What Boundaries Look Like đ
âDoing your bestâ looks different for everyone, itâs important not to compare yourself to those around you, especially if youâre struggling. Be kind to yourself, and be proud of what you achieve today <3
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Any advice on how to approach tough conversations with my parents without getting overwhelmed and crying?
-Keep in mind that not every discussion is a fight. It doesnât have to turn into a fight.
-Think about what you want to say on beforehand. You can write your ideas if possible so you donât miss any point or get lost within the conversation.
-Tell your parents that you want to talk about something important. Schedule a brief time with them in which they can give you their attention.
-Let them know why talking about that subject is important for you.
-Your emotional well being goes first. If the thing is getting ugly you can ask to pause the conversation and re take it when everybody is more calm (this particular tip has made wonders in the relationship with my mom).
-Keep your voicetone calm but steady. Donât shout, and try to not get heated. Remember that itâs a conversation. Donât get defensive even if they do. The outcome might not be what you wanted and that might be frustrating but try to stay calm.
-Some phrases that might help are:
âI would like to know what you think of (the subject)â
âWhy do you think that way? What are your concerns?â
âI understand why you say it but I do not agreeâ
âFrom my point of viewâŚâ
âI would appreciate if you could give thought to (subject)â and negotiate a partial agreement
âI donât agree with that but I respect your decision/ will support youâ
-If things donât go your way you can always try again when armed with resources.
And even if the outcome isnât what you wanted I am already proud of you for speaking out. I believe you and support you.
Part of Avoidant Personality Disorder is like ⌠a failure to regulate social experiences. Like we donât properly integrate or process what we feel.
Interacting with someone means feeling visible, connected, and like you are a self-among-selves: youâre existing as a person, in the presence of others.
Most folks, of course, can handle that effortlessly. They even seek it out.
People need social âbackground noiseâ and social stimulation.
They reach out easily and often, just because it feels good to them.
Socializing gives them a sense of comfortable connectedness. And relief from isolation â they donât âexist in a vacuum.â
It helps smooth out their inner experiences, thoughts and feelings.
But with AvPD, I donât think we process social input normally.
The sensations of interacting donât feel like how most people feel them. Being visible, connected, a person â it just seems dangerous and harsh.
And we canât put these feelings into context.
We canât step back from them, or control how much they affect us.
We donât have the ability to regulate what weâre experiencing.
That means nearly all social stimuli are negative to us, whether friend or foe. Being-in-contact-with-people is all it takes to distress us.
Itâs overwhelming and de-stabilizing.
It provokes more big feelings, and reactions we donât feel safe facing.
Our inner experience is turned into chaos.
Weâre left feeling helpless, afraid, inexplicably ashamed.
We want positive connection. But we usually end up with painful chaos instead.
And itâs a thousand times worse if youâre having an actually negative encounter, like facing someone whoâs angry or criticizing you.
Social perfectionism is about trying to escape this:
âI might be able to enjoy this thing⌠but only if nothing goes wrong ever.â
Perfectionism is a great misdirect. Because âevery possible problemâ is not the issue that needs solving.
What we need to do, is learn how to experience social input in a positive way. And un-learn all the bad habits that have grown instead.
(more here!)
being in love with the process and not the results is one of the healthiest things in the world
Being Kind doesnât mean becoming a complete pushover. You can be kind and have very clear boundaries about what is and isnât acceptable to you.
If youâre struggling, hereâs some words from Angry Prayers for Furious SurvivorsÂ
you know, I probably resembled this earlier in my life ⌠I mean, I donât know much about SZPD, but what youâve been describing definitely resonates with my experiences
in my case though, I think it was caused by intense, continuous dissociation, from my environment + from my own feelings. (and also, depression â numbness or feeling unaffected by things you used to react to, is a symptom of depression)
but nowadays I am plenty emotional and invested in things, which is nice!
(if anyone's interested, you can read my post about dissociation and self-erasure, or read about what I do to get better in general)
i feel like i may have developed szpd as a way to cope with my avpd symptoms lolâŚ
for me itâs been like i started with anxiety and that got so bad that i just became avoidant and then i became so avoidant that i now just have no emotions and donât care about anything
stay tuned for the next chapter where i stop being a human completely and turn into a robot
This is worth doing, no matter what outwardly-visible, culturally-acknowledged things I do or donât achieve.
This is worth doing just for me.