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@sb12062 жыл бұрын
Limerance is certainly a type of depression. I think I have dealt with it on and off my entire life. It was always my escape in my mind, a place I could go where someone “perfect” might treat me well. It led to so much pain and heartbreak and honestly I think kept me from healthy relationships with others and with myself.
@Sweet_Hart2 жыл бұрын
Yes dreamed of the perfect person too
@ashleeskhan40752 жыл бұрын
Oh dear, I understand this totally. 😥
@AbigailRamos2 жыл бұрын
@@innervoice3009 i88df Df F
@pandoramoore37942 жыл бұрын
Same for me x
@Lazy-bliss2 жыл бұрын
Yes. It happened to me too.
@FullMoonHowl10 ай бұрын
In my experience, limerance is depression in disguise. It's a hiding place you make all shiny and decorate any way you want, the way you can't do anything else. It's basically weaving yourself the prettiest of spider webs, never realizing you're the fly.
@bradhaines31427 ай бұрын
i dont like that. it makes too much sense. so many levels of bad
@Shooko7 ай бұрын
That's poetic 🥲🖤
@sarahmiller24136 ай бұрын
damn. bars.
@anubhutirauthan24316 ай бұрын
Beautifully written
@Serenity_now135 ай бұрын
It makes sense now
@MacyPooh196 Жыл бұрын
I just want to be important enough for someone to want to be with me. Not to just be “interested in” and then forgotten about. I just want connection and romanticize interactions. I just want things to be real but the only way it’s real is to imagine it.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
Trauma-driven thinking can be discouraging. But never forget: Healing is possible! If you haven't already, try Anna's free Daily Practice. It is the technique that led to Anna’s own healing, and she uses it to this day. bit.ly/CCF_DailyPractice Nika@TeamFairy
@di34862 жыл бұрын
After being free from limerence, at last, I hope I NEVER feel that awful feeling ever again. I wouldn’t trade this peace for anything!
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Well said! -Cara@TeamFairy
@RoadRunnergarage85702 жыл бұрын
I hope I NEVER FEEL IT AGAIN EITHER!!
@nimrodgrrrl2 жыл бұрын
Thank you, this gives me hope
@jo3552 жыл бұрын
I wouldn't wish it on my worst enemy
@Irene-ls5wf2 жыл бұрын
Having that freedom is everything! So much clarity and being able to be present!
@nicolepasekagrundmeier Жыл бұрын
Poets have written about this exact concept, although it’s usually romanticized as unrequited love. I remember sitting in a high school A.P. English class in 1999. We were told to read “I Find No Peace” by Sir Thomas Wyatt. The teacher called on several students. No one could correctly interpret it. Our teacher was getting extremely annoyed. I raised my hand and explained it. I understood the poem perfectly because I had lived it. Limerence was my escape from a childhood of abuse, including a grandparent who sexually abused me. “I find no peace, but all my war is done …”
@marciasloan534 Жыл бұрын
You write beautifully
@nanimick1 Жыл бұрын
I had similar experiences and limerence served me well back then. It is such a relief to be able to see it now through adult eyes and with the knowledge I can let it go and find other beautiful ways to walk my journey as a grown up.
@ScoutGrey11 ай бұрын
Peace be with you.
@outtamykk187410 ай бұрын
wow
@MHcp810 ай бұрын
Reminds me of the time I worked as a stagehand on a rare Sondheim musical called Passion, which is an adaptation of a 19th century Italian novella called Fosca. The main character (the titular Fosca) very obviously suffers from limerence, as well as C-PTSD. All of my colleagues completely misunderstood and derided this one character, but I related so much to Fosca that I was inspired to read the original story. I could understand her and her motivations completely and thus have empathy for her rather than instant derision and mockery. The fact that none of my colleagues had empathy for this character really goes to show the abnormality and isolation of having this trauma.
@kat95872 жыл бұрын
“Limerence is like a depression” - wow, that hit me hard
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for listening! -Cara@TeamFairy
@audrablue5152 жыл бұрын
Watching this video made me realise I suffered from limerence most of my life. My parents were both narcissists and they constantly fought and treated me and my sisters badly. Physical abuse, mental and emotional abuse. My mother was always angry and taking out her misery on us and neither of my parents showed us any love or affection or support or compassion. As a female child, not getting love and support from your dad wounds you ways you can't imagine. As an adult and an impressionable teenager, I always locked onto any potential romantic partner with laser vision and would do anything for them. Always trying to get them to like and love me. Which they never did because I was desperate and lonely and insecure, so they would use me and leave or make me promises they never kept and disappeared into their own lives. I would constantly put my life on hold while I waited for them to come back and offer me everything. Always believing their lies, listening to songs that reminded me of them, watching romantic movies and daydreaming about how that could be us. I would give men sex to make them stay and moulded myself into whatever type of personality I thought they wanted so I could be their "perfect" woman. Of course, none of that worked and I just ended up alone and heartbroken but doomed to repeat the pattern over and over again. My last romantic relationship ended up being with a narcissist. I allowed myself to be strung along for about 10 years. Being devalued and verbally abused and lied to and kept in the dark about everything while he gave me scraps of scraps and promising love and marriage and a life I'd only seen in movies. It was my sister who asked me if I'd like to go on a personal healing journey with her, and I said yes. Just before the pandemic hit, we began trying to heal the wounds of the past. We started with Louise Hay's teachings and moved through others who spoke to our souls and each day we worked through our childhood issues and the wounds inflicted on us by our parents and past lovers. After a lifetime of chasing men to love me and fill the void inside me, I discovered nobody can do that, you have to love yourself and fill that void yourself. I found being creative helped: painting, sewing, knitting, adult colouring books, gardening and constant application of forgiveness and gratitude and giving to myself all the things I was looking for externally. Love, acceptance, forgiveness, respect, compassion, support - all those things must be given to yourself first or you'll never be able to attract that in any external relationships, And then a strange thing happened. By doing all that for myself, I found that my need/desire for a romantic relationship completely disappeared and I felt happier and more at peace than at any time in my life. Now, I'm truly happily single and flourishing. Being compassionate and kind comes easy now but it's a daily application of my beliefs and the things I learned. Control what you think - you can change your perspective to see the world as a good place but it takes daily work. Listen to your feelings - if you're feeling anything negative, that's something that needs attention to get you back to being in a peaceful calm state. I'm not perfect, I slip and get annoyed and angry and have uncharitable thoughts. But the contrast between that state and the usual happy calm state I'm in is so great that it's loud alarm in my head now and I immediately tend to the management of my emotional life. Because my perspective has changed, I'm attracting lots of amazing things into my life and all the negative people and situations I experienced before don't appear any more because my vibrational energy is such that it's impossible for them to be in my life. As far as romance goes, I'm open to the idea but not pursuing it because I come first in my life. If there is to be someone in the future, it will be a normal natural adult relationship instead of the romantic, unrealistic fairy tale I used to crave. And if he raises any red flags, it'll be "thank you, next". Thank you for this video, it's just another piece in the puzzle that has been my life to date. And for that, I'm thankful to you.
