The Destructive Attraction to Unavailable People: How to Heal

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Crappy Childhood Fairy

Crappy Childhood Fairy

Жыл бұрын

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***
One of the most brutal but deceptive symptoms of Childhood PTSD is the romanticization of unrequited love. Loving, available partners seem boring, while those who don't want you seem to represent a higher realm of being, and give you (if only in fantasy) the experience of great love and emotion. The compulsion to love unavailable people will rob you of all happiness, and any chance of real love. In this video I respond to a letter from a woman who pours her life into creative collaboration with a man far younger who is not interested. Even while asking for help, she is caught in denial. Hear my answer to help her get free.
***
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Пікірлер: 752
@Dan_Chiron
@Dan_Chiron Жыл бұрын
Another advice: when you're wounded, healthy people will feel "bland" or "too vanilla". If you find people like this around you, give them a chance, you might get surprised. When I look at my past relationships, wether romantic or not, I realize how much drama was in there. Once you've healed enough, you'll look at the past and say "What was I thinking!".
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
So true! -Cara@TeamFairy
@Dan_Chiron
@Dan_Chiron Жыл бұрын
@FlyingMonkies325 I meant "bland" in an emotional way. Like people being honest and open about their feelings. I used to cringe about people like that, I found them frustrating for putting themselves out "for the wolves". That's how I only got myself involved with turbulent people, and having very dysfunctional relationships (romantic and not romantic). In my family there are still some relatives who think that if you don't argue with your partner on a regular basis, then you're boring and it's not "true love". Now, intellectually, I'm a pretty smart woman too, except my experience in life has been mainly rejection, so I appreciate when people genuinely want to be around me. You sound young, I understand how you feel, but I'd advice you to soften up a little bit. For me, it helped to understand that not every single relationship in my life has to be deep and meaningful. Some relationships are meant to be silly and shallow, and that's ok, you're not hypocritical for letting them be that way. If you surround yourself with people who are not afraid of being who they are, no matter if you find them challenging or not, you will learn a lot about life and about yourself. Good luck!
@floridalife215
@floridalife215 Жыл бұрын
@@Dan_Chiron these are some good insights. Thanks.
@christinarichie6171
@christinarichie6171 Жыл бұрын
​@FlyingMonkies325 You need to widen your pool and reach and that's where the internet (into the net) can be utilised well.
@Ninsidhe
@Ninsidhe Жыл бұрын
@FlyingMonkies325 I am profoundly gifted (which is a tiny fraction of the world’s population), I’m 58 and my life has been *filled* with individuals who either have a massive issue with my abilities and intellect or who have driven me to prefer isolation because their capacity to comprehend the majority of what I’m expressing or looking at is simply nonexistent. I kept getting told in my younger years that I had to be ‘tolerant’ and ‘accepting’ of the majority’s limitations, but what that effectively did was limit ME in my desires and aspirations; I wasted decades on individuals who resented and attacked my way of being and thinking and who demanded that I accept them as they were while they never, EVER did that for me. What a waste of energy and passion. Your instinct to find YOUR community is bang on. I’m now 8 months out of a 9 year relationship that nearly destroyed me via the relentless attacks on my abilities, which I tolerated because intelligent individuals can ALWAYS see multiple sides to an issue and I essentially had my own intelligence and capacity turned back on me- and that’s one of the actual dangers of being highly intelligent in an average driven world, our ability to see fractally and multidimensionally is a potential exploit point that we’re often unaware of. For me it has also not helped that I’m Autistic in neurological structure, which means I have always tended to take individuals at face value- it’s taken me a lot of being repeatedly exploited to learn that there was a whole other discernment skill set I had to learn in order to distance myself from others and wait for them to *show* me who they actually are. I was raised by a violently abusive Cluster B mother with extreme narc tendencies, so my intellectual capacity created some really hard core defence structures that as an adult nearly resulted in me being wiped out- if you’re here in this community then you’ve obviously had some traumas too. Being intellectually on the higher end of the curve doesn’t protect us from having deep wounds, but being around other intellectually gifted individuals who are ALSO *emotionally intelligent* is a game changer in every way. I totally recommend finding a mentor or therapist that is aware of both aspects- childhood trauma AND giftedness- because giftedness comes with a whole different set of traumas, culturally, interpersonally and individually. This world is not currently set up to support and celebrate giftedness so we have to piece it together ourselves. Personally I have made the commitment to myself after the devastation of the last relationship that I will never, ever again be in connection with someone who doesn’t appreciate, celebrate, respect and honour me, which includes intellectual and emotional capacity that aligns with who *I* am as a being. I’m simply not going to waste my energy on engaging with individuals that cost me energetically to be around- and most mainstream individuals do exactly that. I cannot do small talk, it’s agonising to be around individuals that have no original thinking in any way, I’d rather be at home with a great source of new information, be doing my own researching, having a hot magnesium salts bath, meditating or being in the forest than hanging out with individuals that are costing me life energy to be around. I have zero intention of ‘softening up a bit’ as was one suggested advice, because I’ve DONE that in years past and it was NOT pleasant or rewarding in any way- I suggest you *follow your own intuition* and if something isn’t ringing your bells then take that as a sign that you’re not in the right place for *you* and your uniquely configured Self. It’s not easy being an intelligent female in this world so I recommend finding examples of empowered, intelligent and independent females from any era and making *them* your company, while you figure out how to find such individuals irl; read/listen to their works, their autobiographies, do research into giftedness and its challenges, find communities online (not Mensa or Intergifted, I do not recommend because of their racial and other biases), create your own work that inspires others to come to *you* - life is simply too short to waste on those that will never, ever understand or resonate with you. I’ve learned this the very, very hard way.
@justinesalt9140
@justinesalt9140 Жыл бұрын
This thing with younger men... When a woman gets parentified in childhood, she attracts men who are looking for "mummy". At least it was my case.
@sunnyadams5842
@sunnyadams5842 Жыл бұрын
My thing with sig younger men, back in the day, was a case of arrested development.😁 But I ended up in the same place as you. When I was 24 and deeply involved with an 18 year old high student, what people missed was that I was emotionally only 17.
@sunnyadams5842
@sunnyadams5842 Жыл бұрын
Sorry to double post, but I read back here and realize my former post may former post may Seem Off-Topic. The sort of Parentification I am referring to , although the relationship I mentioned doesn't really
@prettypuff1
@prettypuff1 Жыл бұрын
Whew
@gorunsko31
@gorunsko31 Жыл бұрын
Mine case too. Sadly.
@gaurs230
@gaurs230 Жыл бұрын
I swear this is what happens
@Nariel7
@Nariel7 Жыл бұрын
If I remember correctly, the baby monkey experiment involved two fake monkey mothers: one of them was made of wire and had a milk bottle attached, and the other was made of fur, but had no milk. The baby monkey preferred the furry mother because it felt warm and safe, but as a result it didn't get enough food and eventually died. I think it was a cruel experiment, but I guess it goes to show that we need emotional sustenance even more than actual food, and if we can't have the real thing, we choose what feels the most like it.
@CatherineIves
@CatherineIves 11 ай бұрын
It's also so heartbreaking how they rip away baby monkeys from their real mothers and it's so traumatic for them. Not just with scientific research but in the exotic pet trades.
@age93
@age93 10 ай бұрын
@@CatherineIvesit is heartbreaking and cruel, but the amount of clarity it gives those who struggle with things they don't understand and therefore can't address, more good than bad amounts from it. I don't want to use the word "justified", but personally these findings aid me in the compassion, forgiveness, and healing I was never able to obtain through logic. Society scapegoats and pushes the narrative that it's all will-power and choice like we are solely intellectualize beings. Basic needs and the subconscious can and will rule your life until you become aware or it. Biology trumps psychology 🤷🏼‍♀️
@georgesonm1774
@georgesonm1774 5 ай бұрын
Heartbreaking
@elenamanoli5728
@elenamanoli5728 4 ай бұрын
the monkey was nt hungry
@c.w.8200
@c.w.8200 Жыл бұрын
The older I get the more horrified I am by my mom, my last therapist wanted me to "forgive her because she tried her best" but I'm almost 40 and I still wake up from nightmares about my childhood. I mean, there's something so chilling about a mother watching their child go through the extreme anguish she caused and then punishing the child for daring to express any adverse emotions. Someone in my neighborhood told me she remembers me as the little girl with the 1000 yard stare but as my parents are so well connected and popular nobody wanted to say anything.
