Quote:
Originally Posted by greensky602
Ahhhh! I can't stop envying certain people. I don't want to envy them or ruminate about why I can't control my feelings, but I think envy is a very real sense of my character right now. I want to change to participate rather than compete and envy. Inside myself is a sense of low self-esteem that results from my refusal to do what is right. I don't know if it's actually called refusal to do what's right or I can justify my actions with the truth of not being able to control my energy to do what's right. I'm very lazy because I'm low energy, and I can't help it. I keep trying to change, but I retreat back to laziness, where it's comfortable and familiar. It seems like I have to try 10x as hard as others just to achieve a little, and I get frustrated by the slow results. I don't want to envy anyone just because I can't do it as good as they can. I want to participate in the world, but I just say so, and inside is this annoying sense of envy that I can't help but feel when triggered in the right circumstances. What can I learn to stop my envying? I feel it is malicious and it's not a constructive feeling to have. It doesn't help anyone or anything, and it's a waste of time. I would like all the explanations I can get. Thanks! 
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I want to thank you for offering an excellent explanation of how envy works in your life. As far as it goes, however, you might first make a division in your mind between things worth 'envying' as it motivates you to attempt the same for your own life, and envying that is counter-productive because it's a waste of time to yearn for gifts someone else was given. For example, it's a waste of my time to envy the tall supermodel, because I'm never going to be tall (or a supermodel!) -- but I noticed other people knew more about procedures where I work, and I decided I wanted to know, too, so I am now focusing my energies there. You might have low energy; but it could also be that you are scattering your energy over too broad an area. Some of the most successful people have said how difficult learning what they are now considered experts in, was to learn in the first place. Courage!