It Does Come Back

It’s no secret that I suffer from mental health issues. Ones that can often cause similarly big problems in my personal relationships. However, I am aware of my issues and that they can sometimes come between reality and fiction. This was the first realisation I had which helped me to try and deal healthily when symptoms arise.

My first serious relationship sparked something in me which I had to fight tirelessly to get rid of. During this seven-year relationship, I started out as a really happy and trusting person. By the end of it, I was the asshole.

Some people know how to bring the worst out in a person. Granted I was very young when our relationship started, I didn’t get to fully understand who I was. I did know that I was the type of person who would never hurt a fly, I couldn’t fight to save my life and I was always laughing hysterically at funny things.

My biggest weakness was trusting people to savour my wishes, as I did theirs. Boy, did I get my heart broken. I know your teenage years are for heartbreak, but I don’t think at fifteen you need to worry about a boyfriend being addicted to porn and having his ego stroked by anyone who would stroke it.

Okay, maybe the last part, but definitely not the porn part.

Throughout this young relationship, yours truly was what I’d call nowadays, a dumb bitch. Why I convinced myself this was a great person to be with or that somehow things would get better is beside me. I ended up anxiety-ridden, controlling, impatient and nasty. Before you tell me that that is just my personality and he brought it out, carry on reading…

We fought constantly about everything because no matter my approach, I was always met with a blank face and a mute tongue. Almost as if it were done purposefully, even if I was crying my heart out and begging for an answer. If there was ever an answer, it was something like, “I just don’t care anymore.” My reaction would always be the same, “anymore?” Like when did you first care?

This all brought on extreme anxiety because I knew that it didn’t matter what I said. He would always be right because I was either being ‘unnecessary’ or ‘crazy’ according to him. I was always the cause of the same drama because I just wanted to sort what was wrong out, but I was speaking to a wall all the time.

Eventually, I became extra impatient from never getting an answer and would try and say things that I thought would get any reaction out of him. So now I was anxious, impatient and a mean person.
I became controlling when he started acting weird about his phone and then one day he had two phones…

On each phone he had an array of other girls he was speaking to, telling them how beautiful they were and exchanging images. On his other phone was his ex-girlfriend and him chatting it up like they were still dating. This ex whom he apparently disliked a lot because she cheated on him.

Then there was Facebook and Twitter with conversations between girls and him about how they missed each other and wished they could be together. So as you can imagine, I as his actual girlfriend didn’t enjoy any of this and felt pretty betrayed. You think I left him hey? Nope, that’s why I consider my old self a dumb bitch.

I was a mess from all of this, which continued to happen until about three years into our relationship. After that, I decided I didn’t care what he did behind my back anymore because I was tired of the hurt.

After a long and shitty seven years, I said goodbye to my dumb self and him.

During this time I met someone that helped remind me of the girl I once was. I started feeling happier again, less anxious about relationships and I started believing in trust again.

While I do struggle with mental health still, I am better at finding ways to cope with it. I can focus on myself and my relationship, not just my relationship in fear of being cheated on. My partner has reminded me that I should be respected as a woman and that I’m not just an object for male gratification. I’m allowed to be myself and am confident in my abilities due to my partner encouraging me.

So when people say that they changed because of a relationship, they aren’t lying. There are people out there that are just not a good fit for you and these people can sometimes make you believe that they aren’t toxic, but they will show their true self eventually.

I’m sure he feels the same way about me, he never could admit to being wrong. It was always expected of me to admit to being wrong to stop the tension so we could be ‘normal’ again.

You can and will return to ‘normal’ when the person leaves. It takes a while to remember who you are and what you liked before, but with time it comes back. I’m more chilled than I’ve ever been before, I couldn’t care less to control anyone and I die if I say something that sounds remotely mean to my partner.

Don’t let toxicity consume you, stay safe xx

Quiet

Have you ever gone through a phase in your life where you really just feel like being silent? Or you enjoy the silence a lot more than you did before? I recently noticed that I no longer feel awkward when faced with silence, rather I embrace it. What is the point in constantly yapping on and on? Don’t get me wrong, I have verbal diarrhoea most of the time. However, I’ve learned to enjoy the silence. Like when you’re in the car at 7 am on your way to work and you’re still so sleepy, you don’t have the mental ability that early in the morning to deal with someone telling you their entire life story.

I used to be really loud and spoke a lot because I had such bad anxiety that people were bored of my conversation, that my coping mechanism was to try and keep the conversation going in any way I could. Meaning, I basically couldn’t shut up and would end up saying something inappropriate and offending someone. Don’t do this, it’s annoying as hell and people don’t enjoy being offended. Sometimes chilling in silence allows you to think of some really cool things that you can later converse about. Some of my best ideas have come from my moments of complete silence..

I always thought people who sat around being silent were super weird, but now I’m one of those people and now I think it’s less weird because I kind of get it now.

“Don’t you hate that? Uncomfortable silences. Why do we feel it’s necessary to yak about bullshit in order to be comfortable? That’s when you know you’ve found somebody special. When you can just shut the fuck up for a minute and comfortably enjoy the silence.”

Mia Wallace (Pulp Fiction)

Change

So basically in 2018 I went through a pretty rough time mentally, that ultimately ended up with me making a whole bunch of scary decisions. I was unemployed, depressed and super stuck. I walked away from a long term relationship, moved into a friends place which, unfortunately didn’t work out and I pretty much just went rogue.

However, this isn’t a sad story. You know the saying, “every cloud has a silver lining.” Listen when people say that to you. They aren’t lying, I met someone so beautiful I sometimes have to remind myself that I am good enough and am worthy of being loved again. No matter what I’ve done in my past, it doesn’t define who I am now.

My absolute definition of happiness

I’m not entirely sure just how many people can relate to this story, but all I can say is don’t give up. In that moment you’re under the impression that what you’re feeling will go on forever and no matter how hard you kick and fight, you still feel like you’re being consumed by the negativity and bullshit surrounding you.

Slap that feeling right in it’s bitch face because there is always a way out. These 6 months have taught me so much so far and I have accomplished more than I ever thought I would by the time I reached the age I am now. I have 2 Fur babies, we’re currently moving into our own place together (a first for me) and my partner just got himself the most kickass job! Nothing is forever, including those mega shit times where it feels like there is absolutely no hope.

“If you get up in the morning and think the future is going to be better, it is a bright day. Otherwise, it’s not.”

Elon Musk