Oh my gosh! I did a google search trying to find pictures of somebody impressioning a lock and somehow your picture of you working on a sink came up. I was so thinking of Mario when I saw that and then I saw you wrote that! If you don’t mind, I am going to put you on my blogroll. I don’t know who you are or what you do, but after the Mario thing you are definately somebody I want to read!
I just wrote a post on what I think is a psychological issue. But I don’t know–I’ve not had any psych training. I am just making observations from the patient side.
Can I get you to read this post and tell me what you think of it?
Thank you!
admin:
I’m not not sure my comment went through so I’ll post the answer here too:
People aren’t fundamentally good or bad; they are people. Your friends suffer for you truly when they hear you’re ill, and care for you, and ask how you’re doing. If they don’t have heavy emotional investment in you , after a while though when they see that there’s no quick solving (be it death or getting well) to your problem, they tire emotionally and will slowly drift apart from you . You might unconsciously scare them, mostly by reminding them that they could be in your shoes . I’m not that experienced with counseling long-term illness patients, so that’s just my humble personal opinion.
Apart from the gorgeous church being built, that looks a LOT like where I live…the trees and hills and greenery.
Pretty!
Oh my gosh! I did a google search trying to find pictures of somebody impressioning a lock and somehow your picture of you working on a sink came up. I was so thinking of Mario when I saw that and then I saw you wrote that! If you don’t mind, I am going to put you on my blogroll. I don’t know who you are or what you do, but after the Mario thing you are definately somebody I want to read!
Hi again,
I just wrote a post on what I think is a psychological issue. But I don’t know–I’ve not had any psych training. I am just making observations from the patient side.
Can I get you to read this post and tell me what you think of it?
Thank you!
I’m not not sure my comment went through so I’ll post the answer here too:
People aren’t fundamentally good or bad; they are people. Your friends suffer for you truly when they hear you’re ill, and care for you, and ask how you’re doing. If they don’t have heavy emotional investment in you , after a while though when they see that there’s no quick solving (be it death or getting well) to your problem, they tire emotionally and will slowly drift apart from you . You might unconsciously scare them, mostly by reminding them that they could be in your shoes . I’m not that experienced with counseling long-term illness patients, so that’s just my humble personal opinion.
come back! it’s been so long. i miss your posts.