@hermit.masteroflight5970
@hermit.masteroflight5970 Жыл бұрын
Samechere. My mother is narcistic and psychopatic and I M tired of peoplecminimazing the damaged it has provoked me and I am still suffering the consequences. Do yourself a favoyr and send that therapist to hell.
@aliciafergus2026
@aliciafergus2026 Жыл бұрын
Speaking as a 68yr old now I'm wishing I'd had the strength when I was your age to just say to my mother to fuck off go take yourself as far away from me as possible, even though we had fallouts with years of no contact she would turn up at my work (I was a nurse) She died a lonely old narc. I had not seen her in 6yrs, I felt immense relief, like a weight had been lifted from me. Advice to you, this is not your fault, you have a life to live, never ever let anyone spoil that,. I hope from the bottom of my heart you will be kind to yourself ❣️
@peacearise2157
@peacearise2157 Жыл бұрын
These mothers never tried there best that’s a lie. If they wouldn’t let someone treat them the way they treated us then it was not their best. I think we forgive because we are better than them.
@thethreadedtarot777
@thethreadedtarot777 Жыл бұрын
The moment my last therapist told me the same I knew it was a message to run away from such therapist hahaha. Amazing how some of them think everything is kinda like a Hallmark Movie? Anyway, thank God we found Anna :) good luck and lots of love ⚘️☀️
@Karen-yn2uf
@Karen-yn2uf Жыл бұрын
Forgiveness is not for them, it is for you. It does not excuse their behavior and in no way makes it ok. Forgiveness relieves you of the burden of carrying that hate in your heart. I hope that you can forgive them and be released from their mistakes.
@deliciousabundance
@deliciousabundance Жыл бұрын
"If a man is offered free sex, then even if he's not interested, he's gonna arrange for that." I wish this weren't true, but I've rarely met a man this didn't apply to. :-/
@sasan7401
@sasan7401 4 ай бұрын
"Hope is addictive but it doesn't turn into fulfillment, hope ends up being quite depressing and then you have to do more and more in the pursuit of hope. Hope is our dope."
@Grammamellow1
@Grammamellow1 7 күн бұрын
Hope defered..it is Biblical..no joke. Google Hope Defered KJV..im.gonna do it right now..BRB
@tmac8892
@tmac8892 Жыл бұрын
I was born into trauma and have been holding my breath ever since.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
We understand as few others can. I'm glad you're here. -Calista@TeamFairy
@danilaroche1156
@danilaroche1156 10 ай бұрын
Jesus heals. Exhale.
@__rm307
@__rm307 9 ай бұрын
@@danilaroche1156 this isn’t really the appropriate place to proselytize. Give people some space.
@s.s.ss.4848
@s.s.ss.4848 3 ай бұрын
Please stop. Your deity is not real.​@@danilaroche1156
@Sarafara7
@Sarafara7 Жыл бұрын
Listening to your videos has taught me to be more sensitive to people I meet. We have no idea what their childhood was like, what pains they went through.
@Yukai-ep2dv
@Yukai-ep2dv Жыл бұрын
Same!
@theideaplace
@theideaplace Жыл бұрын
I know women in their 40's and 50's think life is over... they are too old... but that's just not true... You still have lots of hormones...look youthful...have lots of energy ...it's really only in later 60's and 70's that all that changes... so don't waste your time with people who aren't available...the time you spend with them is keeping you from someone that wants a relationship and there are lots of men in those age ranges that are lonely and would appreciate a great girlfriend/wife... don't waste these precious years... get out there and meet someone that really makes you happy... don't throw it away
@lawofsuccess101
@lawofsuccess101 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this! I needed to hear this
@lexaturu9673
@lexaturu9673 11 ай бұрын
Yup, thanks!
@elsarenthal1242
@elsarenthal1242 Жыл бұрын
When I started focusing on myself and finding activities to enjoy is when my limerence stopped. My limerence was at its worst when I only derived pleasure from how many dates I could get instead of finding happiness from within. It’s a cliché but it’s true. Crappy childhood fairy has helped me so much over the last couple years! ❤❤
@janeydoe1403
@janeydoe1403 Жыл бұрын
Contrary to our (Hallmark/bosom heaving/fairy tale) conditioning, true love is self love. That's my epiphany, anyway.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this! -Cara@TeamFairy
@sheilagavin8281
@sheilagavin8281 Жыл бұрын
@@CrappyChildhoodFairy Thank you again beautiful generous intelligent lovely Anna 😍
@seriouscat2231
@seriouscat2231 8 ай бұрын
@@janeydoe1403, I think true love is love of virtue first and (virtuous) persons second. Or Lk. 10:27 in the Bible.
@janeydoe1403
@janeydoe1403 Жыл бұрын
I've been single over four years and in that time only unavailable or unavailable and age inappropriate men have propositioned me. They've all be straight up honest about not wanting an emotional connection and evidently they are not emotionally connected to the women in their life, either. So I am honest, too. I direct them to the adult super store for novel, inanimate sex.
@damalewis9277
@damalewis9277 Жыл бұрын
Good for you!!
@passionela
@passionela Жыл бұрын
similar here...I am more than 2 years single after a breakup with my ex-narcissist (absolutely toxic relationship) and 1 year no contact with my whole family of origin. I get interest only from emotionally unavailable men (narcissists/engaged/married/they "didn't fall in love with me, but want one night"...). They offer only humiliation. I reject them all, and live without sex, despite I felt strong limerence to some of them. But it gets better after I went no contact with my family who actively humiliated me all the time; I now feel that I love myself more than any of these men, and I can't stand that shitty behavior of them. The limerence gets weaker and the anger gets stronger. I think that the journey from this is a combination of loving myself and treating my inner child like a loving person, and not feeling guilty about rejecting any people, who don't treat me well. Once we stop implode with anger and start use the anger to be assertive and stop selling ourselves short, our anger will guide us to progress.... My family of origin taught me from early childhood, that I am not allowed to reject any person, who humiliates me, because I have to be empathetic with them. My grandma was the most manipulative and she humiliated me at any family gathering in front of all people; my mother taught me to "be good girl", not protect myself from this grandma's torture. I still feel that toxic guilt when I reject anybody who tries to humiliate me or when I stand for myself, but it gets better. The anger is a cure.
@genxx2724
@genxx2724 Жыл бұрын
That’s funny. But what is the adult superstore?
@Jean-un2or
@Jean-un2or Жыл бұрын
Good 👏 the right one will come!
@pialindeg
@pialindeg Жыл бұрын
@@passionela Oh yes I know the thing too - except it was my narcissistic mother who always "was the good one". Only my eldest sister (17 years older) can see her, as she was - we were both scapegoats to her envy of us and everytime she had to be responsible, she climbed out of it, to blame us. Everything was my or her responsibility - even my diabetes from 7 years old. She always showed the nice and kind face ..........bvvadrrr!
@jamesbyrne9312
@jamesbyrne9312 Жыл бұрын
'It's not about how young you look, it's about where you are in your life- wow, brilliant quote
@melissam6037
@melissam6037 Жыл бұрын
The “I’m in a self destructive phase” thing sounds like the kind of thing a guy will say when they don’t see you as a potential partner, but want yo keep you around for casual secks. They will make some weird announcement up front about some reason why they have to treat you crappy, and then see if you will sign off on it. If you do, they have things the way they want them. I’m only speaking from a lot of personal experience here, no shade to the letter writer.
@danilaroche1156
@danilaroche1156 10 ай бұрын
She wants what she can't have. This man told her he wasn't relationship material. She needs healing from her childhood. I used to be like her. My childhood and adult experiences with my parents was a NIGHTMARE!! Both my sisters can't be in healthy relationships. I don't mean to proselytize but the Lord rescued me and healed my deep trauma and it was deep. Did u know the Bible says that Jesus is The Mighty Counselor & The Comforter. Jesus saves!
