lovecraft68
Bad Doggie
- Joined
- Jul 13, 2009
- Posts
- 44,093
I agree with a lot of this, but mainly because it's gotten to the point-another great benefit of social media-where its become trendy to be depressed have PTSD, be autistic and the generally vague "mental health issues". You see people on social media making comments like "My depression is really tough today, someone please cheer me up"I know. And you'd avoid people like me. (I appreciate that, too.)
I've noticed that people who are not confident or are insecure NEED others similarly insecure around them to feel better about themselves.
But that seems like a self-destructive feedback loop. Rather than looking for ways to improve yourself, you look for others with whom to commiserate.
SG said "Lucky you", as if luck had everything to do with my confidence. While growing up, in school, I was the butt of jokes, a loner, and had very few positive self-image views of myself. I chose to join the Army an infantryman and volunteered for special courses and assignments to remake myself. I made CHOICES to make myself better and more confident.
I just advise others to try that same approach: Make the choices to improve YOU and how YOU feel about yourself! But in the greater society, look around and try to see what others believe are the better choices. Otherwise, if their opinions matter to you, it's going to be an up-hill battle always fighting the opinions of others.
Are some of these people genuine? I'm sure, and I feel sorry for them if they think social media is any kind of help to them. But are many attention whores ruining it for people with legit issues? I'd bet more than half are.
I also see the tendency to use mental issue-and physical ones as well-as a crutch.
The wife of one of my co-workers is very involved with Meeting street school, a school for children with serious disabilities. This summer they had an event and I went to support the cause. These little ones, some confined to wheel chairs and broken bodies, and broken minds...they are so happy and they're trying to do things, they draw, they make little crafts...and they do not feel sorry for themselves in the least....yet somehow most adults with half these issues are looking for a pity party.
If you need help, get that help and with the mindset on improving your life, not a badge of honor to the social media sheeple and make yourself into a martyr.
You mentioned your childhood. I once-at ten years old-say in a cafeteria while every kid there chanted "pound puppy" because they found out I was in foster care. Abused, surrounded by addiction and violence, cousins over dosing and committing suicide, landed myself in juvie, landed myself in jail at 20...Diagnosed with PTSD and even in my fifties and having led a pretty good life the last 25+ years I still have wake up from night terrors and deal with rage issues and...
It all is what it is. My mentality(thank you 70's and 80's) was to suck it up or as a line in one of my favorite songs says "will you stand up, or will you just fall down" but that doesn't work for everyone, and do have empathy for people going through shit
But have no patience for those who feel the need to spend 24/7 telling everyone about their shit and not giving one about any other persons. Get help, get better, do what you need to , but do it for you and do it quietly, the entire world doesn't need to know about your struggle.
Which leads to my last point about how when you hear about a suicide, be it someone in your life or a celebrity(Robin Williams always comes to mind) most of the time people say "Them? But they seemed so happy!" why? Because most people truly suffering don't talk about it...that's why I'm done with the "look at me, I have stuff"
We all have stuff.