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  #1  
Old Feb 25, 2010, 04:45 PM
Anonymous32723
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Hey everyone,

Ever since I had my first "breakdown" about 15 months ago, I've been REALLY bad for keeping socializing plans with my friends. We'd make plans, and then I'd cancel. Sometimes it'd be because I was anxious, but mostly because I'd be feeling depressed and not up to it.

As of recent, however, I've been sad to learn that my friends don't even include me in plans BECAUSE I've cancelled so much in the past. :/ They have no faith in me anymore. A couple of times I've jokingly said "Hey guys, how about inviting me?" And they'd answer with something like "But we know you'd cancel", or "As if you'd go!"

This makes me feel even more down and depressed...since my first "breakdown", I've only kept in touch with 2 friends basically...I'm not the best at socializing. I'm fine at school, I'm actually considered pretty funny...but I can hardly make plans outside of school without cancelling.

I'm not even sure if I'm asking for help, because I can predict your answers: "You just have to get out more, try new things! Don't be afraid!" But I'm not afraid...I just don't do it.

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  #2  
Old Feb 25, 2010, 06:44 PM
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Junerain Junerain is offline
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Do you do other things, such as attend church, go shopping, get out on your own at least?
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  #3  
Old Feb 26, 2010, 05:21 AM
Anonymous32723
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Junerain, I go to school almost every day, and I sometimes go out with my family to do groceries just down the street. It's very hard though, whenever I get inside the house I don't want to leave.
  #4  
Old Feb 26, 2010, 07:22 AM
TheByzantine
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Quote:
“One who shows signs of mental aberration is, inevitably, perhaps, but cruelly, shut off from familiar, thoughtless intercourse, partly excommunicated; his isolation is unwittingly proclaimed to him on every countenance by curiosity, indifference, aversion, or pity, and in so far as he is human enough to need free and equal communication and feel the lack of it, he suffers pain and loss of a kind and degree which others can only faintly imagine, and for the most part ignore.” ~Charles Horton Cooley
Many cannot understand how difficult it is at times for those of us plagued by mental illness to be sociable. Most of my siblings no longer talk to me. I do not necessarily take umbrage at their apparent indifference. Sometimes an illness is just hard to figure out.

After being quite isolated for well over a decade, this too speaks to the plight of those who do not venture out of their comfort zone:

Quote:
Loneliness of Spirit:
Deeper than the Reach of Love
by James Park

Loneliness is an aching void in the center of our beings,
a deep longing to love and be loved,
to be fully known and accepted by at least one other person.
It is a hollow, haunting sound sweeping thru our depths,
chilling our bones and causing us to shiver.

Is there a person, anywhere,
who has never felt the stab of loneliness,
who has never experienced
the eerie distance of isolation and separation,
who has never suffered the pain of rejection or the loss of love?

The final rupture or breakdown of a valued loving relationship,
the sudden death of someone who was close and special,
an unavoidable separation from a loved one
—these things strike loneliness into our hearts,
the intense experience of the absence of that specific person.

Besides longing for a specific person,
sometimes loneliness has no name attached.
This is the general feeling of being alone,
isolated, separated from others.

And there is a third kind of loneliness—existential loneliness—
which is even deeper and more pervasive than either of the first two.
It often disguises itself as longing for a specific person
or pretends to be yearning for contact with anyone,
but this deeper lack or emptiness-of-being
is not really a kind of loneliness at all.

Being together with other people, even people we intensely love,
does not overcome this deep incompleteness of being.
This inner default of selfhood has never been solved by relationships,
no matter how good and close and warm our relationships might be.
Thanks for this!
mafub, Pomegranate
  #5  
Old Feb 26, 2010, 10:11 AM
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Junerain Junerain is offline
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Location: dreamy land
Posts: 16,888
If it's getting INSIDE the house that makes you not want to leave...how about asking friends (YOU ask THEM) to head out for coffee or dinner RIGHT after class ends!!
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Thanks for this!
TheByzantine
  #6  
Old Feb 26, 2010, 08:47 PM
chipperdear chipperdear is offline
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Member Since: Feb 2010
Location: USA
Posts: 88
Quote:
Originally Posted by ohseedee View Post
Hey everyone,

Ever since I had my first "breakdown" about 15 months ago, I've been REALLY bad for keeping socializing plans with my friends. We'd make plans, and then I'd cancel. Sometimes it'd be because I was anxious, but mostly because I'd be feeling depressed and not up to it.
I cancel all the time too. I've had the same problem. My friends would invite me to hang out, but I never felt like going. They eventually quit hanging out with me. Reading your post actually made me realize that this was a problem I was creating for myself. I may try scheduling things with friends before I get home so that I'm already out and can't use that as an excuse, as another poster suggested. We'll see how it goes Good luck with addressing the issue
  #7  
Old Mar 02, 2010, 03:48 PM
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OrangeMoira OrangeMoira is offline
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Member Since: Mar 2008
Location: West Coast US
Posts: 260
I'm sorry they're not including you right now. I cancel things too, and it's hard to keep in touch with people.

Do they know about your anxiety/depression? If not, maybe they feel like you rejected them if you had to cancel a few times. Even if they do know they could still feel that way; it can be hard to be understanding about something you have never gone through.

Is it easier if someone picks you up? Can you invite people to the house, or does it feel like they are invading your refuge then?

I'm glad you can still see people at school and keep in touch with a few close friends. Good luck working on it!
  #8  
Old Mar 10, 2010, 02:40 PM
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la doctora la doctora is offline
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Member Since: Mar 2010
Location: Inside my head
Posts: 342
I do this too. The other thing I do is that I won't answer phone calls or return phone calls from people I care about and really want to talk to. It is weird because I will be fine and then the phone will ring and it is like someone flipped the anxiety switch on full power. I'll panic and not answer. Then I get nervous every time I try to return the calls. I love my friends and I want to bring them closer to me but I do this and push them away instead. I don't know why I do this. It makes no sense to me. I have been doing better lately.
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la doctora :mexican:
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