@__rm307
@__rm307 9 ай бұрын
@@danilaroche1156funny you are aware of the word “proselytize”. I just wrote that to you in another comment. It’s really not appropriate imo to proselytize to vulnerable traumatized people. That’s how some people end up in cults.
@__rm307
@__rm307 9 ай бұрын
@@danilaroche1156kind of seems like whatever religious / new age beliefs that traumatized people get into - just replaces their limerant obsession. Instead of obsessive thoughts about a guy - it’s commenting “Jesus Saves” over and over under every KZfaq comment.
@HeidiHough
@HeidiHough 2 ай бұрын
@@danilaroche1156 it's the same story for me. i get why people are complaining about the 'proselytizing' though. it's been a struggle for me to figure out how to share what's worked for me but also not trigger vulnerable people. before i found jesus i couldn't stand it when people mentioned him etc. Just wanted to say it's the same for me, though.
@SF-cq6bg
@SF-cq6bg Жыл бұрын
Age 49 is roughly the peri-menopause years & there is one last enthusiastic hormonal push that can lead to a “change of life” baby with all the rush of hormones & emotions of falling in love/lust like a teen/young woman ONE LAST TIME so to speak. Not to say that on the other side of menopause, a woman doesn’t feel sexy or attractive/attracted to a partner, but many things change physiologically & emotionally. I work in physical therapy & I have noticed a pattern of women in their mid-50s through early 60s who don’t understand why their bodies hurt, why they are loosing muscle mass despite exercising & who don’t seem to understand that they’ve crossed that bridge. We make jokes about menopause & drug companies love to try to sell us pills & creams to change us back to earlier years, we don’t understand how to care for ourselves leading up to menopause & after it happens. Potentially it could be a very dangerous time if we are breaking up with stable partners to chase a fantasy one more time. And sadly, not having intelligent, cultural support to guide us leaves us very confused & distraught in what should be as wonderful a transition as so-called “becoming a woman” was in our early teens, when many of us were trapped in abusive families as CPTSD was being reinforced. It’s a lot. Take care out there!
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
Wow, you said it. I invite you to please say hello to me in an e-mail. I'm interested in your knowledge and perspective on this (planning to do some content on it soon). hello@crappychildhoodfairy.com
@christinarichie6171
@christinarichie6171 Жыл бұрын
You hit the nail on the head... I keep reiterating how our endocrine systems are so important and the necessity to support it from your 30s onwards. I just find it astonishing the lack of knowledge or wisdom among the general population. I used to see it in clients as well.
@alexandragasitu8402
@alexandragasitu8402 Жыл бұрын
@@christinarichie6171 how can we take care of our endocrine system?
@divineverse7122
@divineverse7122 Жыл бұрын
​@Crappy Childhood Fairy Dear Anna yes, please can you share a post on peri menopause and c ptsd effects on women esp single women who wanted to have a family. How do women heal knowing that they missed their opportunity have their own family? There's such little support for women over 40 who are single & couldn't meet a healthy partner. God bless you.💚🙏
@faithevolution552
@faithevolution552 Жыл бұрын
Life was hell and confusion before, during and after menopause. I didn't recognize my extreme emotional reactions until I was put on mood stabilizers, antidepressants, anxiety meds, and nutritional supplements. I can finally relax and understand my thoughts and enjoy my life. 😊🙏
@amylane3283
@amylane3283 Жыл бұрын
Another person on YT said that limerance is “emotional masturbation”. Thanks to you Annie, I know know what limerance is, and why I have been doing it my entire life. You saved me ❤ I can’t thank you enough. Fell into another limerant situation with my friend who is married and an alcoholic and a miserable mess. He is off the pedastle and I’m on the road to healing I can’t believe of what I’m capable of when I’m not limerant 😊
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
Congratulations! -Cara@TeamFairy
@That_Handle
@That_Handle Жыл бұрын
@@user-ew1jm6en7s So bright..... 😎
@terr1
@terr1 Жыл бұрын
I'm not glad your limerant but I am glad I'm not alone in " I can't believe what I'm capable of when I'm limerant"
@jessicahandelman1993
@jessicahandelman1993 Жыл бұрын
good reminder! it so is.
@theinvinciblechild1985
@theinvinciblechild1985 11 ай бұрын
​@@panospanayo-enfp-1658well put your number out there so we can call you what area are you in
@hcf555
@hcf555 Жыл бұрын
When I listened to this I wondered if it was a coincidence that she attached deeply to someone unavailable just after she cut contact with her unavailable mum. Like swapping one primary attachment figure for another similarly unavailable one. I relate and it’s painful stuff. Oodles of empathy to everyone going through attachment trauma right now.
@seriouscat2231
@seriouscat2231 8 ай бұрын
I'm a man in my forties. A decade ago I found a self-absorbed woman in church and became her best friend for a few years. I thought she was cute, but she was also shallow and needy. She used many nice guys simultaneously for her emotional needs. And she slept around with what she called "bad boys", which I eventually figured out. Though those too were nice guys, who were only "bad" because of what they did together.
@ziggypip2938
@ziggypip2938 10 ай бұрын
“why doesn’t knowing that (it’s trauma) make it (limerence) stop?” “exactly.”
@WubiWatkins
@WubiWatkins Жыл бұрын
Neglect helped me realize how wonderful silence and time to myself can be
@CatherineIves
@CatherineIves 11 ай бұрын
There's so much more to it then being attracted to emotionally unavailable people. No one talks about how sexual abuse makes you hypersexualized as an adult and you crave similar abuse. Also, how you can become a masochist and crave being hurt all over again by not just emotionally available but by seeking sadists and extreme situations. There's even more with the shame of how your body betrayed you during sexual abuse and how normalized it becomes since you think that level of intimacy is normal with everyone when your parents are the abusers.
@birichinaxox9937
@birichinaxox9937 Жыл бұрын
Yes the domestic part. Doing chores together and working as a team is all i long for. Seems so cruel that those simple things are so denied.
@blairjohnson7830
@blairjohnson7830 Ай бұрын
I feel this in my soul. It’s so cruel that I literally have noone in life. Adoptee also so an added extra layer of im unloved and unwanted and adoptive family have hated me abused me all life. Now have no one. Adoptive mother dead. Dad lives too far away has now own partner.
@curiositydrawsme9180
@curiositydrawsme9180 Жыл бұрын
“Come back from the land of the dead, with relationships that will never happen and don’t exist. That’s a ghost town. Come back! It’s full of life over here - there’s plenty of future ahead for you if you can begin to show up for it.” … Anna, I took this beautiful invitation to heart. I don’t think I was ready to hear it before, although I definitely have described myself as feeling haunted by certain key relationships with people who couldn’t love me. I think it’s time for me to repair the broken down car which dropped me in the Ghost town, waiting and hoping for someone familiar to show up. The open road feels full of possibility. the chance to be a person and not just an embodied feeling of longing feels expansive, too.
@kbc1883
@kbc1883 Жыл бұрын
I appreciate that you wrote that quote out. I heard it as she said it, but the full impact was not until I read your comment. Thank you for sharing that and your thoughts on it.
@curiositydrawsme9180
@curiositydrawsme9180 Жыл бұрын
@@kbc1883 You’re very welcome. I think trauma, grief, longing and regret can make the world feel very small, and as though somehow we (or at least, I) failed to notice our (my) best days until they were already behind us (me). When Anna said what she did about ghost towns, I suddenly had this idea of how joyful it could feel to stop waiting for love, and instead to uncover what it is about the world that I love. …Something like the pure happiness a dog feels in a moving car, with the windows down - lots to smell and the air streaming off of flapping ears. Anna’s message has come just when I’m starting to realize that I don’t have to stay where there is no future. It is ok to stop trying to get what we should have gotten from people who can’t give it to us, anyway. It is ok to become curious about the world. It is ok to discover and cultivate new talents that have nothing to do with trying to get people to like us, and have everything to do with the possibility of satisfying the question: “I wonder if I could…” (insert talent, opportunity, creative possibility, loving self-discovery here)… I just felt so much joy at the idea that there’s plenty of future left - like, actual enjoyable future that’s full of life - and it made so much sense that I wasn’t going to find it by haunting a ghost town, trying to get on the same emotional page as the ghosts. The open road is calling. Our talents and hearts are made for something bigger. Vroom vroom. 🌱🌿💚
@kavitachouhanvisionenvoice9063
@kavitachouhanvisionenvoice9063 Жыл бұрын
@@curiositydrawsme9180 your best days are AHEAD of you . The best days are the ones in which you’re fully alive, and that seems to be you now. Enjoy them! You’ve earned it ❤
@moirosalina
@moirosalina Жыл бұрын
@Curiousity Draws Me so beautifully and well put! I loved reading your responds. I also feel like this is the time for me to receive that message and I hear it's call loud and clear; vroom vroom back at ya!
