• If you haven't yet, we highly encourage you to check out our Recovery Resources thread!
  • Hey Guest,

    As you know, censorship around the world has been ramping up at an alarming pace. The UK and OFCOM has singled out this community and have been focusing its censorship efforts here. It takes a good amount of resources to maintain the infrastructure for our community and to resist this censorship. We would appreciate any and all donations.

    Bitcoin Address (BTC): 39deg9i6Zp1GdrwyKkqZU6rAbsEspvLBJt

    Ethereum (ETH): 0xd799aF8E2e5cEd14cdb344e6D6A9f18011B79BE9

    Monero (XMR): 49tuJbzxwVPUhhDjzz6H222Kh8baKe6rDEsXgE617DVSDD8UKNaXvKNU8dEVRTAFH9Av8gKkn4jDzVGF25snJgNfUfKKNC8

  • Security update: At around 2:28AM EST, the site was labeled as malicious by Google erroneously, causing users to get a "Dangerous site" warning in most browsers. It appears that this was done by mistake and has been reversed by Google. It may take a few hours for you to stop seeing those warnings.

    If you're still getting these warnings, please let a member of staff know.
A

Argo

Specialist
May 19, 2018
360
Imagine any difficult problem. Just close your eyes and get a rough picture of something, it can be undefined. Now imagine trying to solve this problem, except without much of an understanding of the problem ...?

Wouldn't that be frustrating, feel hopeless and like a struggle?

What that means is, understanding has to be the first step to reliably solving any problem-- understanding is what opens the door.

I've personally not found anyone more clear on trauma than Timothy Fletcher:





Solving is still hard, there are lots of good and bad attitudes and methods and so on, but it's almost impossible without understanding first. Now imagine the same problem from before-- except now, instead of a lack of understanding, you have total understanding. You have a genuine clarity and wisdom towards the problem. What happens then? (I'm not saying some kind of omniscience is possible or should be a goal, but it's worth imagining what it would do and what it would mean)
 
Last edited:
  • Hugs
  • Like
Reactions: 26mmmm and Deleted member 8119
2

26mmmm

Experienced
Feb 12, 2024
207
Imagine any difficult problem. Just close your eyes and get a rough picture of something, it can be undefined. Now imagine trying to solve this problem, except without much of an understanding of the problem ...?

Wouldn't that be frustrating, feel hopeless and like a struggle?

What that means is, understanding has to be the first step to reliably solving any problem-- understanding is what opens the door.

I've personally not found anyone more clear on trauma than Timothy Fletcher:





Solving is still hard, there are lots of good and bad attitudes and methods and so on, but it's almost impossible without understanding first. Now imagine the same problem from before-- except now, instead of a lack of understanding, you have total understanding. You have a genuine clarity and wisdom towards the problem. What happens then? (I'm not saying some kind of omniscience is possible or should be a goal, but it's worth imagining what it would do and what it would mean)

I agree. Only recently I've started to really understand my issues.
Im still on a self discovery journey, and it's definitely helping alot and will probably help more in the future as I understand more about myself.

Before that I just didn't realize how broken I was.
I didn't think my situation was normal but I
took it for granted mostly, blamed it on the wrong things and dismissed it at times because I thought I was close to solving things.
I was deep down the rabbit hole, inside this bubble created by my bad experiences.

What I'm trying to say basically is that I atleast understand that im in that bubble now, and that allows me to see outside it sometimes.

I ultimately failed with everything because I just wasn't approaching things the right way and I wasn't equipped to deal with my issues.

But now after learning from my mistakes im hoping for things to work out and im giving life another shot.
 

Similar threads

A
Replies
0
Views
61
Suicide Discussion
ALonelyFreak
A
codeinesyruplover
Replies
0
Views
163
Suicide Discussion
codeinesyruplover
codeinesyruplover
FaultyCepheus
Replies
0
Views
69
Suicide Discussion
FaultyCepheus
FaultyCepheus
charaunderground
Replies
5
Views
231
Suicide Discussion
RIPwednesdayadams
RIPwednesdayadams
notfromthisworld
Replies
0
Views
141
Suicide Discussion
notfromthisworld
notfromthisworld