@maylin1986 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this thorough comment. I appreciate the hurdles you conquered in your life just to have that balance you needed to find peace from the chaos of Limerance. I hate to hear how much pain you had to experience, but I'm glad you were able to push through and get your life back. I'm proud of you. 🩷✨️ I've taken a screenshot of this message because I want to keep to look back on for ways to stay resilient. So, thank you.
@nadulamb4141 Жыл бұрын
So proud of you 👏
@marquistf1996 Жыл бұрын
Thanks a bunch for sharing your powerful story. It was very moving and I'm glad you did the work to be in a happier place. So proud of you ❤
@NehaSharma-777 Жыл бұрын
This is the most awesome comment on KZbin ever
@wtftina3176 Жыл бұрын
Agreed beautifully written. Congratulations on getting to the other side of this.
@Cowface2 жыл бұрын
Hearing that once limerence gets its claws into a relationship it kills any chance of friendship in the future is so sad to hear. Not only do we have to grieve the relationship that never happened (the full closeness we fantasized about), but we also have to grieve the loss of the relatively limited friendship and closeness that we actually did experience with the person.
@RichardJamesMendoza2 жыл бұрын
wow this hurts
@teddlyt2 жыл бұрын
You just described EXACTLY how I feel.
@luisaritosa9700 Жыл бұрын
The friendship has a chance if you can in some way overcome the limerence, if it's even possible...
@genussmensch4683 Жыл бұрын
That sentence did hit hard for me too.
@Cowface Жыл бұрын
@@genussmensch4683 yea, but now here I am 5 months later, and I’m ok with it. I never really wanted to be friends with her, I wanted to date her. Having her as a friend would just be painful. It would hog up too much of my emotional bandwidth, leaving me less available for other people who may come along. It still hurts and may hurt forever, but I grew so much as a result of that pain, I’m still grateful that it happened.
@astridfeline742 жыл бұрын
Wow I'm not alone. I always referred to this as "unrequited love", never knew there was a psychological term for it. It would be nice to have something real & reciprocal some day.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
So glad you're here, sending you encouragement! -Calista@TeamFairy
@dixienormous69692 жыл бұрын
That would be the nicest thing, to have someone love me as much as I love them.
@freddyperla7944 Жыл бұрын
@@dixienormous6969 I have that. But the situation is so fked. I'm married, mistress is 12 yrs younger and she's living with her bf. I love her, and I think that she loves me although she won't really express that verbally but she does show it and she's made tremendous effort to see me. But my life is a mess and she deserves a better man. Not sure which situation is worse tbh.
@57andstillkicking Жыл бұрын
@@freddyperla7944 That’s actually the same thing- depression is motivating your decisions.
@tinyking1110 ай бұрын
I felt this. 💯 I definitely have this feeling. I want reciprocated love so bad. It sucks not experiencing a real relationship especially as an adult. I crave it.
@christinelitvak64272 жыл бұрын
In addition to my childhood trauma being a catalyst for limerence, I also experienced a fantasy about romantic love brought on by the popular media of the time. Growing up in the late 50's and early 60's, I read stories and watched movies with the Disney princesses finding their prince and similar stories on TV of idealized love, heard endless streams of love songs on the radio, and heard the teenagers around me talking about going to the prom, and older girls planning their wedding. It all set me up. I never understood that love is an everyday kind of thing that is actually sometimes boring because you have to do it even when you don't feel like it. I am blessed with a wonderful, understanding husband who has made his decision to love me - in an everyday kind of way, every day. So, as I recover from my childhood trauma, I am discovering the real meaning of love.
@Juliss4jul2 жыл бұрын
YES. Thank you for sharing this. I think we don’t speak enough about that romantic love myth and what it does to us. I am so very happy for you, that you can experience real love.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
How beautiful! -Cara@TeamFairy
@GreasyBaconMan2 жыл бұрын
A reasonable, realistic kind of love. No sensationalism!
@patriciastewart25372 жыл бұрын
Christine Litvak, Yes! The Feminine Mystique. Ozzie and Harriet! Programming! We ARE enough!
@returnoftheromans67262 жыл бұрын
That is so sweet! And yes, Disney actually did set us up for lots of failures as women. Who, after all, would just go marry a random stranger after being awakened by a kiss from them ahem, (Snow White!) Also, High School Musical was no better.
@cristinadoronzo99282 жыл бұрын
"nothing can replace what we lost when we were babies" hard words to hear but necessary... Thanks for this...
@stefaniakonstantinidou981 Жыл бұрын
Jesus can replace it and heal you. All you have to do is ask. He did it for me and He can do it for you
@57andstillkicking Жыл бұрын
@@stefaniakonstantinidou981 Yes!!!😊
@swethaprethyu5338 Жыл бұрын
That means we can't heal properly ourselves?