@maribelsanchez6421
@maribelsanchez6421 Жыл бұрын
Vivian… he is using you ! He sees you as a resource to make money… but not as a woman ! That is a reality!
@jabby8460
@jabby8460 9 ай бұрын
I usually don't post in public forums, but your comments about Vivian's infidelity, dishonesty and mistreatment of her boyfriend at the time was a sobering dose of genuine tough love. It's understandable considering her background, but your caring yet firm rebuke was completely necessary, both for her personally and for everyone watching. Part of healing is realizing that we just don't do certain things, no matter how badly we've been hurt.
@lybrty7272
@lybrty7272 Жыл бұрын
Scary to know that someone as cold, cruel and violent worked in an ER
@amberwinders6892
@amberwinders6892 Жыл бұрын
I know what it's like to have a mother who completely denies the abuse her husband put on the innocent children she had before the monster she brought to us came in. Trying to tell a "mother" what is going on and she doesn't care , doesn't see it...I totally get this. Going no contact with her and her abusive husband and my flying monkey siblings was the best decision I ever made. I'm glad she had the courage to do it too. I wish I had done it learning all of the things I should have known how to do (i.e. social interaction and relationships) but couldn't because I was protecting myself. People like her parents and mine are murderers. They kill who their children could have been. That's my belief anyway
@rob25910
@rob25910 Жыл бұрын
I agree with you.
@donnafarmer3904
@donnafarmer3904 Жыл бұрын
And I agree with you also.
@ghazikutbi3206
@ghazikutbi3206 Жыл бұрын
Hey precious stone, you reached the threshold of being a positive effect for the world. You have enough experience, enough fuel to push forward to make change in this vast world. If you want ... I wonder if Donald Trump can benefit from these lessons instead of pushing America to hurt people all over the Globe and making the reputation of the US sewage stink.
@bsdetective1500
@bsdetective1500 Жыл бұрын
What exactly do you mean by "flying monkey siblings"? Did they attack you to be in favor with the abusive parents? If that is what you mean, I think it's a perfect description and I had the same experience with my siblings.
@mnelson9057
@mnelson9057 Жыл бұрын
Agree, they destroy who we are, and could be, don’t allow us to have normal development.
@lafragolastrana
@lafragolastrana Жыл бұрын
as a woman who works in architecture, most male architects are bad news as people/partners, it’s a very narcissistic field, not to mention most people in it are extremely busy. the whole culture of the field is male-dominated, invalidating and harsh, and you don’t want that in your life. avoid avoid avoid.
@helenhighwater5313
@helenhighwater5313 Жыл бұрын
The Viet Nam Memorial in Washington DC was designed by a woman who also designed the new public library in our nearby college town. Your work is valid and is a testament to your talent and ability. The good ol' boy clubs are pathetic and even self destructive. Be glad you are shining through that pall. "Don't let the bastards get you down." Success is the best revenge.
@alyciamarie4163
@alyciamarie4163 Жыл бұрын
It was George from Seinfeld’s fake career hahahaah 😂😂😂
@frankG335
@frankG335 Жыл бұрын
I don't think you can classify entire professions as unsafe. It's tempting to protect ourselves by coming up with rules like "stay away from this or that profession". I'm sorry you've been through so much though.
@Embers167
@Embers167 Жыл бұрын
@@frankG335you’ve never been to architecture school! I have 1 yr left and im interior but I have to agree on this one … considering not finishing school it’s such a triggering environment
@Yehoshua66
@Yehoshua66 7 ай бұрын
@@frankG335i’ve only ever interacted with one architect in a romantic way and he fits this bill as well💀
@Crystalblue58
@Crystalblue58 Жыл бұрын
I can relate to this person's childhood. I suffered from neglect from my parents-both dysfunctional. I am so grateful for these videos! I am almost 65 years old and still trying to recover from my childhood. I may never do that fully, but these videos do help. Thank you.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
So glad you are here with us recovering :) -Cara@TeamFairy
@harrisontrork
@harrisontrork Жыл бұрын
I wish I had found this info two decades ago. Thank-you so much for your time & kindness. A journey into the deep room indeed. Stay strong friends. We do recover. ♥
@chrissiebabe234
@chrissiebabe234 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely true!
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
Thank you for watching. This is the right place for you.Jack@TeamFairy
@c.w.8200
@c.w.8200 Жыл бұрын
All the years I wasted on a bad therapist gaslighting me and a shitty boyfriend...
@designchik
@designchik Жыл бұрын
My god, what an upbringing. It’s a testament to her that she survived, albeit very wounded. We really need to start giving psychological tests to wannabe parents. As for the obsession with appearance and age, I totally get that in our youth-obsessed society. I’m 64 but look 45, yet nothing changes the fact that I’m 64. There is a 47 year old guy in my apartment building who is cute and seems very nice. We have great convos when we run into one another in the parking lot or hallway, and my co-worker keeps saying I should have a fling with him. No way, man. There is no way I would put myself in that position even if he expressed interest, which he hasn’t. Therein madness lies. But I’m not judging Vivian whatsoever; her desire for love and acceptance leaks through every word in her letter, and it’s heartbreaking.
@genxx2724
@genxx2724 Жыл бұрын
Me too. I’m not going to embarrass and humiliate myself by getting involved with a younger man who will leave me. Look at Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher. He married her, lived with her and all her kids, then cheated, left her, and married someone his own age and had his own kids. Doesn’t matter how rich or hot you are- it only makes it sting worse.
@designchik
@designchik Жыл бұрын
@@genxx2724 Exactly. But I do understand how tempting it is when you’ve never really been loved by anyone and then connect with someone who, if you could take 15 years off your age, might be the one. Reality bites, lol.
@genxx2724
@genxx2724 Жыл бұрын
@@designchik It won’t be “the one”. It’s emotionally safe for someone who’s disordered, because you know no matter how good it is, it’s not going to last.
@christineherrmann205
@christineherrmann205 Жыл бұрын
I get that the age gap is substantial, but the bigger issue, IMHO, is always going to be if the person is interested and if you're interested. It doesn't have to be a mess just because of the age gap. But would I always go slowly, now that I've been hurt? Absolutely.
@metisthefly2826
@metisthefly2826 Жыл бұрын
No psychological test in my state, just a pregnancy test and then all the choices have been made for you.
@katrinapage7902
@katrinapage7902 11 ай бұрын
I believe it could be healing if she knew what motivated her mom to do these awful things. My own mother abandoned me. Decades later, I learned that she was unwanted as a child. She endured many awful and hurtful things. Now, I have compassion for her and absolutely zero bitterness. It makes it easier to heal, when you have understanding.
@tanyasmeditationmusic
@tanyasmeditationmusic 11 ай бұрын
Her mother is a complete psychopath and all psychopaths know exactly what they are doing to people. I am the exact same age as the writer and my mother was also a narcissistic psychopath. At this stage of my life, I am still always completely amazed at the fact that my brothers and I have any sense of true self and normalcy at all.
@trucuriousity
@trucuriousity Жыл бұрын
Gosh what's the term for when a couple bonds over abusing a child? I think I heard it in the Netflix doc about Gabriel Fernandez. That's what this story reminds me of. Only thank God not as severe as that. What a sick woman her mother is. Sounds like she never wanted to be a mother from the get to. She just wanted a little mini me to live vicariously through and reflect positively on her. But somehow to do that without surpassing her lol. Crazy. That's exactly how my mom is. Wanted me to make up for everything she thinks she's not. But then gets jealous and has to take me down because of her insecurity. All my life it was "you're going to college." And when I graduated it was, "oh so you think you're smarter than me now huh?" Any time I get something cool she gets one too only nicer. She compares her weight and appearance to mine too. You can't win with a parent like that. Only thing is to walk away.
