N
noname223
Archangel
- Aug 18, 2020
- 5,881
I have been through a lot of shit. The domestic violence started with 5. The bullying in school was also very traumatizing. It is a conventional wisdom people who suffer grow faster mature. I think this partly fits to me. Not in the sense I turned faster independent. Quite the opposite I am a mental wreck that is dependent on help of many different people. But I have started to become very reflective and thoughtful.
I know there is a picture of me when my family was in a theme park. I look pretty sad and really disliked that they made a picture. I think I partly remember what I thought to that time. I was self-conscious that I ate way too unhealthy stuff and always bought expensive unnecessary products to fill that inner emptiness. I was a young teenager to that time.
There was always this deep sadness, emptiness and pain inside myself. Everything felt so shallow and artifical. All the joy I had was so superficial. When I turned manic I made huge changements in my life. My personal philosophy changed too.
But there was also a very infantile side of me. I trolled a lot online when I was a teenager. I wanted to be edgy. Sometimes I was really unfriendly to other people online. I think I compensated the bullying in real life. I think this is a common way to handle bullying at teenage age. I feel sorry for what I did. I also made a lot of stupid jokes with my friends. I wanted to provoke a lot. But I never showed this behavior to other people in public or the society. My friends were sometimes shocked by my jokes or the stuff I talked about. (gore for example)
However this was all caused by the pain I was experiencing at that age. (I made a huge thread on SS where I explained that I really regret having watched this gore content due to ethic reasons.) It was my way to cope. My suicidality and my mixed manic state started with 15. My life was and is horrible. This was an unhealthy coping mechanism.
I think for me I can answer the question of the title with "yes". When we define being mature means being more serious about life and thinking more about the consequences of our actions and trying to act like a responsible citizen I think this is true for me. But there were and are always childish elements of me. But I think most people know that. Though I never had a sentiment of childish innocence. I always have been very scared about life and I probably ever will.
I know there is a picture of me when my family was in a theme park. I look pretty sad and really disliked that they made a picture. I think I partly remember what I thought to that time. I was self-conscious that I ate way too unhealthy stuff and always bought expensive unnecessary products to fill that inner emptiness. I was a young teenager to that time.
There was always this deep sadness, emptiness and pain inside myself. Everything felt so shallow and artifical. All the joy I had was so superficial. When I turned manic I made huge changements in my life. My personal philosophy changed too.
But there was also a very infantile side of me. I trolled a lot online when I was a teenager. I wanted to be edgy. Sometimes I was really unfriendly to other people online. I think I compensated the bullying in real life. I think this is a common way to handle bullying at teenage age. I feel sorry for what I did. I also made a lot of stupid jokes with my friends. I wanted to provoke a lot. But I never showed this behavior to other people in public or the society. My friends were sometimes shocked by my jokes or the stuff I talked about. (gore for example)
However this was all caused by the pain I was experiencing at that age. (I made a huge thread on SS where I explained that I really regret having watched this gore content due to ethic reasons.) It was my way to cope. My suicidality and my mixed manic state started with 15. My life was and is horrible. This was an unhealthy coping mechanism.
I think for me I can answer the question of the title with "yes". When we define being mature means being more serious about life and thinking more about the consequences of our actions and trying to act like a responsible citizen I think this is true for me. But there were and are always childish elements of me. But I think most people know that. Though I never had a sentiment of childish innocence. I always have been very scared about life and I probably ever will.
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