@presentfuture7563 Жыл бұрын
@@swethaprethyu5338 It does NOT. In fact looking to external saviors is how some of us got into this mess. It triggers so much anger in me when I come across this kind of saccharine Christian proselytizing on self-help channels, because some of us were traumatized due to our childhood indoctrination, e.g. the self-loathing messages we received from doctrines like original sin, and the fact that "Jesus" or "God" was in fact *our first unavailable limerant object.* I cannot believe people still aggressively peddle this destructive scam to hurting people. I can't wait for the day that Religious Trauma Syndrome makes it into the DSM as a recognized disorder so people stop treating all "faith" as benign.
@joanneedwards563010 ай бұрын
Nobody can love like our Heavenly Dad and pressing into His love and realising what His Father heart goes through for us I think can heal our hearts here before we get to fully appreciate the depth of it when in His presence.
@asprr4852 жыл бұрын
I've experienced limerence a couple of times and I didn't know it was until I've found your videos. I hate that I'm always so intense and can't just like someone, I immediately put them on a pedestal and their actions are the only indicator of my feelings: they are nice to me: I am happy. They act distant: I feel total blackness in my gut. The second someone shows interest me, I walk into the fire , but that interest often comes from manipulation and love bombing, so you'll end up with depression and a broken heart either way :")
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
It takes work to change this cycle but you can do it :) -Cara@TeamFairy
@asprr4852 жыл бұрын
@@CrappyChildhoodFairy Thank you :)
@crystalthrower8982 жыл бұрын
Omg @goddarn you described how I operate perfectly. Being aware of what is actually happening psychologically inside of me and course correcting with my internal narrative helps quite a bit. Good luck on your healing journey. ❤
@rebbitlover2 жыл бұрын
hey its my story..I experienced exactly same but now everything is very different I started vauing myself and putting myself on "pedestal". I put boundaries with everyone doesn't matter who even with family members. I don't rush 'Liking" or "loving" someone anymore. You should definilty try self love hypnosis it will heal you so fast.
@asprr4852 жыл бұрын
@@crystalthrower898 We're all in the same boat! Thank you, good luck on your healing journey too❤
@lynns8057 Жыл бұрын
Limerence = depression. I've had it since I was a young girl., and its exhausting. You've walked through hell, and when you speak, it's from the heart. Thanks ❤
@deidreritter11652 жыл бұрын
I’m just here to offer Sophie some love and virtual hugs because she didn’t deserve the life she had growing up.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
How kind, thank you! -Cara@TeamFairy
@FeyCopse Жыл бұрын
This made me cry, its so beautiful to acknowledge that like you did
@ellenhendricks46062 жыл бұрын
I have always kept journals, since before I could even write. I went back and read my journals from age 9-19, and they were all filled with romantic idealizations of boys. By age 20, it had spiraled into an addiction. I think it was a coping mechanism, something to focus on as a substitute for my narcissistic father. Now I am trying to process the grief of a father who completely cut me off emotionally when I was "bad." There's no heartbreak like that.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Great you're now doing the work! -Cara@TeamFairy
@hana.92712 жыл бұрын
Similar situation to me I thought I fell in love when I was 11, was just limerence. Been struggling obsessing over guys ever since. I had a narcissistic mother who I don’t speak to anymore.
@annemurphy80742 жыл бұрын
So painful, but such important inner work.
@sofiehoflack27062 жыл бұрын
Wow. I have same kind of. Is it possible to channel all thid energy into something beautiful?
@suzie_1552 жыл бұрын
So true, this happened to me too.
@Clearlight2012 жыл бұрын
Sophia (or Sofia) I'm a monk, ordained for 26 years. I agree with Anna what you are going through is very normal although I know it's difficult and painful. Even for ordained people we sometimes go through periods of sorrow and longing just as everyone else does. At times when we're in pain inside it's natural to long for healing from something or someone outside ourself. The truth is your path will get you through this and your peace and inner wellbeing will come back. Your vocation as a nun is wonderful and special and not the cause of this, as Anna has pointed out. Go through this as best you can and on the other side of the pain is more peace than you have felt before. I really appreciated how compassionate, empathic and caring Anna's response was and how supportive she was of your vocation. Blessings and prayers for you, and everyone.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@aishwariyasweety24332 жыл бұрын
thank you for being kind to sophia as well. this is what we need.
@mayb12182 жыл бұрын
Well said Father, I second that. ❤
@imagismus Жыл бұрын
I've spent my entire childhood in my imagination, and my teenage years in a constant state of limerence. A deep seated fear of abandonment and this permanent identity void was mostly at the root of this. I will not elaborate on my life's circumstances, but I can say that today, while in my first stable, safe and healthy (yet passionate!) relationship it felt definitely scary at first. It was way out of my comfort zone: there is no obsession, no drifting off to my fantasy world. It's definitely a process to build a sense of safety in yourself because it's a years long coping mechanism, but once you start getting there, you START getting there. I know I started healing when my emotions stopped swinging between extremes (with no medication), and when this need for an obsession ceased. Well-explained video!
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing! Glad you're hear and healing. Nika@TeamFairy
@BrendaSmith-f4q11 ай бұрын
I would love to talk to you . I’m going trough a breakup of a boyfriend and friend and it’s like I’m obsessed with them . I have had so many broken relationships that I think I will never have a good one and even if I do I will probably sabotage bc I’m afraid of getting hurt again
@PriyaOltikar10 ай бұрын
My life's story. But the difference being I had a plutonic obsession with a sibling. But all this is in the past. I am at a happy place now.
@ailyvievie0910 ай бұрын
How to overcome this ??? I’m aways depressed so I NEED to go to the fantasy world otherwise I’ll die of sadness
@Gracie.Gardener2 жыл бұрын
Ugh, I’ve struggled a lot with limerence in life. It’s really soul crushing and I’m so glad I’ve worked to heal that part of me. The worst of it was after my dad died and I ended the abusive relationship I was in. I fantasized about and idealized someone I met online. It was easier to believe the fantasy than the huge red flags that he was probably not a great person (for me) and not at all interested in building a relationship with me. Now it’s hard to believe that I was so hung up on him. I am engaged to a wonderful guy who shares my feelings and it feels so good!