@vintage6346
@vintage6346 Жыл бұрын
That sounds sooo much like my mother was. Thank you for putting it into words. I did "walk away". She spent the rest of her life convincing everyone she possibly could that I'd mistreated her. It never ended. I'm so glad I walked away.
@ClandestineGirl16X
@ClandestineGirl16X Жыл бұрын
Anna, you are a real life superhero in my eyes. Thank you for helping us.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the kind words. Jack@TeamFairy
@ambivalent5842
@ambivalent5842 Жыл бұрын
Yes , it makes one a prime target of a Negligent Narcissist. These are the breadcrumbers, ignore you when present, and love pop you when you pull back. They ignore you when in the same room or table, and they punish you by withholding your needs, expressed or known.
@annied3273
@annied3273 Жыл бұрын
Wow! So well said @ambivalent5842. You just nut-shelled my last relationship of 9 long years.
@petekdemircioglu
@petekdemircioglu Жыл бұрын
Yes. Horrid. Mental torture.
@nicksterp2805
@nicksterp2805 Жыл бұрын
Sadly met too many of them
@CATALINAG1
@CATALINAG1 4 ай бұрын
Oh my God right
@CATALINAG1
@CATALINAG1 4 ай бұрын
I finally found a place where people can relate to where I am , where Iv been , and hopefully I can grow & get better 🙏🏼
@janetmcknight2123
@janetmcknight2123 Жыл бұрын
I just found this channel… what? There’s a whole lotta people who are alone not by choice but by necessity to be sane and not in toxic relationships… this is the best therapy I’ve ever had
@TopSecretInformations
@TopSecretInformations Жыл бұрын
I recently got back into bike riding & storm chasing.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
Chasing storms on a bike sounds wild... maybe a little like limerence!
@maribelsanchez6421
@maribelsanchez6421 Жыл бұрын
That was an abusive mother…. I am glad she is away from her. 😢.
@dragonfly8149
@dragonfly8149 Жыл бұрын
Hope is our dope. Thank you for this knowledge. I've just wasted 3 years on an energy vampire with narcissistic traits. I've struggled to understand how I stayed so long to my complete detriment. I'm 58 and had been 25 years without a relationship before this. Steep learning curve...now I get it.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
I'm so glad you feel you're turning a corner! -Cara@TeamFairy
@singinglawnchair
@singinglawnchair Жыл бұрын
I've watched a lot of these videos and they help a lot - but I wonder if there's such a thing as platonic limerence? Like wanting a friend so badly and having expectations and magical thinking about meeting people that you hope could be your best friend but end up flaking on you, shaming you or outright disappearing? I never felt like there was a lot of loyalty in my family so I sought that "family" from others and attached myself to a lot of unavailable people, emotionally and even geographically, lol. I often felt like I was too attached to people, that no one understood me and I was too clingy when really I just wanted to connect with people. I kept chasing after these people because I constantly felt like I did or said something wrong. Maybe limerence is the wrong term for friendships but I feel like this applies a lot. I'm autistic along with my family trauma so it's like a double whammy.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
I don't know if there's a word for it but I understand exactly what you are referring to and I had the same struggles. I recommend checking out our membership where others have had same struggles and are learning together now :) bit.ly/CCF_DailyPractice -Cara@TeamFairy
@djpower8791
@djpower8791 9 ай бұрын
I have this exactly and have never heard someone else say it.
@MelissaThompson432
@MelissaThompson432 Жыл бұрын
My instinct with this guy would be to tell him, "you're attractive but I am never going to want to dally with a work partner because I have to be responsible to myself." I wonder if he doesn't think she's on his back burner, and she's going to eventually warm up, to continue that metaphor; and if she makes it clear that that's not a potential, I wouldn't be surprised if he runs out of projects. I have known a surprising number of younger men who have thought this way....
@Susette0302
@Susette0302 Жыл бұрын
This is horrifying I just spent 50 years trying to figure all this out by myself. 😢
@lindadodson1586
@lindadodson1586 Жыл бұрын
I joined an organization and, across the room, saw a man that literally made my heart jump. I went to every meeting, every event, any time I thought he'd be there. If he was there, I'd often look up and he was staring at me. But we never spoke. Neither of us made the attempt. Finally the day came when I had a good reason to speak with him. He invited me to his house (he was single, early 50s, a year older than me, never married). We sat out on his porch, him smoking a good quality cigar, sipping lemonade, and talking about everything under the sun. I drove home on cloud nine--this has got to be Mr. Right! We started to 'hang out,' not dating, but going to movies, out to eat, local concerts, etc. But it never went beyond friendship--and it was a really good, comfortable friendship. He started disappearing--not answering his phone or calling me, pretty much hibernating for weeks at a time. Then out of the blue he'd call me, act like he talked to me yesterday, and make plans. My adult kids really liked him. I had more fun with him at Walmart than I did with my ex on a cruise. But...the relationship did not progress. I believe he was asexual--not attracted to men or women. One night I came on a little strong, not telling him I loved him but that I had feelings for him. Eventually I had to let go. I figured he has my phone number, email, and knows where I live--if he wants to contact me, he will. I heard nothing from him until...8 months later...I got an email on my birthday from him, saying something to the effect that many years ago God created a wonderful woman, blah blah blah. I was stunned. It sounded like something a boyfriend would write. So this never had any closure or anything. I know I made a fool of myself. I told several friends that were in the organization where we met that I was crazy about this guy. From the women I'd get warnings. From the men I'd hear that he talks about me all the time, we're meant to be together, etc. Then tonight I came across this video. I've been listening to your videos for a few weeks now--it's so incredible to have explanations and reasons for why I am the way I am. Anyway, I now know I was in limerence. I also know that I was pursuing someone who was unavailable, and the worst part is that at some level I knew it all along, but I challenged myself to win him over. Thank you for your videos...they are so valuable. And as someone who's been where we are, you can relate on a whole deeper level than our friends who have no clue.
@carrie8083
@carrie8083 Жыл бұрын
Not everyone is lovable. I’m almost 50, a physician, fit, attractive, and generous. I’ve never been married. I wanted a family so much, and now it’ll never happen. My struggle will always be figuring out how to live with wanting to be loved, but not finding a way to be loveable.
@loulouhj1104
@loulouhj1104 Жыл бұрын
Carrie . Im 20 years younger and i already have lost the hope of getting married and creating a family . Since i was 14 years old that was my dream . i have a lot of love to give but i never truly felt that im lovable . I wish one day i can learn to love myself and being alone in peace is enough ..
@melliecrann-gaoth4789
@melliecrann-gaoth4789 Жыл бұрын
@@loulouhj1104also there are way more women than men it seems. So that is tough too.
@victoriaporsiempre
@victoriaporsiempre 11 ай бұрын
you are loveable!!! with or without….whatever you are just loveable, period. But you have to believe first
@CatherineIves
@CatherineIves 11 ай бұрын
I can relate I want to be loved but don't feel loveable. I'm 32 this year and don't feel attractive enough, and have myself and life together to be worthy of love and a relationship.
@kristinhawkins5757
@kristinhawkins5757 10 ай бұрын
I have to live my entire life single and alone, too. My dream will never come true either. I’m already in my mid-30’s. I barely know what a real date is like. I know a guy could never choose me. 😔
@travelchannel304
@travelchannel304 Жыл бұрын
I wasn't ignored at home, and still , I have done some of this.
@show_me_your_kitties
@show_me_your_kitties 9 ай бұрын
Jeez, this letter broke my heart... my God, the betrayal. I want to hug this person. What a strong human being. I am new to the channel, 42 and trying to figure things out. Thank you.
