Wetkitty09
Virgin! AGAIN!!
- Joined
- Jul 16, 2024
- Posts
- 1,017
Morning. 
I hope you’re doing as well as you can.
Be safe out there.
Love you.
				
			I hope you’re doing as well as you can.
Be safe out there.
Love you.
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You as well. Enjoying my day off, going to spend a day doing nothing productive. Sometimes we need a day of pure leisure.Morning.
I hope you’re doing as well as you can.
Be safe out there.
Love you.
Thank you and to you. I am doing some silversmithing to lose myself for a few hours. Currently working on a celtic cross with a central carnelian or maybe a green agate. A present for a friend who is having a hard time.Morning.
I hope you’re doing as well as you can.
Be safe out there.
Love you.
My condolences. I have been there, losing someone and looking for them to reach out to you.I'm usually a positive person, but grief in the loss of someone you care about can hit hard. I recently lost my friend, and I find myself checking to see if they've sent a message or even an email knowing there will never be one again.
Grief is brutalI'm usually a positive person, but grief in the loss of someone you care about can hit hard. I recently lost my friend, and I find myself checking to see if they've sent a message or even an email knowing there will never be one again.

It truly is hard for men, I 100% agree. Not to invalidate depression in women at all, men simply experience it differently and we face our own unique obstacles with it, that's all I'm saying.Depression is always a hard thing to deal with,I didn’t even realize it till my wife and daughter pointed it out that for last several years that I don’t remember a day where i woke up and stayed happy all day,99% of the time im miserable.so finally went to doctor and told her about it and she put me on Zoloft my attitude has gotten a lot better.but i think depression is extremely hard on men due to us not having anyone to talk to or that we’ve been taught to hold our emotions in and man up.but a man like me (blue collar oilfield)that has a very feminine side at home and with my wife.i don’t have any friends close to me or that i would even talk to about anything
So sorry to hear this. Losing someone can be one of the hardest things to deal with in life. And the longer we live the more we have to go through it. I hope you can find some peace and comfort in this difficult time.I'm usually a positive person, but grief in the loss of someone you care about can hit hard. I recently lost my friend, and I find myself checking to see if they've sent a message or even an email knowing there will never be one again.
After my husband died, I kept his number and contact picture on my phone until just a few months ago.I'm usually a positive person, but grief in the loss of someone you care about can hit hard. I recently lost my friend, and I find myself checking to see if they've sent a message or even an email knowing there will never be one again.
I still have "Dad" saved in my phone. I have no idea who has that number now, but I just can't delete it.After my husband died, I kept his number and contact picture on my phone until just a few months ago.
It just helped me feel like, maybe, he wasn't really gone.
This turn of events is taking many of us into a very bad place. I hope those in the know will fight back against this and the many other injustices that are coming.It doesn't matter how old you get, someone you love and trust will treat you horribly because they think they're in the right. It can send you into a tailspin, making you cry. Then, you reach out to someone who represents everything you can't stand because they're your twin. And she listens even though she thinks the 1964 civil rights laws aren't being done away with. And you tell her she was the one person you thought would take a stand against fascism. Is this weird af or what?
I don’t think we ever really let go, we just get used to the hole that is left behind and learn to live with it. My parents have been gone nearly 30 years and I still think about them almost every day. The pain of losing them has become remote.There’s so much to grief that I can’t seem to connect to.
I’ve never gotten a “sign”.
I’ve never been visited gently in my dreams.
I’m not fearful of losing the image of her face, or the sound of her voice, or the pause in her laughter, or the shine in her eyes, or the ring that held mine, hers, and my sisters birth stones side by side, nearly fusing together after decades of solidarity.
My dreams aren’t comforting, they’re awful. Every single night, I have to tell her that she’s gone while she fights with me that she’s not. She’s been gone for two years. When will my subconscious let her rest? Let her go.
In my opinion, grief for loved ones never truly leaves you. You just learn to live with it. But I don't think that's a bad thing...There’s so much to grief that I can’t seem to connect to.
I’ve never gotten a “sign”.
I’ve never been visited gently in my dreams.
I’m not fearful of losing the image of her face, or the sound of her voice, or the pause in her laughter, or the shine in her eyes, or the ring that held mine, hers, and my sisters birth stones side by side, nearly fusing together after decades of solidarity.
My dreams aren’t comforting, they’re awful. Every single night, I have to tell her that she’s gone while she fights with me that she’s not. She’s been gone for two years. When will my subconscious let her rest? Let her go.
I went through that in late October. A cat that had been a part of my life for 15 awesome and funny years suddenly feel ill, and less than 48 hours later...Lately, I've been feeling depressed because I'm very worried about my sick old cat.
Totally. If I may add, I think remembering a deceased loved one fondly is a sign that you still love and miss them. I don't think it means that you miss them any less than someone who is still grieving years later.In my opinion, grief for loved ones never truly leaves you. You just learn to live with it. But I don't think that's a bad thing...
It's completely human and normal to still love people after they have passed.
Not really depressed per se, but I've had some musings lately that have lowered my spirits a bit.
So, as a weird kid with ADHD, I excitedly shared my interests (toys, cartoons, video games) with everyone I could find and was always told to shut up (yeah, I was annoying, I'll admit that). Eventually, I stopped talking altogether.
Now, as an adult, people demand to know why I'm so quiet. They want me to "speak up", to share what I think of things. Whenever I do decide to "speak up", I'm ignored. And people wonder why I'm so quiet, how I can go an entire day without speaking to anyone. What's the point?
Yes, you pretty much hit the nail on the head. I'm actually an open book once someone is willing to read. The irony is that once people do get me to open up, they find out that I'm actually pretty "normal" and boring, the mystery I apparently project disappears and it's disappointing for them.Silence is too much for most people to handle, especially to those who aren’t comfortable in silence with their own thoughts. You being silent, to them, triggers them. It reflects their own fears, insecurities, and shortcomings - because if you are choosing to be silent, that must mean you are hiding something.
You become a task, something to unlock. But by that point they’ve already been running with their own narrative - your reality will never live up to the fantasy that’s been projected on you without your consent.
So now you feel like you’ve spent so long giving, and giving, and giving only to be ignored and now, now people are suddenly interested and it’s a joke because it’s still so self serving. You can’t even really be mad at them because on some level it’s human nature - I too would want to know what’s on your mind.
But past that, most people just don’t care after the initial discovery. It makes for a very one dimensional, lonely day.
That all said, having even one person actually care and value your thoughts and opinions makes the world of difference. It’s so validating and suddenly you aren’t that annoying kid rambling on and on, but an ecstatic adult expressing their greatest current interest to someone who genuinely cares.
Sorry to hear it’s got you down, but at least we aren’t those unaware kids anymore and we can learn how to stay away from those only seeking to take from us.