Anonymous wrote:This amount of rumination is rarely about the incident itself. Rather, you probably do this because the incident triggers an emotion you felt during childhood that made you feel horrible.
If I had to guess, I'd assume that you grew up feeling like a disappointment to at least one of your parents. What was the family dynamic like? Did you have any siblings, and did you feel like you were in their shadow?
The answer to why this incident is haunting you, 20 years later, is in your childhood.
Be kind to yourself.
Signed,
A ruminator who has been to therapy
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it helps any, I'm 51 and still remember an interview fresh out of college for an entry level editorial assistant job at a non profit where this kid, yeah, kid (was probably 26) asked me if I was so 'up' for the difficulty of the job.
I said: "Yes, of course, I'm up for any challenge and don't stop until I have a solution!"
He then blurts out, half chuckling: "Well, then, why didn't you get a 4.0 in college?
Thirty years later I still have visions of pummeling this pencil necked geek into a puddle of piss.
How many interviewees did he attempt to embarass just for his own amusement?
I'd pay $1000 right now if someone could give me his name.
To this day I envision beating the living snot out of him
A 3.0 GPA is still bigger than your dick!
Anonymous wrote:If it helps any, I'm 51 and still remember an interview fresh out of college for an entry level editorial assistant job at a non profit where this kid, yeah, kid (was probably 26) asked me if I was so 'up' for the difficulty of the job.
I said: "Yes, of course, I'm up for any challenge and don't stop until I have a solution!"
He then blurts out, half chuckling: "Well, then, why didn't you get a 4.0 in college?
Thirty years later I still have visions of pummeling this pencil necked geek into a puddle of piss.
How many interviewees did he attempt to embarass just for his own amusement?
I'd pay $1000 right now if someone could give me his name.
To this day I envision beating the living snot out of him
Anonymous wrote:When I was 25, I had a really awful experience at work. Itâs hard to explain but Iâll try.
I had a task to work on while my boss was out of town. A man who was acting as my boss in her absence, told me not to work on the task and to work on something else instead. Unbeknownst to me, he recruited help from one of my coworkers and finished the task himself. When my actual boss returned, he threw me under the bus, acted clueless, and blamed me for my laziness, saying he had to do my work for me.
It was awful and the situation really bruised my confidence. It didnât help that I had to see him occasionally and he always gave me this look, like a barely noticeable head shake, like I was a huge disappointment.
Iâm 45 now and have had multiple jobs between that one and where I am now, which is in a completely different career field altogether. I can see that man for exactly the type of man he is, and I know exactly how I would deal with that sort of interaction today. But every time I think of that situation now, I become that 25yo girl again.
And I think of it often. Itâll just come to my mind and Iâll feel ashamed and embarrassed and confused. Itâs palpable. And I have no idea why I do this to myself. But I want to stop ruminating over this. In the great scheme of things, this one thing at a meaningless job means nothing. If anything, it helped me grow.
So why do I do this? Maybe if I know why, itâll help me stop.