
Teratogen ~
Sometimes, just 'using' someone as a backdrop for our thoughts [like your writing me

~ Lizzy
lizzytysh wrote: but then i reminisce that i would have loved to have shared many of my experiences with someone else in my life." That's very true, and you deserve to be with someone for that. I just hope you can be willing to give yourself time . . . as I look at it, it's simply that the one who's 'right' for you hasn't appeared, yet. That may sound corny, but if you ask most people who have been adults for a while, I believe you'll find that there end up being very few they've met and gotten to know who they truly considered were 'right' for them. "If you can't be with the one you love, then love the one you're with" works great in songs, but in reality it comes up a bit short.
~ Lizzy
We all post on here to get attention.anyway, lizzy, i don't mind sharing everything with everyone, but sometimes it makes me think to myself that i'm only doing it for attention
You don't make us feel pity, There is a difference between pity and compassion. If someone reads your words and pities you it means they (falsely) think they wouldn't feel sad if they didn't have enough love in their lives. Compassion is what we all feel for each other because we're all in the same boat.and for pity and sympathy,
and i don't want to be looked at that way. or maybe i really am saying all of this for the pity. why else would i post these things? i dunno... i haven't really had a real mother for quite some time, so perhaps i'm doing all this for that nurturing feeling.
Some people are lucky enough to feel deeply accepted and valued as young children and believe from the off that others will accept them. Sounds like you did not absorb that feeling of being 'good enough'. I've been there, T. So have many other people.my first real experience (...) sometime later that this other new kid who came to that school (and was in her grade) was real cool and wild and she started hanging out with him and i remember during our friday movie day the two of them were messing around underneath a blanket in the back of the room. i got upset, but what can ya do?
OK. I'm not meaning to infer any criticism of your father, and it sounds like he did a wonderful job with you and your sister. But if he believed he was no good at conversation, boring and so on, he would have passed this on to you by example, not by genetics. Some personality traits might be genetic, but attitudes and beliefs are learnt, are often untrue and self-sabotaging, and can be changed. You might have inherited an introverted personality, but that does not equal boring, usually quite the reverse. Your mother leaving when you were six must have been quite upsetting to say the least. The reason I mention these things is because so much of how we feel and behave, and the things we believe, derive from our early significant relationships. That's not just a myth, it's the truth. But I should change the record, and read what you say.diane, i don't believe i had a lack of good parenting (... ) but it's not like i'm angry at him for this.
Sounds like poetry...lost my glasses forever in the ocean .
Well, maybe her mates were egging her on to write something like that, and she also knew your mates would be reading what she wrote. So, she was 'writing for an audience' and not only for you. I doubt she would have written her phone number if she did not want you to call, but sometimes it is hard to infer motivations. She would have had her own worries and insecurities too, remember. If she was just playing games to wind you up, it was unkind of her.i had to prep for what she wrote. here it is, in all its punctuation-less glory: "Hi Homer woo woo you sexy thing you give me rides as you did last time if you know what I mean <3 Tiffany Horvat," and she also gave me her phone number. needless to say, i never called her. i was confused by this message for obvious reasons. i was frightened, too, BECAUSE of my confusion. i didn't know what to do and i was afraid that i was either being had, or that i would fuck it up somehow. it was just a mess. my buddies laughed and congratulated me, but i was bewildered.
i am VERY aware of this. however, it's not like i witnessed my dad in conversations. i did not learn that. it was only after i broke down one day and he talked to me in private about what he used to be like at my age did i understand that i had been just like him. i'm sure things like this can be changed, but it will be much harder because of the genetics. he only claimed to be boring. who knows if he really was. i don't think that i'm boring. i like to believe that i can hold a conversation with just about anyone, but that doesn't mean i'm a ladykiller or anything. anyway...Diane wrote:OK. I'm not meaning to infer any criticism of your father, and it sounds like he did a wonderful job with you and your sister. But if he believed he was no good at conversation, boring and so on, he would have passed this on to you by example, not by genetics. Some personality traits might be genetic, but attitudes and beliefs are learnt, are often untrue and self-sabotaging, and can be changed. You might have inherited an introverted personality, but that does not equal boring, usually quite the reverse. Your mother leaving when you were six must have been quite upsetting to say the least. The reason I mention these things is because so much of how we feel and behave, and the things we believe, derive from our early significant relationships. That's not just a myth, it's the truth. But I should change the record, and read what you say.
i am VERY aware of this. however, it's not like i witnessed my dad in conversations. i did not learn that. it was only after i broke down one day and he talked to me in private about what he used to be like at my age did i understand that i had been just like him. i'm sure things like this can be changed, but it will be much harder because of the genetics. he only claimed to be boring. who knows if he really was. i don't think that i'm boring. i like to believe that i can hold a conversation with just about anyone, but that doesn't mean i'm a ladykiller or anything. anyway...
It's great to be different from the crowd, isn't it? But lonely sometimes, yes.i could not relate to anything these guys were talking about. getting with girls, cars, playing football, being aggressive, things like that
anyway, this pie hit me on the shoulder on a day that i was wearing a brand new t-shirt. and this one asshole jock said, "sucks to be you!" so i walked up to him and rubbed my shoulder all over his jersey and he just shoved me away. i didn't say anything to him, but he was pissed. hahaha.
Well, I'm glad you can see that it is possible to change a deeply held belief, when you notice and accept evidence to the contrary. But why polarise what you think sex should be? Maybe sex can mean different things at different times, even with the same person.high school and is often the point in people's lives where they first experience sex. and of course, she confided in me that she had been sexually active with him and i got really jealous. not only that, but i remember how i felt about the whole sex thing. and diane, when you asked me if there was something i once believed and it is completely different now... well, i just remembered that this is one of them. i used to thing sex was so important, that it should be held on a pedestal and be romantic and should be saved for someone very important and special and so on. maybe it was only because i had never gotten anywhere with a girl yet and also because i wanted to be with rachel and couldn't. but i got over that notion very quickly, and i'll get to that later.
How was guilt your "best friend"? Is there something about a feeling of guilt that you associate with girls/women? Do you feel, in general, that you have done something wrong that you need to be forgiven for?ah, i found it. the poem is called "my guilt," and i wrote about guilt, but used it in the form of a female. i called it "her" and "she." at the end of the poem i refer to "her" as my best friend. well, rachel's comment was towards that line. she wrote, and i quote: "Me? Jason, I'm sorry, but I don't consider you best friend... all we basically do is talk online. Sorry.
Your poem and your dream, and the dashed hopes you expressed with both of them, are very sad. I'm sorry you felt so lonely at this time in your life." i noticed here that the very next poem i wrote was about that dream i had. it's terribly titled "I Had A Dream (The Answer To All Your Questions)." Here is an excerpt:
You looked at me
I looked at you
You realized who I was
And I could see it, too
Realized what I've done for you
Realized what more I could do
Recognized I was here and there
Realized I was the only one to ever care
Forgot that other guy
Forgot everything else
You noticed how I love you
And I forgot myself
You reached your arms all the way around
Picked up your eyes to stare me down
Lodged your lips close to mine
And that was the end of time
All those feelings rushed back into me
Now everywhere I look you're all I see
These are the answers to everything you've asked
And I hope your feelings aren't like they were in the past
then i put my arms around her and embraced the kiss
You wanted those things so much. I can imagine how bad you would have felt.You noticed how I love you
And I forgot myself
I'm listening...i had one more semester at that school and it was one of the most fucked up experiences of my life. until next time....