time and coping with a lot themselves. I've been there myself. Many times. It's so easy to think people are just plain fed up with you because you're not the life of the party. You start to ask yourself what it is about you. What don't they like? What did you do wrong?
You'd be surprised how often it isn't about you at all. But about other people being at a place in their life where, for whatever reason, they can't be as supportive as you need. Or they just snap. But for someone with low self-esteem, it's so, so hard to see that. Because the self loathing is always there, and
everything is your fault, you know? Even when it isn't.
QuoteI have tried so hard to break the spiral. I've spent more money than I care to think about on therapy and self help books. I've tried to change, but I feel that I've taken two steps back for every one forward. I have seriously thought of heading off with a bottle of pills and a bottle of vodka.. but if I vocalise those thoughts I'm accused of attention seeking.
Thank you for caring, and for believing in me.
Sweetie, those things... they're tools. Yes they can help, but breaking the spiral has to come from inside you. If I could suggest something... do you think perhaps you've been looking for a solution from outside? And that's where the problem lies? It strikes me throughout your posts that people have been telling you your whole life who you are, what's best for you, what you can and can't do. And it's the only way you know how to be. So you're also looking to others to tell you how to fix things, and how to feel better?
No matter how much money you throw at it, and how many libraries of self help books or armies of therapists you go to see, they don't have the solution. They don't have the magic pill or little-known secret to make it better.
You have to do that yourself. That's where the change lies. This is what I've been getting at. You have to listen to yourself rather than others. It's okay to do that. What you want
does matter. How you feel
is important. You're
not worthless. You're a human being. With the same wants, needs and desires as anyone else. And you're just as valuable. You just need to start looking at the negative scripts your mind is reading from right now. See how relevant they still are to you.
You can do this. Everyone has the capacity for change within themselves.
*hugs* Keep going, okay? You will get there.