yeh, bad habit
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W odpowiedzi do @HamzahAkram786
I don’t think that’s just you. I’d be surprised by anyone who said they found it easy to help themselves, particularly at their lowest. If it were easy, it wouldn’t be such a problem, but there’s literally something inside us that recoils from recovery.
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W odpowiedzi do @sarahlongthorne @HamzahAkram786
Perhaps, while horrible, there’s actually something familiar and almost comforting about pain which makes it preferable to the unknown that is recovery. Or perhaps it’s a feeling of just punishment or obligation to pain. Perhaps all of those.
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W odpowiedzi do @sarahlongthorne @HamzahAkram786
When we feel ourselves digging our heels, we should endeavour to see it for what it is and do the exact thing we don’t want to do. Put on a funny vine compilation. Load up a puzzle game. Just a few clicks.
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W odpowiedzi do @sarahlongthorne @HamzahAkram786
There’s no shame in struggling to do that because it’s so, so hard. Managing it despite those feelings takes incredible strength. The battle against our own fear is slippery and deceitful and one of the hardest we face, if not the hardest. Which makes it all the most admirable.
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W odpowiedzi do @sarahlongthorne
know that saying "a man who shows his pain is weak" or however it goes, i feel like thats a norm ive learnt and live by , and as much as i know its absolute BS, its weird to put myself and my own issues first, because its so unhuman to me, like i often feel guilty for being happy
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W odpowiedzi do @HamzahAkram786
I’ve never heard that before. But you know what? It’s bullshit. Showing vulnerability, especially for a lot of men, I think, in the current ‘man up’ culture, is incredibly difficult, but also admirable and a necessary step towards healing.
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W odpowiedzi do @sarahlongthorne @HamzahAkram786
I wonder if it’s a British thing, but here we seem to see adversity as almost a good thing. Someone who’s overcome adversity is admired, and rightly so. But also I think it’s lead some to believe that adversity is desirable and necessary in order to be admired.
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W odpowiedzi do @sarahlongthorne
honestly i think its a male thing in general regardless of where youre from, were taught not to show our weakness, like the whole idea of "sticks and stones may break my bones, but words wont hurt me" but in reality words can kill you far more than objects can 1/2
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W odpowiedzi do @HamzahAkram786 @sarahlongthorne
the pain you feel from objects will last for sometime but the way someone talks about you or insults you, regardless of what you do it;ll always eat you inside because we're not good enough to be taken seriously, or we arent "It" can ruin lives alot more 2/2
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I agree. I was taught that as a kid too but I never felt it to be true. And I’m not sure it’s the case everywhere; don’t quote me and I’m not sure which, but I think there are other societies where masculinity is treated differently. Not many, but I think it’s systemic.
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MCV 30 Under 30 2021