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Victory! -Cara@TeamFairy
@Sweet_Hart2 жыл бұрын
Wow. I could have written that fact pattern myself. Dont want to say I’m out of the woods yet but feeling better as well. Also, Congrats!
@bev97082 жыл бұрын
Congrats Gracie!!!! ❤️
@chosenqueen51092 жыл бұрын
Wow 💚 ... I hope to be in a great relationship one day instead of fantasizing & cyber-stalking 🌞 How did you heal?
@Gracie.Gardener2 жыл бұрын
@@chosenqueen5109 thanks for asking! I started investing in myself and loving myself. I did a lot to improve myself so I’ll try not to overwhelm or bore you! It started slowly with more exercising and reviving my hobby of painting. I tuned into my spiritual side with meditation and affirmations. I healed my attachment from fearful (disorganized) attachment to secure attachment. I learned to love and nurture my inner child. I developed better boundaries and I forgave myself for all the stupid stuff I’ve done. I cut out everything I could that was toxic. I accepted loss for what it was, instead of chasing after the idea that people or situations should be different or better. I also had ‘princess pamper days’ where I bought a perfume, cooked a healthy but indulgent meal, gave myself a massage, had a bubble bath with champagne and wore lingerie to bed and made sure I was so happy that I didn’t feel like I needed anyone else. On my worst days I forced myself out of bed, put on a pretty dress, did my hair and go for a long walk. I held my head high, smiled at everyone I met and told myself I had value and I deserve better. Slowly I noticed improvements in myself and I felt the need to obsess about other people to lessen.
@JIRH9222 жыл бұрын
I never knew what to call limerence. I never even felt like I could talk about it to my therapist, that’s how ashamed I was. Thank you.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
You're welcome! So glad you're here :) -Calista@TeamFairy
@krystalhoekzema25782 жыл бұрын
"You're just human, your humanity is beautiful, and i accept you" God i wish i could hear that more❤
@krystalhoekzema25782 жыл бұрын
God I am grateful for finding your channel... your talks are so grounding and helpful... blessing and luck find their way to you for helping so many people.
@reihannahherring8605 Жыл бұрын
She relied on him for happiness since he helped her grieve her mother's loss. She developed an attachment.
@Ursaminor312 жыл бұрын
You are more than a therapist, you have walked through the fire Anna many times, you speak with authentic wisdom and a purity of Conscious compassion. Thank you.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for supporting the Fairy :) -Cara@TeamFairy
@debramarie85212 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@mshara12 жыл бұрын
Controversial opinion: She should leave the nunnery for a period.
@biondna7984 Жыл бұрын
Amen.
@stefaniakonstantinidou981 Жыл бұрын
I can t say I m pious nor do I lead a devout sacramental life. All I do is try to keep the commandments, many times I fail but I make sure I send blessings to my enemies ( people who might offend me or sth), I ask God to give me forgiveness for those who have hurt me and forgive me for my sins. Maybe the key is to not think u r perfect, to try and see who u r hurting in every day life( maybe unknowingly). Many times we yell at our spouse or our kids and we think it s OK. Well it s not, bc we r hurting others. We need to try to accept others with their faults,just like we have faults, they have too. And I ask God specifically for what I want in my prayer. For example, I ask for joy ( as I was getting up depressed). Some things happened to me quickly, some others happened gradually, like my relief from anxiety and healing from nervous breakdown happened to me gradually
@ebbyc18172 жыл бұрын
The gap left by her mother needs to be filled. All she needs is love,.., validation. All any of us need is love.
@ricabenita1379 Жыл бұрын
"...you give love to so many people, you're a friend to all, a mother to all..." But who gives love to her, support to her? Who's a mother to her? Here's someone who did seem to give her the support she needed, the friendship she needed...
@lorainisrael6 ай бұрын
Very good point, she might find healing in building some relationship where someone else would take care of her, an appropriate relationship, for instance: an older nun.
@roamingroadtrip56965 ай бұрын
Exactly! I loved that part, too.
@GabeCoolwater2 жыл бұрын
I've been obsessed with someone for a year now and it really hurts. I want to stop it, but don't know how... It's making me feel miserable. My childhood was definitely a bad experience. Neglected and bullied by one of my parents, and the other didn't protect me... even other family members knew about it and did nothing to help me. I don't trust people...
@jovenusdivine5032 жыл бұрын
I guess I'm here because I don't have that obsession anymore
@pebblebrookbooks48522 жыл бұрын
Ya I used to have lots of crushes in my teen and college years. Oh that's what that was! 😅
@user-jr8fg1wk7e2 жыл бұрын
Me too!!!
@MaRiAm9362 жыл бұрын
Does ist suddenly disappear? I have been in limerence for two years and a half and it makes my life like a hell
@pebblebrookbooks48522 жыл бұрын
@@MaRiAm936 no you just gradually get interested in other stuff...
@ProudEve12 жыл бұрын
How did you get rid of it??
@basicbase7492 жыл бұрын
When you’re no longer excited by all the sweet conversations that a teenager would be, and when you see the mismatch between actions and words, know you’re healing. Thank god I worked on my childhood issues this year and learnt so much about them that I have dodged bullet twice with two guys recently when I saw the patterns. I feel free and liberated from the need to seek emotional validation from another person, especially by falling for below average guys who never had anything to offer, except sweet talks
@NehaSharma-777 Жыл бұрын
Wowww truee
@TesIaNikola10 ай бұрын
I can’t relate at all to the childhood troubles. My parents were and are excellent people. Yet this term limerance describes my life. It is comforting to know that this is established and studied, that I’m not alone in this. I feel like I’m incomplete, and I entertain the idea that if I were with someone, life would be more worth living, even though ironically I feel that I’m incapable of having a relationship, as I’m not a whole person.
