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Right. I'm a compulsive liar/sarcasm

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  • Right. I'm a compulsive liar/sarcasm

    I am getting really, really sick of this.

    I am, of course, making up the fact that I'm Buddhist. Never-mind the fact that I have been exploring Buddhism since 2010. So I'd like the snide "Oh, how long is that going to last?" comments to stop, especially since I've been Buddhist for two years. But no, it's just a teenage fad or a rebellious thing.

    I am especially making up the fact that I'm gay, and I'm 2 seconds away from my ex. Again. Because we've apparently already done it. Three out of the four family members I've come out to immediately responded with "You think you're gay?" the fourth gave me a long lecture about how I can't 'knock it until I try it' and how I wasn't 'sexually mature' enough to really know. To be honest, I was expecting much worse from the last one, so I'm actually fairly fine with it.

    My parents are especially good at misinterpreting my relationship with my ex-boyfriend. We've both come out as LGBT since our relationship, so let's just say that whole thing is more sexually confusing than anything else. He and I have become fairly close friends because we've known each-other six years, and we went through a lot together. But it isn't even remotely sexual.

    My favourite is, and let's break it down individually:

    I'm making up the depression and anxiety, because they never saw it. Ignoring the fact that I went directly to them several times asking for help for it, and got chewed out each time (the time that got me to finally stop doing that was when my mother told me at my age, she'd had an abortion, and my father said if he thought it'd help he'd throw himself out a window right that second.)

    After that, I often went out-of-my-way to hide the SI marks, or just lied about them (oh, that burn was from cooking. Yeah, know I don't cook often), and the day when I destroyed my room, I spent the next hour cleaning it up, throwing out what I'd broken, in a hurry so they wouldn't see.

    Oh, and now that my sister is in therapy too, I'm trying to 'convert' her. I'm trying to make them out to be the bad guys, to earn my sister's favour.

    I'm also making up the nerve/stress pain I've been having, because when I show symptoms of it around them, I'm 'putting on a show' but they also never see it.

    I wish they were out-and-out bastards though, sometimes. That it wasn't so complicated. It's not like they've stopped me from entering help, and when they discovered I'd gone on SSRIs, they didn't freak out on me, and were up-front, very supportive. They've been disparaging, sure. Snide remarks, yes. Sometimes, downright insults. They haven't threatened to cut financial support, evict me, or anything.

    I just don't know how much longer I can put up with all this. I've tried hiding all this from them, and it just got worse. I tried directly talking to them, and that just made everything worse. I've tried sucking it up, and it just makes me miserable. I feel like I have to justify every thought, and now I'm fighting on behalf of my sister as well.

    I just can't do anything to please them, or prove it to them. Official diagnoses from my doctor? I lied to them too.

    I just really needed to vent, maybe commiserate. I can't cut off ties from them just yet, unfortunately. My sister still has at least 2 more years in their custody, and since I'm not financially independent yet, so do I. AT least we don't live in the same building anymore.

  • #2
    Quoth Cooper View Post
    I'm making up the depression and anxiety, because they never saw it. Ignoring the fact that I went directly to them several times asking for help for it, and got chewed out each time (the time that got me to finally stop doing that was when my mother told me at my age, she'd had an abortion, and my father said if he thought it'd help he'd throw himself out a window right that second.)


    I'm also making up the nerve/stress pain I've been having, because when I show symptoms of it around them, I'm 'putting on a show' but they also never see it.

    I wish they were out-and-out bastards though, sometimes. That it wasn't so complicated. It's not like they've stopped me from entering help, and when they discovered I'd gone on SSRIs, they didn't freak out on me, and were up-front, very supportive. They've been disparaging, sure. Snide remarks, yes. Sometimes, downright insults. They haven't threatened to cut financial support, evict me, or anything.

    I just can't do anything to please them, or prove it to them. Official diagnoses from my doctor? I lied to them too.

    I can sympathise, far, far too well on all the above counts. Probably some of the ones I edited out as well.

    Except that my little brother, when HE was mentally ill .. oh THAT was real. It's only MINE that was me bunging it on...
    Seshat's self-help guide:
    1. Would you rather be right, or get the result you want?
    2. If you're consistently getting results you don't want, change what you do.
    3. Deal with the situation you have now, however it occurred.
    4. Accept the consequences of your decisions.

    "All I want is a pretty girl, a decent meal, and the right to shoot lightning at fools." - Anders, Dragon Age.

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    • #3
      How awful of them. *offers hugs* <3
      1129. I will refrain from casting Dimension Jump and Magnificent Mansion on every police box we pass.
      -----
      http://orchidcolors.livejournal.com (A blog about everything and nothing)

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      • #4
        *hugs*.

        I do face the same somewhat with my depression related stuff - everyone expects me to shove it off and get on with it no matter what. Then they can't understand why I'm quiet/reserved around situations that are awkward for me - if I wasn't I'd be throwing so much negativity in their faces it would ruin friendships and relationships forever. As is I keep it quiet and they take it that I'm annoyed with them for unrelated reasons.
        I am so SO glad I was not present for this. There would have been an unpleasant duct tape incident. - Joi

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        • #5
          So, good news, for my sister at least.

          Not only is her therapy going to continue with a real, professional therapist pro-bono (she had been seeing an intern whose internship is about to end, because we don't have the money for therapy), Mom seems to be coming around.

          Apparently, she totally broke down at conferences yesterday. That, combined with a few other meetings Mom has had with some of her teachers from that school, seems to have convinced her that Sis has some issues therapy can help with.

          She has a pretty good sway over my father, so she might be able to convince him to back down as well, though for the most part, I've been shielding her from their backlash to her going to therapy. Hopefully it helps that Sis has a condition that they cannot deny: Aspergers. (She was severely autistic as a kid, and moved up the spectrum thanks to their working their butts off.)

          For those of you also dealing with this, now that I'm not so frustrated, I remember my Grandma saying she talked to a psychologist friend of hers. She was complaining that I was just making all this up, it was all in my head, and the psychologist silenced her with one sentence.

          "Well, it would be 'all in her head' wouldn't it?"

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          • #6
            Anna says "I'm tired of hearing about your cancer. Why can't you just smile and get over it?"

            When people give her a shocked look, she shrugs and says "You just told Seshat to go ahead and get over her depression. It's no different."
            Seshat's self-help guide:
            1. Would you rather be right, or get the result you want?
            2. If you're consistently getting results you don't want, change what you do.
            3. Deal with the situation you have now, however it occurred.
            4. Accept the consequences of your decisions.

            "All I want is a pretty girl, a decent meal, and the right to shoot lightning at fools." - Anders, Dragon Age.

            Comment


            • #7
              Quoth Seshat View Post
              When people give her a shocked look, she shrugs and says "You just told Seshat to go ahead and get over her depression. It's no different."
              Except that cancer is easier to understand for most people. I think I said once around here, while I was in chemotherapy, that I would much rather have cancer than a depression. At least with the cancer, I didn't need to doubt my own thoughts.

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              • #8
                I like her counter to those who tell you to get over being depressed. It's cruel and classy at the same time.
                Customers should always be served . . . to the nearest great white.

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