When you're involved with someone for a while, and they decided to express their feelings to the public - that's not my personal way of therapy, but I guess everyone takes split-ups differently.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I think everybody I've seen has come from some other therapy, and almost invariably, it's very much the same thing: the therapist is too disinterested, a little too aloof, a little too inactive. They're not really interested in the person; he doesn't relate to the person.
Sometimes I feel a bit socially disconnected in terms of being a little bit gullible about how people interrelate emotionally.
From a young age, I was rubbing elbows with a very different kind of person and social class, and I felt a lot of tension and conflict in my identity because of that.
The times that I have done something that I didn't respond to emotionally right away, it's generally not worked out too well.
Whenever people are faced with any sort of adversity... they tend to gravitate toward things that make them comfortable, and things that they feel are important.
I am actually going to two therapists right now. I don't know, I actually feel like therapy has just made me more uncomfortable.
I was brought up with considerable discipline, and I was taught it wasn't proper to display certain very private emotions in public.
When I am out and about I feel watched. It's become second nature. The only time I get to be private is in my work. That is when I liberate the ego. The blessed-out sensation of liberating the ego.
Picture being forced to talk endlessly about your feelings and listen and care when what you needed was just to get something done.
I can't imagine having a real personal thing, like divorce and marriage, all those things, being in the public eye. I try to not talk about anything personal, and then nobody has the fire to throw back at you, like 'You said this back then!'
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