Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Similar story, OP, and I also tried to address it for years through talk therapy, will power, and self help. Some of these efforts helped a little at the margins, but nothing truly moved the needle.
It wasn't until I hit menopause and went on antidepressants-antianxiety meds to help with those symptoms that I really was able to get a handle on my feelings of inadequacy, people pleasing, etc. It's funny because all I really wanted was some relief from hot flashes, but the true benefits have all been to my mental health. I had no idea how much anxiety I had learned to live with, or how living with a high level of anxiety sets you up to over-react to (and obsessively try to neutralize) perceived threats - especially those that recreate or remind you of past trauma. Now, with that baseline level of anxiety under control, I am finally able to "stop caring" as some pps have suggested.
It has been a revelation. My only regret is that I didn't try meds sooner. So, my advice is that if you've tried talk therapy and self-help and all the things, and after years of these efforts you're still not at a place where you can control it (as well as understand it), is to find a doctor who can help you think through your medication options.
Thank you for describing your experience! Can you tell it bit more? What meds? What dosage? Any side effects? What were your overreactions? I am not trying to pry - I have thought that I might need meds but my therapist has always said I don't.
Anonymous wrote:Ugh, I am feeling this so much right now. A person I have never considered more than a casual acquaintance recently decided to unfollow me on social media. Which is fine! This was not a friend and this change will impact me in no way. But I realized it by accident (was trying to remember the name of their employer to answer a question for someone else, and when I navigated to their profile saw that we were no longer connected) and now it's just haunting me. Like I need to know why they would do this, and if there was something I did or said that could have prevented it. I hate feeling like this. And again, this is over a casual acquaintance I've spoken to maybe 6 times in my life and who I almost never think about unless I happen to run into her or someone else mentions her. So imagine how I respond when an actual friend or family member expresses displeasure with me.
I really wish I could let stuff like this roll off my back. I'm in my 40s. I'm not going to go cry about it or do anything about it, but it's crazy to me that it's now been on my mind for hours. I wish I could just find if funny or genuinely not care.
Anonymous wrote:Similar story, OP, and I also tried to address it for years through talk therapy, will power, and self help. Some of these efforts helped a little at the margins, but nothing truly moved the needle.
It wasn't until I hit menopause and went on antidepressants-antianxiety meds to help with those symptoms that I really was able to get a handle on my feelings of inadequacy, people pleasing, etc. It's funny because all I really wanted was some relief from hot flashes, but the true benefits have all been to my mental health. I had no idea how much anxiety I had learned to live with, or how living with a high level of anxiety sets you up to over-react to (and obsessively try to neutralize) perceived threats - especially those that recreate or remind you of past trauma. Now, with that baseline level of anxiety under control, I am finally able to "stop caring" as some pps have suggested.
It has been a revelation. My only regret is that I didn't try meds sooner. So, my advice is that if you've tried talk therapy and self-help and all the things, and after years of these efforts you're still not at a place where you can control it (as well as understand it), is to find a doctor who can help you think through your medication options.
Anonymous wrote:I have the same problem OP! And it is very painful to date with this trait. Look up "anxious attachment" style. It stems from childhood and not feeling good enough.
I also found a helpful article on how to deal with feelings of neediness:
"Five Ways to Overcome Feelings of Neediness" by Craig Malkin in Psychology Today (posted Nov 30, 2012).