Categories
- Art (356)
- Other (3,632)
- Philosophy (2,814)
- Psychology (4,018)
- Society (1,010)
Recent Questions
- Why did everyone start to hate the Russians if the U.S. did the same thing in Afghanistan, Iraq?
- What needs to be corrected in the management of Russia first?
- Why did Blaise Pascal become a religious man at the end of his life?
- How do I know if a guy likes you?
- When they say "one generation", how many do they mean?
You can't say better than the classics…
1 .Dale Carnegie: Stay busy.It's the cheapest medicine on earth — and one of the most effective. The secret of our unhappiness is that we have too much leisure to think about whether we are happy or not.
2 .Forrest Gump: To go into the future, you need to get rid of the past.
3. Dale Carnegie: Live in the “Compartment” of today
Oh, to do this, you need to harden your soul thoroughly and become imbued with the awareness of your own infallibility! Then the conscience, and it is she who tosses and turns, will become completely sluggish and cease to disturb the memory. The process itself is quite simple-I remembered how something was done wrong-mentally shake yourself like a dog coming out of water, and stay on different sides of the spray – You are here, everything bad is out there somewhere… With particularly intrusive thoughts, you can do a more refined thing: reread Poe's short story “The Barrel of Amontillado”, mentally go through the whole process and complete each such memory with the words ” Rest in peace!”
A smile is a smile, but every smile has a bit of cynicism in it…
All the best! Good luck!
The reason is that you want to relive that unpleasant moment again and again in order to harden up to it. I.e., repeatedly experiencing “pain” dulls it. For example, if you start pouring ice water on yourself, then after a while you will feel less and less cold from it. The body will just get used to it. Another reason and a likely method of dealing with that. what you described is replaying the situation in a different way, as you would have thought it should have happened. I.e. if you are offended by someone's words or actions, imagine that this person says and acts differently, as you yourself would think he should have said or acted. Also, imagine what you would do if you were someone who hurt or hurt you. Maybe you will realize that you yourself could have made a mistake in his place.
PS It is very difficult to advise something specific without knowing the specifics.
Anna, as practice shows, in such pity for a person there is some benefit or something, I can't find the right word. In addition, the usual state of experiencing pain, familiar and already native.
If there are no mental processes that you need to contact a specialist, you understand that you can cope on your own, try to find meaning and benefit in self-pity, in sacrifice. Why are you going through this all over again? What does it give you?
If you find the answer to these questions, you can move on.�
The path is not the closest.�
Perhaps, after you stop feeling sorry for yourself, you can find valuable experience in what caused you unpleasant experiences that will help you develop further.
But as long as you look from the inside, not free from the experience of pain, the experience is difficult to see.
You need to get out of the situation and look as if from the outside.
It is difficult to try new things, it is much easier to experience the familiar, it is familiar.�
Try to write a story or two about what happened to you, and what lesson you take from it.�
And good luck changing your pity for love and personal development!
I suffer from it myself…and how to get rid of this-I will not put my mind to it because all that was advised here is the completed stage.
Psychologists/psychotherapists/antidepressants-it was also there.