@Shortstacksandticktacks7 ай бұрын
Did your parents put you in daycare as a baby, or put you through sleep training as an infant, leaving you for hours alone? Would they be honest to you if they did that?
@lorainisrael6 ай бұрын
It does seem contradictory to claim that you have excellent parents (not just normal good parents) and yet you feel like you are not a whole person and you are not capable of love. Something is missing in this story. Where is that missing part of you? Maybe look into disassociation, see if you ever experience it.
@berniebarclay21832 жыл бұрын
Limerance has fogged me my whole life. Working on it. Thank you Anna.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Don't give up :) -Cara@TeamFairy
@krisscanlon40512 жыл бұрын
For me it's an addiction and old kid wounds...healing after awhile and no contact set me free. I feel so much better 5 years later. Don't look for unavailable ppl and dangerous liaisons is my lesson
@donpeace8942 жыл бұрын
Dangerous liasons ... How true is that ? That's it with me every time... And the obsession is more than I can bear 🧸🧸
@krisscanlon40512 жыл бұрын
@@donpeace894 Well for me it was always dangerous liaisons...literally got into all forms of emotional and financial danger due to these liaisons. I'm a recovering alcoholic and ACA so I reframe everything through these lenses. Not sure where you are exactly at although I wish you the best.
@donpeace8942 жыл бұрын
@@krisscanlon4051 I'm better thank you. Much better. I wish you the best also
@miraclestivender651 Жыл бұрын
You mean emotionally unavailable people are the worst
@PieTalle11 ай бұрын
5 years later!!!!! OMG!!!!😭😭😂
@meropale Жыл бұрын
I've done this for so much of my life. So many of my relationships are just fantasies that happen in my head.
@legibitiqua2 Жыл бұрын
I've been limerent, and now I'm at a place where I can actually hear about it and not feel anxious because I see the light at the end of the tunnel. This year I've been on a journey of remothering myself, forgiving my parents for the ways I felt my upbrnging contributed to my attachment style and my thinking around love. This is the first time in my life where I feel like I can be single and not longing and longing for a healing love. Because the job of healing is mine and a lover isnt magically going to fix everything in my life through their love. Mending and rebuilding a genuine love for myself is the best healing I could ever do and that I've been doing. When I get into my next relationship it'll be with a person who treats me well because I know how to treat me well feels like. I will not self abandon, I will show up with integrity and give from a place of love and not desperation to be loved.
@Ontheroadofhealing Жыл бұрын
Your comment literally describes my current mindset. Having been married to an emotional unavailable man for 9 years. Then, being limerent to someone who displayed the same traits short after getting divorce. I found out about limerance, attachment styles, unhealed childhood wounds, and everything makes so much more sense now. I'm currently enjoying a relationship with myself, which I'd never had and giving myself all the love I didn't give myself before nor did I get from my parents and my ex-husband. As an adult I should no longer depend on others for my emotional needs to be taken care of.
@doyouknodewae170910 ай бұрын
I’ve connected with your comment so much because I feel I am on this journey currently. The more I learn about limerance, childhood wounds and loneliness, the more I can be aware and correct these coping mechanisms. It’s hard honestly, I’m going to have to learn how to love myself as well. But I’m looking forward to seeing that light at the end of the tunnel😊
@maelledk85492 жыл бұрын
I just got back to my house after a night over at a guy's place. We met 6 months ago, became friends and I started liking him/seeing him differently a few weeks ago, told him and we discussed it before anything physical happened. It's the first time ever I haven't been idealizing, romanticising and obsessing over someone. Things went softly and peacefully and I'm really proud to have come to this point. Thank you for your work and great content ☀️
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Yay! -Cara@TeamFairy
@turquoise-flower Жыл бұрын
Im a very spiritual person and I think maybe sometimes the decision of being a nun (I wanted that) is a way to justify the fear of being abandoned. Is a beautiful place to service others and give love but maybe because of our fear to be rejected or abandoned, we decide to be “unable” to others. Sophia is very brave in identifying and addressing her situation. Blessings for both of you, Sophia and you, and everybody that reads this message. You are Gods tool for healing in this world ❤
@anthonyfiducia8 ай бұрын
Praying for you sister, it’s happened to me, it takes a while to feel better, resting in prayer helps a lot, also try finding a therapist to talk to, that helps too.
@idwolfshow17272 жыл бұрын
I've always been this way, and I feel like I take so much longer to heal. I've pushed everyone away. My anxiety is crippling and I'm one week away from being homeless. That's just the tip of the iceberg. I feel nothing but shame and it's reinforced by the few people left in my life. Social support is an enigma to me. It causes so much pain. 😭
@lisacurtis81622 жыл бұрын
Search for the light. God, safety(emotionally) and love ( not from a man) are there, close. Sometimes you have to search for a while. God bless you.
@sarahalessa782 жыл бұрын
You can do this. It's going to be so hard at times but you are able to get through it. One step at a time.
@thembekamajola56022 жыл бұрын
🌻sending you bunch of hugs and healing energy.
@thembekamajola56022 жыл бұрын
🌻sending you bunch of hugs and healing energy.
@thembekamajola56022 жыл бұрын
🌻sending you bunch of hugs and healing energy.
@reatcas8 ай бұрын
I just figured out couple years ago about me suffering this phenomenon, I've learned gradually about it and fortunately I took very logic decisions in my life going against my feelings and everything had turned out great, I'm father of two beautiful girls and I'm with a woman who really loves me, I'm grateful for that. Anyway I know that I'm really fucked up in the head as I'm still always thinking about a girl I fell in love back in 2013 but I've learned to live with it. Human brain is certainly amazing.
@squreshi84132 жыл бұрын
Nuns are people too! As many of us here I can relate. I have a toddler, and it saddens me every day that my mother was so negligent of me at this age. And older ages. And all the abuse from her and others. The limerance in my head gives me shame inside. This channel is changing my life. Best of luck to the Sister!