@Privatenospying
@Privatenospying Жыл бұрын
My mother and extended family showered my fraternal twin sister with accolades for her beauty which resembled my mother’s - I looked completely like her abusive husband and suffered for it. I still don’t know how I remain a fairly nice person :-). Stay kind to yourself and others above all.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
I'm so sorry to hear that. I'm glad you're here, we're all sending you encouragement :) -Calista@TeamFairy
@wordivore
@wordivore Жыл бұрын
"Admitting the abuse is not suddenly not being the person that she was." -CCF This hit hard. I got pulled into being vulnerable with my NM too and it just resulted in more dysregulation for me. Lesson learned and now reinforced with this quote from Anna.
@kbc1883
@kbc1883 Жыл бұрын
@33:00 had me crying. To feel that power and creativity energy swell and to know that there is no future for it is so very hard, devastating really. It is that energy that I have walled off, done so much to make sure I didn't go there (stayed obese, isolated, not done what I could to be attractive). Because every time I've changed those things, the hope comes back, the interactions with men start, and I end up feeling that energy and I know it is limerence and I cannot bear it, so I go back into walling off. It is such a frustrating and life saping cycle.
@lisacurtis8162
@lisacurtis8162 Жыл бұрын
This one made me so angry. For the beautiful little girl who's parents hated her and abused her so badly. Even if they had a sucky life themselves couldn't they just love and protect this child??? They didn't have to hate so cruelly. I hate them for her and they make me so angry.
@oasisneko1
@oasisneko1 Жыл бұрын
I'm 68 (in two days) and all of this applies to me too. I'm at the stage where I can feel the surge of fake love and push it away through the same kind of avoidance Annie advocates in the video: not signing new contracts, no need to explain. On another self help video I heard a psychologist say that trying to fix your limerent object is arrogance. It's a way to control them, which is not possible even if it were healthy. This situation reminds me of "La belle dame sans merci" by John Keats. The knight is dying because he fell in love with a limerent object -- was she real or supernatural? He can't tell. He's sitting by a lake that was magically transformed, but suddenly it's winter. She rode off, almost mocking him. Was it real? He has hallucinations. He feels like he's dying.
@serbiancapybara2.068
@serbiancapybara2.068 7 ай бұрын
Y'all deserve someone who won't make you feel lonely.
@xlauriestarchildstudios7777
@xlauriestarchildstudios7777 Жыл бұрын
I want to be alone. My picker is broken and I prefer being alone. I'm tired. I'm 60 and finally got diagnosed with borderline personality. Thank God! It all makes sense! Indeed I have wounded my children...which is a tremendous burden to bare. I am learning and growing but since coVid my dysregulation has gotten so much more WILD. I seem to come across "harsh" especially with my devouring mother. I seem to hurt people or offend them effortlessly. It is much easier to be alone. I don't want to hurt anyone, especially me since I have been in trauma for 59 years. I'm tired and just would rather be alone and sleep 16-18 hours a day and play w my kitten. The entire world appears dysregulated to me and I don't want to be part of it. Dealing w my own amends and dysregulated self is all I have energy for. Thank you CCF. Your videos help me center and calm myself down.xo
@grandiesgarden175
@grandiesgarden175 Жыл бұрын
Hang in there, you actually sound like a fun person together be around, saying 'my picker is broken", made me kinda giggle...
@xlauriestarchildstudios7777
@xlauriestarchildstudios7777 Жыл бұрын
@@grandiesgarden175 im glad.
@loriritchie1156
@loriritchie1156 Жыл бұрын
DBT saved my sanity and my life. It doesn't have to be like that. You CAN regulate your emotions. I did it at 63.
@Embers167
@Embers167 Жыл бұрын
@@loriritchie1156how long did it take until you noticed a difference in your felt experience of the world?
@user-wk5yc7eb7t
@user-wk5yc7eb7t Жыл бұрын
@@Embers167 I will vouch for dbt. If you really buy into it and do the work of using the skills and buy into the gimmick for lack of a better term, it can improve your life very quickly. It gives you tools but you have to use them.
@c.w.8200
@c.w.8200 Жыл бұрын
Everything you say makes so much sense, can't stop commenting, my mom was threatened by me because I was taller and more "nordic" than her, which she idealized, she reminded me at every turn that nobody will ever want me, all the men want her not me, she was emotionally stuck at a very low level. When I gained weight because of my mental issues and bullying at school she did everything to sabotage my attempts to lose weight and basically became another bully. When I almost died from an eating disorder she didn't care about the possibility of my death, she yelled at me: you're not that thin!!! and tried to compete with my weight loss. My little sister became her beloved mini me, she's a narc too unfortunately...the narcissist divides and pits siblings against each other, you are always alone.
@passionela
@passionela Жыл бұрын
Omg I feel so sorry for what you had to go through...same here with putting siblings against each other-my mother did this all the time (brother was a golden child and she tortured me by giving him outwardly more care, gifts, responsibility....while I was exploding with anger and wanting same treating, she guilttripped me for this behavior) and at the same time she guilttripped me to not be enough kind to my younger brother..
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
This is painful to read and I understand what you are talking about. Thank you for sharing with us. -Cara@TeamFairy
@c.w.8200
@c.w.8200 Жыл бұрын
I realized I forgot to mention the most insidious and disgusting thing she did, which was accusing me of trying to "steal" my father from her. One of my worst memories is when I was 6 years old and my mother had a massive tantrum and yelled at me that I'm trying to steal her husband (my FATHER) because he watched a kids movie with me and made us popcorn while she was out of the house...which she thought was a "date" I guess. When my little sister was born I wanted to play "being the mommy", which is a normal thing to do for a little girl I was told much later in life, and the yelling that accompanied the beatings turned into "YOU WANT TO STEAL MY HUSBAND, YOU WANT TO STEAL MY CHILD". Later when I was a pre teen my dad started taking me on hiking trips because I shared his love for the outdoors, which my mom and sister didn't. I came home to my mom yelling at me that she knows I had s*x with him, I kid you not. My dad never did anything like this to me, he's just a very passive and dependent man who's very good at ignoring whatever doesn't fit into his comfort zone, he just left the room whenever my mom started losing it and left me there.
@c.w.8200
@c.w.8200 Жыл бұрын
I think I never told that part to anyone outside therapy and I push it to the back of my mind as much as I can. My therapist didn't believe me but it did really happen, I begged my father to tell me what he remembers for real or if I'm crazy and he admitted it was real, she was violently jealous of a 6 year old girl that happened to be her own daughter, has this happened to anyone else?!
@helenhighwater5313
@helenhighwater5313 Жыл бұрын
@@c.w.8200 Strange how good men attach themselves to evil women and stand by them to the end, the kids be damned. Happens in reverse also.
@santifoster1741
@santifoster1741 9 ай бұрын
59 and rocking..... You go girl
@norahinthegarden8219
@norahinthegarden8219 11 ай бұрын
Sounds like my mom. It took years to have a relationship with her. I had man who wanted me to dye my hair and changed my appearance so goodbye. I am me.
@getupandgo77
@getupandgo77 9 ай бұрын
I was not dark enough for my mom. She wanted a dark haired brown eyed baby, I was blonde and blue eyed. She tells the story all the time how she insisted the nurse had brought her the wrong baby. She told me if I had not been the only baby in the nursery she never woudl have believed I was hers
@ramoth777
@ramoth777 10 ай бұрын
Can't help but feel bad for the woman who wrote to this therapist. Narcissists are the absolute WORST species of human on the planet!
@randomkiliinterviews9453
@randomkiliinterviews9453 9 ай бұрын
This world is so full of sick people and misleading idiocy jealousy sadism sometimes I feel this world is hell . But now I see it as a dangerous place that yields opportunities as well as rusty poisonous bear traps ; wonderful people and parasites, sages and demons. You cannot go out into the world without a mentor. A sane warm even tempered disciplined balanced wise mentor . For me it’s mostly authors I trust and books , and certainly this channel is of unbelievable value. Having no mentors and no beacon or choosing the wrong ones can kill you. You need Merlin figures . The terrible thing is that I implicitly learned to force myself to follow adults unconditionally , that they will know . This message nearly killed me . I am disgusted at the looks obsessed abusive woman described in this video’s Ietter it nearly made me want to throw up . Some people make you ashamed to belong to the same species.
