The comments about cutting ties with parents reminded me about an article I'd read a while back. It's also a little "out there"

www.dream-analysis.com/index.php/dream- ... -that-bind
Moderator: Fist and Faith
Really not... that's called "finding something more pleasant/appealing/positive". You had no idea it existed until you experienced it. You may then wish you had it before, but it absolutely does NOT mean you missed it back when you didn't have it. To allege otherwise is just retconning your own existence.aliantha wrote:And re the comments on the previous page about whether you can feel the lack of something you never had: of course you can. It may take meeting someone who has the thing you're missing before you can put your finger on it, though. One example would be a kid with dysfunctional parents who practically moves in with a friend whose parents are more nurturing.
Why does it make you so irritated? If a person finds solace in solutions that are unproven why is this such an affront to you? If a person finds calm and a ease to emotional pain in theories that do not meet current standards of scientific proof why does it disturb you? How is this any different than a person that takes comfort in a religion with an unproven God. It is all about faith, isn't it?TheFallen wrote: Damn but this sort of schtick makes me irritated.
Lorin, that's a fair question and one that got me thinking - even though you take my position and push it into overstatement. I don't find it an "affront" as such, nor does it "disturb" me - as I said, it irritates me.lorin wrote:Why does it make you so irritated? If a person finds solace in solutions that are unproven why is this such an affront to you? If a person finds calm and a ease to emotional pain in theories that do not meet current standards of scientific proof why does it disturb you? How is this any different than a person that takes comfort in a religion with an unproven God. It is all about faith, isn't it?TheFallen wrote: Damn but this sort of schtick makes me irritated.
...and I can't help thinking that these words are much more apposite and likely to "help those who struggle in a similar way", to hijack u's no doubt sincerely expressed sentiment.The Serenity Prayer wrote:God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change,
The courage to change the things I can,
And the wisdom to know the difference.
Yes there is - but in agreeing with you, I also hope that, within that space, people believe in what is the most truly and long-term positive for themselves.lorin wrote:Its all about choices and allowing people to believe what they what they choose to believe. There is space for everyone.
Speaking of the Serenity Prayer, I have more issue with the 12 step program than the lone twin theory. Now THAT is a program that divests the person of personal responsibility. "It's not my fault, I have a disease."....my mothers mantra since good ole' Bill wrote his little book. Ah, but that is for another thread which is already floating around somewhere.The Serenity Prayer wrote:
God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change,
The courage to change the things I can,
And the wisdom to know the difference.
Though I've got no personal experience of them, I too have issues with 12-step programs from what I know of them. Nevertheless, looking in isolation at the Serenity Prayer I quoted, as far as I'm concerned, the sentiments it expresses strike me as particularly valid.aliantha wrote:lorin, I've got my own problems with 12-step programs, including the fact that they don't work as well as popular opinion believes. (I read a study on that not long ago.) But yes, handing your disease over to God can be a convenient cop-out.
Well maybe I'm being overly picky, semantically speaking (gee, whoda thunk?), but to me there's a great deal of truth in the age-old adage "you can't miss what you've never had" - or perhaps better put, "you can't miss something which you have no idea exists". So, to more directly answer your question, ali, the "when" can only come after you've experienced or observed (or realised that you've experienced or observed) the thing you're now missing. Not that this'd make any difference to the strength or validity of the emotion of "missingness", of course - it just defines when it can occur.aliantha wrote:TF, getting back to feeling the lack of something: what difference does it make *when* you figure out what you've missed?
On this we agree. I would say the single most important word for people who struggle is 'responsibility'. I do not offer the information on lone-twins as an opportunity to dodge stuff. The exact opposite in fact. Facing and dealing with the possibility can be a difficult experience. It offers the opportunity to engage and take responsibility for such issues as separation and grief. It also places responsibility on the person to find the good in the experience and celebrate that (which can be a real challengeTheFallen wrote:I guess I'm just wary that looking for an externalised source of responsibility for some of one's problems risks on occasion being a less than courageous and "head in the sand" ducking of issues, in which case they won't get confronted and dealt with - and that wouldn't be healthy.
I always tell people that there are at least 11 steps* required before it is possible to reasonably accept the idea that being a lone-twin is of any relevance (and for those who don't accept the first steps this is where the mumbo-jumbo can seem to multiply).TheFallen wrote:Well maybe I'm being overly picky, semantically speaking (gee, whoda thunk?), but to me there's a great deal of truth in the age-old adage "you can't miss what you've never had" - or perhaps better put, "you can't miss something which you have no idea exists". So, to more directly answer your question, ali, the "when" can only come after you've experienced or observed (or realised that you've experienced or observed) the thing you're now missing. Not that this'd make any difference to the strength or validity of the emotion of "missingness", of course - it just defines when it can occur.aliantha wrote:TF, getting back to feeling the lack of something: what difference does it make *when* you figure out what you've missed?
Interestingly there is a suggestion that some skin problems may be related to this. I wrote a poem about it a while back, which I've posted **Warning** here **Warning** (It's a bit graphic and may be found upsetting.)Vraith wrote:If itty-bitty doses of chemicals [either foreign/external, or internal/natural] can alter the biological and psychological and neurological futures of beings in the womb by being slightly unbalanced and/or mis-timed---and they absolutely, factually, demonstrably can---I'm willing to accept the possibility that the death of another in the womb could cause meaningful changes during gestation and have such future effects.