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This sounds like what I have been grappling with the past five years.I would not assume it is a refusal....it could be an inability. Grief is powerful, and everyone experiences it differently.
This is true.Agreed.
I would suggest, however, that the inability stems from long reinforcement of the idea that "they" were her happiness.
Not trying to take over this post either, but, this is hitting the core of my emotional issues at presentA person or a thing can't make someone happy, as true happiness comes from within. Some say it's a choice. IMO it's more of a quest. Seeking things that bring you joy and discarding what stifles you
@SusanLR , @ainely ,my question now is "if we go forward we have always to lead on things and people and be ready and aware for when they will fade away? and always find new ones? what's the meaning of life then?" it's actually a bit like the concept of the time and every day changes something
You present some very goodHappiness, what is that exactly?
A state of mind combined with emotions and feelings?
What hormone-cocktail do your body-mind have to mix, that you feel happy and how can you get it to do so?
Is our concept of happiness based on culture?
Does it have an influence of what we are feeling, how we are acting?
And if so, does's this fact influence what's going on in your body?
I think, the very base of happiness might be awareness. So if you're aware of what's going on in your mind and body, you might get a more realistic view of what's going on in the world and how you react to it. May be you could detect your own intentions for a special action and what result would follow.
And then you could work with your insights.
Maybe happiness doesn't come from a person or subject outside from yourself, but from a well adjusted balance of action and non-action of your mind and body?
Does this make any sense to you?
My question then is, do you think that are things or people that make us really happy?
This sounds like what I have been grappling with the past five years.
I feel like I'm adrift on an ocean, alone, waiting for something inside myself to come forth and alleviate
the feeling of alone since my loss of the only person I felt made me complete.
That would mean somehow feeling happiness without "desire",( that word again),
of having someone to share the world with. Someone that I feel
a loving bond of trust with. Without the bond, they are just someone to talk with in an intellectual
interchange.
I mean we can talk to an animal, but, not hold a conversation with really.
And still feel a loving bond.
We can hold a conversation with another human, but, not feel a loving bond. Thus leaving a rather
emotional emptiness.
Writing this out is helping me understand the problem is within and not the lack of something or someone outside of self. And it does feel like an inability.
Happiness is wanting what you have,
and not wanting what you don't have.
Maybe happiness doesn't come from a person or subject outside from yourself, but from a well adjusted balance of action and non-action of your mind and body?
Does this make any sense to you?
You are absolutely right!the point is to achieve this balance
You are absolutely right!
Difficult, but possible! Just keep trying.
So if you're aware of what's going on in your mind and body, you might get a more realistic view of what's going on in the world and how you react to it. May be you could detect your own intentions for a special action and what result would follow.
And then you could work with your insights.
Maybe happiness doesn't come from a person or subject outside from yourself, but from a well adjusted balance of action and non-action of your mind and body?
State of mind combined with emotions. Yes.Happiness, what is that exactly?
A state of mind combined with emotions and feelings?
What hormone-cocktail do your body-mind have to mix, that you feel happy and how can you get it to do so?
Is our concept of happiness based on culture?
Your report is very interesting, SusanLR!It comes from the inablility to have ever been able to feel a deep bond or connectedness
with another.
I know what you mean.Your report is very interesting, SusanLR!
Your experience of not feeling deeply connected in a conventional manner is exactly mine. Might be that within autistic perception bonding or feeling connected works at other layers than within neurotypical perception.
I'm not only a visual person, but also an auditive one. I remember a experience of very deep connection, that was when I had the great opportunity to perform music with an extraordinary gifted pianist. At the end of the performance we both cried.
Some rare times this phenomenon reoccurs with an other very good musician.
At a very rough time in my life I worked with a physiotherapist. I had a seemingly ever-lasting headache.
After a week or so working in silence, because we didn't speak the same lamguage he knew my body and seemingly my mind and I knew the touch of his hands. And then this feeling of deep connection occurred when he was very focused one my body and I was focused on his hands and his intentions to heal me.
I experienced it also with great meditation masters.
It feels like may be "unity of minds".
For me things like toys, hobbies and interests can be a useful and/or destructive way of avoiding stuff I find unpleasant or difficult. Really nice, pleasant, beautiful things/experiences are often very sad for me because when I experience them I immediately realise that I have no special people (friends or family) to share them with and that spoils any enjoyment that I should be feeling.There is an italian song that says '' is there something you really care about? that makes you really happy?''
I can't answer or rather- I would be able to answer but my ''thing'' is a person that isn't a part of my life anymore and I don't know how good it can be to believe that people are solid walls to lean on.
My question then is, do you think that are things or people that make us really happy?
I think that things lead to a passing happiness that in the long terms it will run away but people aren't made to stay, therefore, are we destined to suffer and that's it?
okay, this is just a part of the things that go through my mind and I know that actually it's a difficult and depressing thing to answer but I ask it here because I like to hear others ideas and then I know, or at least I perceive, that here I'm accepted
I think we make our own happiness. I will sometimes talk about the love of my life and I say that because I was always happy around him and still am. I was forced to leave him, was definitely not my choice. But I did realize that the happiness I had with him, I made. The special times I remember, in all actuality, had nothing to do with him. For instance one of those special times was when I was driving my car following him in the semi truck he drove. I was looking back at that memory and it dawned on me that it was ME. He wasn't doing anything to make that special.There is an italian song that says '' is there something you really care about? that makes you really happy?''
I can't answer or rather- I would be able to answer but my ''thing'' is a person that isn't a part of my life anymore and I don't know how good it can be to believe that people are solid walls to lean on.
My question then is, do you think that are things or people that make us really happy?
I think that things lead to a passing happiness that in the long terms it will run away but people aren't made to stay, therefore, are we destined to suffer and that's it?
okay, this is just a part of the things that go through my mind and I know that actually it's a difficult and depressing thing to answer but I ask it here because I like to hear others ideas and then I know, or at least I perceive, that here I'm accepted