@bordendonna
@bordendonna Жыл бұрын
The cruelty people are capable of is off the chart. Get a spiritual support group…a church or community…a new family. Healing can happen in sharing with others. ❤
@Otka7ali
@Otka7ali Жыл бұрын
My narcissist mom hated her nose and always told us she chose my dad so that her kids wouldn't have her nose. Jealous of all her daughters, all beautiful btw, manifested in different ways. Ignoring one scapegoating another and idealizing and living vicariously through the third.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
That sounds hard! You're in the right place. -Calista@TeamFairy
@maribelsanchez6421
@maribelsanchez6421 Жыл бұрын
I am 53 and i had limerence with a 37 year old man. I also look young and atrack only young men which is a curse rather than a good thing ,i don’t attract men my age . you mentioned this part of looking young but the reality is that i am not in the same place as him…there no future… we are living in different stages of our lives! She need to move on and stop thinking about this Delusional love. Time to get real! 😊
@susanswarts1407
@susanswarts1407 Жыл бұрын
I'm 69 and exhausted. Glad I found you.
@AnyahEMB
@AnyahEMB Жыл бұрын
Narcissists and noses. I can so relate. My narcissistic mother also had an obsession with noses. I love your channel. I had a lot trouble with unrequited love and did not have the language for it or the tools to disengage until I found your videos on limerance. Thank you. ❤
@intrigue8664
@intrigue8664 Жыл бұрын
So did my grandmother who laughed at people’s noses, weight, etc. Never really a close bond. I always wondered what she was like when she was young.
@klarmy8824
@klarmy8824 Жыл бұрын
Dear Letter Writer, OMG what a hard thing. I am 70 years old and could have written your letter myself. From the vantage point of being OLD please please listen to Anna's advice. You still have time to fix things. Best of luck to you and warmest wishes.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the kind words for the letter writer! -Cara@TeamFairy
@danilaroche1156
@danilaroche1156 10 ай бұрын
Anna is rocking my world!!
@redwoods7370
@redwoods7370 Жыл бұрын
Hearing about child abuse lacerates my heart. God bless her.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
Me too :( -Cara@TeamFairy
@fluentinoverthinking
@fluentinoverthinking Жыл бұрын
Omg how relevant it is! A few days ago I've noticed that I have some features of my grandma's behavior (who was always 'saving' people, especially alcoholics). I started diving deeper into it and found out I am attracted to an emotionally unavailable man and instead of running away I want to... Save him! And give him my love to 'fix' him 🤦🏼‍♀️ Thanks God I've come across a book by Robin Norwood 'Women who love too much' and just finished reading it. I'm so glad I made myself aware of this problem before it got too late. Your video was like a sign I'm moving in the right direction!
@personne3837
@personne3837 Жыл бұрын
Same here. He was unavailable, with a lot of problems in his life, an alcoholic. As a former people pleaser I wanted to save him at the risk of losing myslef again in the process. But thank God and thank my healing journey cause this time i knew i couldn't save him, I knew I would have drown trying like all my previous relationships (friends, family, romantic ones)
@schenelle79
@schenelle79 Жыл бұрын
Terrific book.
@michaelknapp8961
@michaelknapp8961 Жыл бұрын
My love life was basically one disaster after another. When I was a child I had ADHD and serious Dyslexia. I was put down sooooooo much that it destroyed my self esteem and self worth. I didn’t have the courage to be in a relationship with someone who never went through what I went through. They never understood me. I was different and the relationships fizzled and died. This happened time and time again. I needed love and understanding and it just wasn’t in the cards for me.
@purplepterodactyl94
@purplepterodactyl94 Жыл бұрын
✨Hope is our dope✨ You should put that on a t-shirt 😂
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
lol not a bad idea, we need some merch :) -Cara@TeamFairy
@joyh.729
@joyh.729 Жыл бұрын
One of THEE best segments on limerance!! Thank you🌟🌟
@tucky3191
@tucky3191 Жыл бұрын
I love your compassion toward the letter writer and your validation is healing also for me as a daughter of a narcissistic mother
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your kind words! -Calista@TeamFairy
@Nan-Elle
@Nan-Elle Жыл бұрын
That's an interesting thought that the step-father denied his family because someone might have been in the room whom he didn't want to know about his life. Yes, it surely could be someone like a nurse he worked with daily. One time I had a car for sale. The woman who came over to try out my car (and she bought it) had a guy with her helping her make the decision. I thought they were boyfriend and girlfriend, a couple for sure. I recognized them immediately from both working at the deli at the grocery store which I frequented. She waited on me now and then. Months after the sale, I was ordering at the deli counter again and smiled and spoke to the man who waited on me. He seemed like he had never seen me before. I asked him if he remembered --he came to my house with Amy, and she bought the car I had for sale. I couldn't understand, but he kept shaking his head no, and saying no as I expanded my questioning, like "Yes, Amy who works here...you remember I had a such-and-such car for sale...I live on (street) and you both came over to look at the car. He kept repeatedly shaking his head no, and looked like he was hoping I'd leave soon. Yes, I realized that the other co-workers were around and he couldn't admit going somewhere with Amy. Oops...
@genxx2724
@genxx2724 Жыл бұрын
The stepfather probably never mentioned his family at work, and had affairs with nurses. The mother was humiliated when the daughter brought the neighbors’ knowledge home. She was afraid he would leave her, and was relieved when he abused the daughter, because it showed there was hope - he wasn’t completely disengaged.
@scarletsletter4466
@scarletsletter4466 10 ай бұрын
As a healthcare practitioner myself, I’d bet money that Anna is correct that the ER doc denied having children (to people he’d met before!) because he’s keeping his family secret for an ongoing or desired affair with a colleague. There are wonderful ER docs, but in my experience, many of the best are narcissistic, controlling, & detached. Those traits can be helpful in our field, bc empathetic docs tend to suffer burnout & struggle to control a hectic ER. Anna you’re def not the only one who’s family treasured light eyes/ hair. Nobody in our family would outright say they tried to produce kids with those traits, but those traits were celebrated. It creates a superficiality that’s hard to move past. I was born with platinum hair & I recall being so upset that it got slightly darker in my teens & begging for highlights (which ofc my mom was happy to oblige). I’ve always obsessed over keeping it light enough
@melissakemp2741
@melissakemp2741 9 ай бұрын
I also worked in an ER at one point and it’s very true what you said about ER docs, some are lovely people but only some.
@clambarn1218
@clambarn1218 Жыл бұрын
I remember the monkey experiment too, but you forgot one of the details. The hard wire mother had no fur at all and was next to a soft fuzzy mother. The baby would drink from the wire mother but spend most of its time cuddling up with the soft mother. The conclusion from the experiment was that the soft contact was as important as eating to the baby. I don't remember the bay dying but it DID have a soft alternative. I hope this helps.
@kinj5422
@kinj5422 2 ай бұрын
My mom once told me, when I cut my hair short, “why did you cut it? Long hair is your thing, without it you look average” thanks mom
@marianrosin6486
@marianrosin6486 Жыл бұрын
Is limerence more common in artists? Artists seem, by virtue of the trade, to live on hope - getting the next part, getting a script produced, someone buying a painting... I so wish this info had been available when I was in my 20s.
@suzannaflores1164
@suzannaflores1164 8 ай бұрын
This!
@biondna7984
@biondna7984 9 ай бұрын
"Hope is our dope." That pretty much spells it out. Thanks!
@henriettehofsink8003
@henriettehofsink8003 Жыл бұрын
Classic narcisitist: If you're upset with them they'll chase you with positivity and when you are reined back in they insult you
@caffeinejones3513
@caffeinejones3513 Жыл бұрын
Interesting point about limerence fueling creativity. I used to consider the objects of my limerence "muses" and I really enjoyed the inspiration. Funny, since I have healed from that somewhat, I'm less prolific as an artist. I confess to loving the creative high, and have wondered if I could keep it, while still enjoying being committed to myself.
