magz wrote:
Jbert35 wrote:
It was revolutionary, stopped masking in early twenties. I had come to a point in my life where I had to acknowledge that I didn’t have enough basic skills to get along as an independent adult. Ditching the mask was a necessity for my own growth and survival. And it felt good to be myself. That was all well and good as a young, single woman. The crisis came again after getting married and having kids. I know I love my family, but that’s not enough. I have to show them that, and be attentive, etc. If my kid is having a meltdown, I have to dismiss the fact that now I am inches away from my own meltdown. It’s hard to parent effectively if you are putting on an act, but it is hard to demonstrate love and attentiveness to kids without masking. If I don’t mask, will they know I love them? These are questions I am struggling with right now.
Be careful. I was masking round the clock to make up for a loving mommy for four years, and then I psychically collapsed to a total mess.
It's good to have sufficient self-control but real love needs real you, with your quirks and your discomforts embraced.
Same here. It turned me into a zombie over time.
That said, not all masking is masking, in a way. I don't even know how to explain this. Sometimes I get energy from masking, because I have positive social experiences from it. I'm finding it almost impossible to do now if I'm tired, though.
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I sometimes leave conversations and return after a long time. I am sorry about it, but I need a lot of time to think about it when I am not sure how I feel.