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Appreciate you sharing! -Cara@TeamFairy
@snhbaclvrj22462 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this video!! It makes so much sense. Im not sure if this falls into limerence exactly but I had a very lonely childhood and often felt emotionally neglected and lonely, and watching my parents constantly fight made me fear marriage and relationships. I always retreated to imaginings of not only a perfect partner (often based on a fictional character or celebrity crush) and also an idealized version of myself, and my ideal life. It was like my mental sanctuary, to retreat to this “imaginary” life where everything was perfect. It didn’t help that I had attention problems and often daydreamed and couldn’t pay attention in school ( I was good at reading/studying and got good grades so no one noticed). I just feel like because I had this inner “ideal” life that I used as a safety blanket, it prevented me from having real dreams and goals, because 1. I felt like they weren’t realistic or attainable for me and 2. It was easier to use my imagination to have my needs met than to actually go after them or ask for them. It makes me sad because as an adult in my late 20s, I feel like life passed me by and I want to create a better life for myself, and not one that I need to escape from with inner daydreams and idealization. But I also have this learned helplessness where I don’t know where to begin. Thanks to content like yours, I hope I can find my way ❤
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing! Sending you encouragement :) -Calista@TeamFairy
@nishasiyer2692 жыл бұрын
Omg..this is me.. except parents fighting part
@brittanys59692 жыл бұрын
This describes me exactly👌🏾 Are you sure we didn't live the same life?
@snhbaclvrj22462 жыл бұрын
@@brittanys5969 thanks for saying that! I’m glad I’m not the only one :)
@3313xx2 жыл бұрын
Wow, everything you wrote is very relatable. I never really considered myself emotionally neglected, but I did feel lonely and un-seen and misunderstood, and as a result overwhelmed, a lot... But now I do notice some signs of emotional neglect and even slight abuse from my parents. I think what makes it hard for me to really see it is bc my mom always told us about her own traumatic past and how much her parents neglected and mistreated her... How dare we complain, if relatively speaking we had it much better? It seems that whole doubt of my own judgment is a result of gaslighting and emotional abuse...
@eottoe2001 Жыл бұрын
I have mixed views on limerence because what "we" want is pretty much what everyone else wants but never had as children. We have a problem because we don't know how to make it happen with the skills we have because our parents didn't have them. I do think it is love but it is saddled with a lot of hopes and expectations to heal the missing love of our childhood.
@apemayaxx4 ай бұрын
👏🏻👏🏻❤
@redwoods73702 жыл бұрын
I had never heard the word limerance before watching this channel. I have been through this and it took years to pull out of it. Hard years. Luckily he moved across the country and I forced myself to go off Facebook permanently. My heart goes out to anyone experiencing this.
@kzingajimenez28102 жыл бұрын
I cried throughout this entire video. I have dealt with similar circumstances. Sending everyone love who reads this 🙏🏽
@varnishyourboard2 жыл бұрын
Limerance spanning years, coupled with the low self-esteem over her rejection when meeting someone new and then "comparing" them to my limerant object leads to a very lonely life. Thanks for articulating these overwhelming emotions in me!
@sissymarie29122 жыл бұрын
I think what you said about displaced grief is such a big deal. In our heads, as creatures who are primed to look at possibilities and problem solve, there is a scenario where the relationship is possible no matter how unlikely but the situation we're grieving can't be changed. Our traumas have already happened and can't unhappen. The person we've lost isn't coming back. Our mind wants to cling to a possibility for happiness that's tangible whereas healing and happiness are very abstract and difficult to conceptualize until progress has already started happening. Our minds do a better job of recognizing them in hindsight. If we haven't gotten there yet we might have a tendency to cling to that person who's right there in front of us in the now, even if they're not really available in that way.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Well said! -Cara@TeamFairy
@kingkong8974 Жыл бұрын
I have experienced limerance many times throughout my life. I didn't know what it was until last year. I used to let myself get fully immersed in it while dreaming in my sleep. It was great when I was in high school because I was lucid dreaming and creating a world in which I was loved and shown affection
@nandu1770 Жыл бұрын
I've never fell in love. I wonder how some people find love or fall in love easily. I envy them so much while also feeling unblessed.
@indianunicorn014 ай бұрын
I've been suffering it for 11 years! I was completely clueless what's going on. I felt a lot of guilt and shame through these years.It was like a long long punishment in silence. I can't express it in words. I'm probably the longest time holder in it. It proves how poor my mental health is! Now I started accepting my situation. I often cry like a baby.and through this, I healed a lot in this year. Thanks to my mom and dad. They are still with me. I know everyone is not that lucky! Mam, Thanks for your videos. It really helped me identify my problem and work on it.
@135762302 жыл бұрын
This just made me cry because it made me realize my pain and the cause
@tigalbaby10 ай бұрын
“Nothing can replace what which was lost in childhood “. More powerful words are yet to be spoken . I now understand my obsession and am finally reconciling myself to the reality rather than the fantasy . I now realized that as a child I was never loved for who I was but for how much status I could bring to the household. And so I became fixated on the one person who I thought loved me for bring me. An obsession which lasted four decades. Classic limerance! What a paralyzing trap . Thank you for articulating my feelings and analyzing my addiction to this one person . I think I am now free.
@sixthsenseamelia46952 жыл бұрын
Romantic obsession. AKA Co Dependence. Yes, for myself, definitely changed perspectives when change up the view.
@sixthsenseamelia46952 жыл бұрын
💖 Thank you Anna and Crappy Fams Team.
@user-lk1qx7gb5o2 жыл бұрын
Although it's not codependency....quite different. It's a whole other layer of dysfunction.
