Okay Edward... I'm answering posts from
another thread, over here, because they're off-topic over there. I won't answer any of this again.
edward18 wrote:Care to tell me how to get over it?
DO SOMETHING ELSE. Do ANYTHING else, think about ANYTHING but that. Move on. You have other interests, which must be rewarding in some way, because you continue to do them. Keep doing them. Stop doing that. It's really that simple -- not easy, but simple. And it does get easier to do, with practise.
edward18 wrote:I do that all the time when I act out how my characters are. Doesn't mean anything though. It's just a mask you put on. Just something to hide what you're really feeling.
Not entirely true. This has been tested. Researchers have asked people to remember times when they'd been happy, to try and reconstruct the entire scene mentally and/or verbally [talking to the researcher], or imagine things they looked forward to, to build a potential future moment in their head [again, while talking to the researcher] -- and you know what? After a while, a lot of them began to smile.
Another test involved asking the interviewee to smile, and keep smiling while talking to the researcher. After some time spent doing this, even though it seemed silly at first, their mood improved and the conversation turned to more fulfilling topics. Some even joked about this goofy smiling exercise having no real effect -- but did laugh about it. So it actually did affect their mood, despite what they were saying.
So, these things can work their way in from the outside, or outward from inside. That `mask' can grow roots, work its way in and affect how you're really feeling. Use it.
edward18 wrote:First off, I've never been able to get over a crush
Secondly, why would you want to?
Since you've asked this before, and since you do seem miserably unhappy... I can only conclude that you're in love with your own misery -- possibly more so than your purported crush, since you've seen a lot more of your own misery than her, lately. The role of Mr. Sad&Lonely must appeal to you in some way. Do you think the person you're so in love with would actually *want* you to be this miserable? Of course not. She'd have to be pretty vile to want that.
But on some level, *you* must want that, because you continue to pursue it. I'd tell you to be careful, that self-pity can be terribly addictive, but I think you're already well and truly hooked.
And that's the main reason you're on my `Ignore' list.
Goodbye,
Patrick.