@DoReMeaCulpa
@DoReMeaCulpa Жыл бұрын
Unless I missed something, I don't think she actually addressed the limerance that the letter writer wanted help for. 🤔 And, I think the advice here is incomplete at best. Why do I say this? As I understand it, limerance is managed and even eliminated by figuring out what trait or traits the object of your limerance possesses and that is missing/unexpressed in YOU. For example, it could be self-confidence that you admire in that person but that you yourself are not expressing but wish you had more of. So, by looking for ways that you ARE self-confident and taking manageable risks that increase your own self confidence, and ACTING with self-confidence, you eventually eliminate the limerance. That's just one example, but hopefully it conveys the information about how to overcome limerance. And, I can say that it worked for me when I experienced limerance for a coworker. I still really like and enjoy working with the coworker, and not only do I no longer feel the limerance, I feel mich more confident as well.
@show_me_your_kitties
@show_me_your_kitties 9 ай бұрын
Interesting, I've never thought about it like that, but my mother has always treated me differently because I look like and have character traits like my father. She would call me by his name often up until I went no contact with her 5 years ago.
@MyKittkat
@MyKittkat 8 ай бұрын
As someone who is attracted to emotionally unavailable men and narcissists, this gave me tremendous insight. I don’t know if I’ll ever be in a place where I can be in a healthy relationship but I am able to identify what I’m doing wrong. Thank you these videos. 🙏❤️
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy 8 ай бұрын
I'm so glad the video was helpful! If you're interested, Anna offers a course on dating and relationships, here's a link: bit.ly/CCF-Dating -Calista@TeamFairy
@MyKittkat
@MyKittkat 8 ай бұрын
@@CrappyChildhoodFairy thank you! I’ll check it out
@deborauzumaki1010
@deborauzumaki1010 6 ай бұрын
I found it very hard to understand why limerence is a bad thing. When we fall in love, the beggining involves daydreaming about the other person, being excited about what we're gonna wear to see them, etc. I think that's normal... The problem is when we get obsessed, especially with someone who's not available for us, who is not present in our lives in a healthy romantic way. Only if we could choose the ones we are drawn to... In the past, I only got interested in guys I later find out to be unavailable. Then, I realized I needed to stop fantasing about someone I was just getting to know. I would have to observe his concrete actions, his consistency or lack of it over time, and be clear about intentions (mine and his) right in the beggining. Today, I really don't have any patience to waste my time and affection on the wrong people.
@yehmen29
@yehmen29 Жыл бұрын
15': I had the same problem! My mother and her family have blonde hair, blue eyes, a palish skin, and claim to be descended from Vikings. I am a brunette with brown eyes and a darker skin, like my father. My mother alternatively claimed that he was Jewish, and therefore that I was Jewish too, or that I was a gipsy changeling, i.e. that she had given birth to a blonde hair blue eyed little boy and that the hospital had stolen him and put a 'gipsy brat' in its place. The first time she saw me (she had a C section so was under anaesthesia when I was born) she declared 'IT looks like a rat' (I had lanugo. Rats are actually born without any body hair) and then turned towards the wall, refusing to look at me again. I spent 2 weeks in an incubator while the social services were trying to get her to sign the paperwork to give me up for adoption (as she was insisting I should never have been born and should be put down) but she refused, with the argument that 'I don't want her to be happy' and 'She has to pay for the crime of being born'. I was humiliated because of my physical appearance throughout my school years (that was in France, so people would compare me to the changeling girl in the movie La Vie est un Long Fleuve Tranquille), the result is that, as an adult, I struggled to understand that men found me sexually attractive, and mistook their interest in me for a desire to be my friend... or my adoptive father (since my biological father had not been around). Of course, many men used my lack of understanding to their profit, to get me alone with them for a 'one to one', a 'little chat', offer me 'a lift home' etc.
@johnpatterson6448
@johnpatterson6448 8 ай бұрын
Annie is a different calibre from most people -in any field - offering their insights. My jaw metaphorically drops at the honesty and wisdom with which she deftly deals with delicate dilemmas.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy 8 ай бұрын
Thanks for your comment & thanks for watching! Nika@TeamFairy
@gurlycash7394
@gurlycash7394 Жыл бұрын
My mom bullied me so much about my looks, I have a hard time with my reflection. I become obsessed with my imperfections. I'm 35 and thought I would grow out of it. Because of this I don't take pictures and I don't have any of my son, he's 15. I'm paralyzed with this insecurities
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
Sounds like there is a lot to untangle. We suggest starting with this free course: bit.ly/CCF_DailyPractice -Cara@TeamFairy
@debbieterry1453
@debbieterry1453 11 ай бұрын
64😢
@corvus_knives
@corvus_knives Жыл бұрын
Dang. That was strong and made so much sense that she also got the looksism bit from her mom. I've seen it before not only with looks, personally i have a behaviourism thing. It's great to see that it's normal to take so much time to wake up to stuff like that... sad... but great.
@stephencostello8792
@stephencostello8792 Жыл бұрын
I have just started my journey and it’s really hard. I have tried before but this time I do actually feel hope. Thank god for people like you who are there to be the friend that tells us the truth and helps us understand and encourage us when we stumble.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
You are on your way, congratulations! -Cara@TeamFairy
@will89687
@will89687 Жыл бұрын
Personally I'd settle for the unfulfilled but stable life I had before I became limerent in the past year.
@2listening1
@2listening1 11 ай бұрын
Oh, Anna, Sweetheart! I think you’re a huge improvement over perfection and I’m so glad you took the clothespin off your nose, laugh my head off!
@thesehandsart
@thesehandsart Жыл бұрын
Screw these people who abused us, left us to raise ourselves,v then shame is for coming out the only way we could and still be in one piece!
@googoodolly89
@googoodolly89 Жыл бұрын
That step-father sounds like he was definitely having an affair.
@msdixieblues
@msdixieblues Жыл бұрын
While I was lucky to have a loving, kind and communicative mother, it was my father who was emotionally abusive and treated us terribly. I am understanding now that I've kept my dreams and relationships at arms length because I am afraid of failure and think I don't deserve full love. I should honor my amazing mother with loving myself and try to distance from the father's negativity
@wr4050
@wr4050 Жыл бұрын
Yip, I can attest to that. Fortunately I realized this in my early adult hood, but still have not healed from it. I certainly cannot wait to listen to you on this!
@MissBluebirddays
@MissBluebirddays 7 ай бұрын
I love that the letter writer cut contact with their abusive mother as an adult
@ayd324
@ayd324 Жыл бұрын
You are so brutally honest! I love it. So Articulate !
@martinavy2305
@martinavy2305 Жыл бұрын
Dear Anna, THANK YOU SO MUCH for your tough love! So spot on again, so insightful, so healing! ♡
@MiuMiuG
@MiuMiuG Жыл бұрын
This was an excellent and enlightening video. Thank you!
@anne-marieh6128
@anne-marieh6128 Жыл бұрын
Havent proceeded to the feedback part of video yet; but will say I really admire this gals strength- that she went out into the world and created a great carrier for herself. Thats huge. While not physically abused in the presence of a disinterested parent, and my mother wasnt quite as malignant as hers- everything she’s said resonates with me. The 8 year old “what do i do with this information” kinda thing: and the sense of shock felt in the body when as an adult you hear parents say unbelievable things that expose just how unsafe you are with them: Those are only two examples of “Yes! I get it!” Im same age- not nearly as graduated and removed from harmful factions as she is. Just wanted to acknowledge her share. Vital to ones sanity to hear. Thank you SO VERY MUCH !
@camadams9149
@camadams9149 Жыл бұрын
22:32 Always interesting how people looking in have an easier time understanding these situations. Im sure everyone listening immediately thought "The mother is irreversibly broken, she is completely unsalvageable. Don't even waste you energy. Some things can't be fixed" But it takes years for someone in that situation to understand that (if they ever do)
@northofyou33
@northofyou33 Жыл бұрын
Yes. Especially when it's the mother. We all need a loving mother. Missing out on that is, in my opinion, one of the worst possible primal injuries. It's so hard to see anything clearly when you have missed out on having a real mother.
@Genxmom
@Genxmom Жыл бұрын
I love the voice you made as the neighbors. The ER doc theory you have sounds right on the money. This mother was horrific. It breaks my heart.
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