@lilygarden8910 ай бұрын
No, thats not what co dependence means
@faridaashu2 жыл бұрын
Hey Sophia. I hope you visit this video's comment section once in a while. I'm sorry for your experience, and I pray you get all the guidance and support you need to overcome it. I relate to your story. Particularly crying at the feelings you had when you realised you were limerent. What helped me overcome limerence as a whole was: 1. I engaged my feelings for him. I journaled my feelings for the person, and wrote letters about how I felt to him that I never shared with him. 2. Whenever I was idealising him or what I thought he could give me, I would pause myself and ask if this is something I can provide for myself. If yes, I ask myself how and go ahead and attempt. If no, I put it in prayer, and seek God to take care of it for me. 3. I made a mantra for myself: "Two things will happen. Either I end up with him or wake up one morning and decide he isn't what I want". Being that your a nun, your mantra will be different. Seek the ultimate state that you know is a truth you can achieve, and keep reminding yourself of it whenever the feeling comes up. 4. Grieve your mother's death. Grieve all that you could've had that you never did, and all that you wished you had that you can't. 5. Engage in little things you love for yourself. As a nun, this will be different from my process. However, make room and time for little things that are just for and about you. As a giver, that empty feeling comes from the part of you that's starved for your own attention and care. Direct some of your energy; a moment at a time, a step at a time; to yourself. It will fill up bit by bit, until you wake up one day and it's just an impulse because your system is used to it. It took me 5 years to overcome being limerent as my default. I'm still a work in progress, but I'm able to healthily engage my relationships without being limerent. And the ones that trigger it in me, I'm able to regulate myself enough to stay grounded. I wish you love and the best of all you need. Take care.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing! -Calista@TeamFairy
@sabrinatukaz69110 ай бұрын
No.2 ❤❤❤❤
@jaysee27482 жыл бұрын
Seeing this is showing me, how hard I have worked on myself and how far I have come. I never had a word for that obsession and it's almost like now that I do, it will help me to let go of it entirely. It has been a long and bumpy road, filled with pain and emptiness. Now I'm 40 and I'm finally aware of my wounds and unhealthy attachments. Thank you for your video.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad you are able to celebrate your progress! -Cara@TeamFairy
@susieanderson178210 ай бұрын
Sending love to the letter writer. Hoping your world has more clarity now ❤
@CrappyChildhoodFairy10 ай бұрын
Thank you for your kindness for the letter writer. Nika@TeamFairy
@Olirকথা Жыл бұрын
Most painful feeling to deal with. This made me vulnerable to narcissists and toxic people. I am 47 now and it took me so many years to realise.why I am experiencing this... Too painful. Led to self sabotaging....God gifted me with so many qualities but I didnt do justice to myself. Glad Fairy.... You are saving lives.❤
@biondna7984 Жыл бұрын
I'm amazed there wasn't yet a comment from me here. Your limerence counsel is pure oxygen for me. Limerence flourishing when grief and loneliness are filling life? I feel like the bloody poster child for this: the slow death of my beloved husband after only 13 years, from Alzheimer's; moving 750 miles to care for him full time, leaving behind all professional contacts, projects, and friends; Covid making my isolation complete. This great, gaping wound of a heart. Enter magnetizing hunk who knows his appeal, made his marriage known at the beginning of our work time on an uncommon skill I needed, and my options limited. Then he became my "knight in shining armor" by volunteering to sell my unneeded related equipment, handing me all the cash. My hero! Let's trowel it on even thicker. Why can't we just puke these feelings out to get rid of them? I'm okay; I've honored my own heart, his wife and their bond, even with HIS beckoning verbal tests. We finished last summer and I avoid him. I'm out and about, taking classes, meeting folks, dating "online," meeting a few for coffee. I'm OUT there, and damn it EVERYONE is so drab after him. I'm not giving up; I'm not going to be consigned to anyone's "backup," isolated even more by having to hide myself from his "real" world. Screw THAT; I've seen how wretched that is. It's just hard, for now. Rant over. Thanks. I feel better.
@nycrae Жыл бұрын
I've turned someone down that I was also infatuated with - turns out I wanted the fantasy not the reality. I recognize it's an escape!
@nk1974 Жыл бұрын
Once I got on medication, my limerance went away. I was not neglected at all. I had an imbalance in my brain.
@screentake012 жыл бұрын
Yes, I grew up with emotional neglect from both parents. Thanks for the video.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching! -Cara@TeamFairy
@kateweber83652 жыл бұрын
I have a similar story to Sophia. At two months I was sent to a neighbour to breast-feed for three weeks while my mom was in the hospital. My mom suffered postpartum and depression after complete hysterectomy. The doctors lied to her about taking her ovaries. I was mostly emotionally detached / neglected in my relationship with my mom or emotionally abused by my much older sister. I would love to see a video on the impact of sibling abuse. None of this has been brought to the open In my family, also catholic and mostly in denial. Listening to this video brings my experience to light and sheds importance on it. I have also often been in a state of codependence, depression or Limerence. Reach out to me Sophia if you would like to be a penpal 💕
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for reaching out to Sophia! -Cara@TeamFairy
@月亮-g5f2 жыл бұрын
Yes, I would love to see a video about siblings impact on children too. Thank you for your story, you are very strong 🌻✨
@LoriKLynn2 жыл бұрын
I too would like a video on sibling abuse. I am the youngest of 3 girls and my middle sister was often moody with a quick temper. I idolized her even though she’d beat me up just about everyday of the week and 2X’s on Sunday. All 3 of us grew up in a household with an excessively punitive and emotionally uninvested father who also molested us and (in my humble opinion) a narcissistic emotionally unavailable mother, though I know that term gets thrown around a lot unfairly. As the youngest, I was low man on the totem pole and always felt powerless and had no voice. My middle sister usually took the brunt of my father’s crap bc she was outspoken whereas my older sister and I cowered. But I paid for her unhappiness by being the target of her anger. Funny/ironic side note: I outgrew everyone in my household, including my father. They seemed so powerful back then.
@LoriKLynn2 жыл бұрын
Can that happen? I had a partial hysterectomy (supposedly with ovaries and cervix intact) and I went into menopause immediately. I’ve had nightmares about the idea that perhaps my doc took more than he said he did. I mean, how would I know?! 🥺
@jennyg.77492 жыл бұрын
I would like to see a video on sibling abuse as well. I have 3 older siblings, and there is a 7 year gap between me and the youngest of them. They hated me back then, and I know that had a big effect on me. I don’t blame them though. Our father was definitely abusive, but he liked us all when we were little. (maybe 6 and under?) So, when they were pre-teens/teens and he was being awful to them, he still liked me. They had to have resented me for that. But, when I was a pre-teen, and he was being awful to me, they had all moved out, and I had to deal with him on my own.
