sorry for hijacking your post
There's no hijacking at all, I'm happy that other related conversations take place here
my brain immediately puts the brakes on that, that 0.5 sec was a precise number haha so I don't have the chance to let it happen
Yes, what I meant is to let the shutting down happen, just observe it and see how it happens. The idea would be to avoid the chain initiated by the shutting down to continue with other negative feelings such as frustration.
I'm at a transitional phase in my life and things are going so fast and my part of the world is in flames and I'm scared of further mental dissolution
It's good that you're being careful, then. Particularly if there's a lot of violence going on where you live. I have never lived through anything of that type, but have observed how in other, lesser crisis situations, the fear, hatred, and anger that appears in the general population can be much more influential than one would think (I suppose you know about that better than I do). Going slowly into it and being very aware seems like a good plan.
I do feel that I am quite honest with myself
Sometimes one can be dishonest to oneself not in hiding negative aspects but positive ones. I tend to be very harsh on myself and very critical, and my experiences have been helping me to see that a big chunk of my particular dishonesty to myself is much more about forgetting that certain "problems" aren't really important, and considering myself to be much worse morally than I am.
now reading your words and replying is making me smile and that's not self induced
Now I'm smiling too
Just to clarify, what I mean is not that every emotion is consciously decided and executed, but that they are an action. Think, for example, of the reflex to use your arms to protect yourself when falling. It's not voluntary and may not even be conscious, but it's still an action you're doing yourself, and it can be trained to be different. For example, when learning to jump into a swimming pool one learns to not act in that protective way. Or when learning to fall down in judo or another martial art, one learns to protect oneself in a specific manner that is not the original, instinctive one. Feelings and ideas are very much like that, I think.
Another example: there was a time where I was under a lot of stress, and I started to pull my facial hair. At first I was more or less aware, it was one hair here, one hair there. Over time, it became more and more automatic, and at one point I could pull whole chunks of hair without being aware of it at all. It was difficult to stop doing that, but in the end I was able to retrain that and stop. Destructive feelings, lack of feelings, etc. can be trained in a similar manner.
I usually bundle that under "cultivating motivation" and discard it
I totally get that. It may seem something related to "manifesting" (no insult to anyone that believes in that, but I personally don't, and consider it actively harmful). But there's a difference: this is not about denying reality, but quite the opposite. Most of the time, one is actually fine, the external situation is fine in that moment. There's no real danger. Then, training oneself to feel content and fine when the external situation is, at the moment, fine, is not fooling oneself but learning to bring feeling in tune with reality. Trauma and a neurotic culture train us to be constantly on guard, scanning the environment and our minds looking for danger, and trying to foresee it by considering all that could go wrong (often to extents that aren't very realistic). So it's about undoing that training, not about training to distort reality.
Gentleness it is! it's a good idea to start low, it's always there and I can reach out for more if needed. perhaps I'll go a bit lower on the harmalas and split the 40mg dose in 2 like you're doing. and if it doesn't feel like I've gone deep enough I'll wait for another opportunity and take moar.
Sounds like a good plan! I also have to remind myself that there will be more opportunities. In my experience, learning to appreciate weak experiences has helped me to also appreciate strong ones more.
I grew up in an environment where love and sensitivity and genuinity are ridiculed
Me too, as you say any expression of genuine emotion was punished by mockery and mean-spirited questioning. In my case it was mostly about positive emotions, negative ones were more allowed. That has left in me very critical tendencies that prevent me from some behaviors that require some genuine, spontaneous behavior. For example, I can't dance. When I try to do so (being alone), I notice a freeze reaction appearing and I become more and more stiff, so I can't really move other than if I consciously plan every movement.
the part about the "fetus gaining awareness
Yes, that has been coming up for me very insistently. I'm thinking a lot these days how every human being has been there at one point, every human being at one point had a mind that was not human in the sense we understand it. And we were completely vulnerable and defenseless to the extent that only a person on the verge of death could be. It's just a very strange situation, and the fact that it's strange is in itself strange, as there's nothing more natural. How much are we trying to run away from that reality, particularly in the way that it ties with death? I often hear people say "I don't fear death because of not being alive anymore, but because of the process of dying". That "process of dying" is likely the process of a fully formed human mind going back to more primitive forms, until it finally goes back to nothing. Just food for thought, it's not that I have a specific point to make here.
hoping you'll face it and overcome it and move on to blissful visions
Interestingly, the first time this whole birth topic appeared in a way I could recognize the topic, it was in a very blissful way:
X log update I wonder if it needed to be presented that way at first so I didn't reject it without recognizing what was going on, as I've done in the past.
it also makes me think whether all the wild and crazy mental stuff I went through in my childhood might have been due to trauma from circumcision
I don't know if it will be the single experience that it all comes from, but it sounds reasonable to me to assume that such an experience has to leave at least some degree of trauma, potentially a lot. If an adult person was kidnapped, strapped to a table, and mutilated (I mean this from the pain part, I'm not trying to pass cultural judgement), no one would be surprised that it would result in trauma. A baby is much more defenseless, has less emotional resources, and doesn't understand anything of what's going on in such a situation. The same would apply for other surgical procedures. Many events that to an adult are just unpleasant can be experienced by babies as life-or-death.
All my support in your way to balance and wholeness. As you say, it's great that here we have a space to share all of this without judgement with people who understand
