Anonymous wrote:OP, are you expecting too much? You aren't special. I mean there is nothing especially special about you.
Trying to say this to be helpful, really ... but who doesn't experience "wrong" turns. Why would you be spared this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, could you try a balcony garden or houseplants? I'm in a similar place of feeling like I wish I were in the suburbs or just a slightly further out part of my city where I could just go outside and be in green space, but I'm not. I have a tiny bit of outdoor space and made a container garden on my steps this year with random plants on clearance. I've been spending a lot of time observing other people's potted plants, gardens in parks, etc and thinking about what I'd like to either grow from seed in the spring or buy more intentionally next year. I still won't ever have a view of trees out my window, but it's distracting in a good way and neat to be paying attention to something new.
Where do you live?
Downtown Frederick, MD. Always thought I'd buy a house with a yard but doesn't look like it's gonna happen.
Anonymous wrote: ...How putting up Christmas decorations wasn't construed as a political statement?
I'm shocked by how stuck in nostalgia I am. I'm not 80. It feels like the world has changed too much for me.
Anonymous wrote:OP, are you expecting too much? You aren't special. I mean there is nothing especially special about you.
Trying to say this to be helpful, really ... but who doesn't experience "wrong" turns. Why would you be spared this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, could you try a balcony garden or houseplants? I'm in a similar place of feeling like I wish I were in the suburbs or just a slightly further out part of my city where I could just go outside and be in green space, but I'm not. I have a tiny bit of outdoor space and made a container garden on my steps this year with random plants on clearance. I've been spending a lot of time observing other people's potted plants, gardens in parks, etc and thinking about what I'd like to either grow from seed in the spring or buy more intentionally next year. I still won't ever have a view of trees out my window, but it's distracting in a good way and neat to be paying attention to something new.
Where do you live?
Anonymous wrote:This may sound odd. But sometimes I watch dystopian movies or read the books and end up feeling better that life is not (yet—ha, ha) that bleak. Also getting outside every day helps—in the outdoors—a park, a trail, the neighborhood.
I understand how you feel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. The only way I can improve my mood and outlook is to work outside in my yard, in my garden, staining my deck, any task that is outside. I feel closer to my deceased loved ones who I miss, not in a weird way, but with soft, pleasant memories. Even just 10 minutes watering plants outside helps. I wish I knew why but thought I'd share.
OP here and this sounds wonderful to me. We currently live in an apartment in the city and all I find myself thinking about lately is how much I want a garden to work in and to spend weekends planting and weeding and pruning. I think this is one of the major sources of my crisis -- we are realizing that we will not be financially able to sell and move out of the city anytime soon because of both stuff with our kids' education and economic factors, and I'm really wishing I'd pushed to take the leap to the suburbs (or even more rural) five years ago when it would have made more sense. I'm trying to find a way to make this life work for me and just feel claustrophobic and stuck.
Maybe I can find a community garden to work in or something. Or just something I could do outside. Thank you for the idea, PP.
And thank you to others for the book recommendations. I have made a list and will look into it.
This is interesting. I live in the suburbs and kind of hate it, but the one thing that keeps me sane is my garden. I grow a ton of fruits and vegetable and have a butterfly garden. I think about downsizing to the city when the kids have left, and I always wonder if I will miss my garden. You have me rethinking it.
What city are you in? DC? Maybe we can hep you find a community garden. There's a huge one in NW DC off Macomb, but there is a waitlist I believe.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for that, good to know I'm not alone.
I feel like I should add that I need to do things that don't cost a lot of money. We are very cash strapped at the moment, which is a major trigger for a lot of my feelings of failure/inadequacy. So taking a nice vacation or splurging on clothes or self-care is not an option for me. No risk of me running out and buying a sports car, I guess.
I'm looking more for things I might read or do that could help relieve some of this grief and regret. Like, I don't know, a novel or poem or other book you've read that brought you solace. Or... I'm not religious but I have been thinking lately maybe I need to find some religion, or some kind of community like a religious community. Is that sustaining for people? I am feeling very isolated right now.