@cm89892 ай бұрын
Your advise or words is nothing short of excellent!
@cwolniewicz8852 жыл бұрын
Thank you for putting a name to this very painful behavior. 🙏 I had no idea this was as result of childhood neglect.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Glad you're here! -Calista@TeamFairy
@giannazeringue10722 жыл бұрын
I just want to say thank you for making these videos. From an early age, I grew up in a stressful environment with two very anxious parents who were not at all happy in their marriage. As the tenth of eleven children, I watched my nine older siblings fight anorexia, anxiety, and depression as I grew up. I remembered distinctly the sound of my Dad's voice yelling at my mom or my siblings. To get to the point, I was best friends with a guy as a kid. He liked me and I liked him, and he was my first real friend. We told each other about our feelings when we were just ten years old, and would write each other love notes. His feelings were so strong for me I became frightened ( I know realize I was so afraid because I hadn't had someone openly express how much they cared about me like that) so I cut it off. We grew apart, and I developed crushes on other guys. Those did not last, seeing as my feelings for Daniel began to fester up. Freshman year of high school I acknowledged my feelings for him and told him how I felt. He no longer felt the same way for me. So we went out separate ways. As time unfolded, we became friends again. There was always a tension after that. I experienced severe depression and anxiety through high school as well as a deep "love" for Daniel. All through high school I obsessed over him. I even have the current job at a grocery store because I knew I would be able to be his coworker. Limerence has dictated so much in my life. But I'm tired. I want to be happy. And I can't be happy with limerence. I look him in the eyes and now can begin to say "I want out". I want to actually love someone. And be loved. Not only that, I want to be able to move past my trauma, and not let it have the final say in the thing I hold most dear:my relationships. I plan to move to Colorado this year, and I'm hoping the distance will help. Anyway, just thought ide share. 16 years of limerence does alot of damage. But I want to change. And I haven't always been able to say that
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
So glad you were brave enough to say you want to change, you can do it! -Cara@TeamFairy
@christianemauro22452 жыл бұрын
This is so interesting. I spent most of my life experiencing this. Each obsession was very real and very painful and completely unattainable. Finally I put myself Into therapy because of it and spent many years unraveling lots of childhood programming. We didn’t exactly pinpoint it to your explanation but it’s 100% accurate in my situation and Thank you for posting this connection for others too. I’m now in an amazing real and mutually loving relationship. You can retrain your brain, it’s so much easier now…
@marsovie54562 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video, it had confirmed something that I already kind of knew. 2 years ago I was in the same situation as Sophia, except I'm not a nun. I met a guy online and we became sort of friends with a potential for more but the situation was very complicated. Two weeks after we met my mum died - I had a very complicated relationship with my mum and at times loved her more than anything, but we were kind of estranged before her death. I was surprised cause I didn't grieve much for her. The guy I met filled the void in my heart and although we never met in real life - he lives on a different continent, he was my emotional crutch even though I never talked to him about my loss. Then three months after my mum's death he broke things off and I spent the next 7 months literally feeling like I was in hell. I couldn't even name the feelings - I was in the darkest place of my entire life, felt suicidal to a point where I wasn't sure I'd live to see the next morning. A gaping hole inside me was such that I couldn't see anything but darkness and every day was filled with pain I cannot describe. I was in therapy then but my therapist didn't understand that I was for the first time in my life afraid I might kill myself. And there was nothing that could subside the pain - it was like living in hell, I never knew you can feel this way and I've been battling severe depression since I was 14 - this was a thousand times worse. But nothing could compare to the pain and struggle I was in. Evenings were the worst. There was no escape, I was on my own with nothing but my thoughts. I'd pace my living room feeling like I was going to go insane (literally). It took me seven months till one day I woke up and realised the feeling was gone. Just like that, nothing has changed. It progressively became easier and by the end of the year I was feeling like my old depressed self again - which comparing to how I felt for the first seven months of the year was a blessing. I was never in love with the guy, I knew that. But I bonded with him and became very attached. When my mum died he filled the emotional hole and gave me a sense of safety just through the text messages we were exchanging daily. When he was gone the overwhelming grief hit me with all its force. The loneliness, sadness, depression like never before, all the horrible feelings that have been hiding inside also because of the relationship that I had with my mum when she was alive - all of this surfaced at once. It was the worst time of my life and I have a lot to choose from. To this day I fear that this feeling might one day come back. It hasn't in a year and a half but the fear is still there. I did want to add if Sophia should ever read this that I am now close friends with the guy. We reconnected in a non-romantic way, he is with someone else and I am single. I appreciate him but I've never been in love with him, he is a great person and I am grateful he's in my life. I often develop this strange non-love feeling for different people in my life - even one woman though I am straight, and I can never name it. I know it's not love but some adoring feeling for these people and I feel so empty when they're gone. The video gave me a great insight into what this might be and yes, it's probably just the need for connection and attention that I never had as a child. Once someone gives it to me, even though I know it's the wrong person, I feel good when they're in my life in some way, it's addictive and I find it hard to move on. It's never love but it is literally like a drug - it fills some void in you and you feel whole for a moment, and it feels amazing and then don't want to let go even though you know it's not healthy. Luckily I am a very strong person and in spite of the pain that separation causes I've always made the right decision. The pain at times was excruciating but being with the wrong or unattainable person is painful too. And at least when you leave them alone the pain will last for a while but soon will start to subside; if you choose to stay it will last for as long as you stay and then when things end as they inevitably will, you'll still have to deal with the pain of separation on top of it
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing! Glad you're here. -Cara@TeamFairy
@ambraiezzi50372 жыл бұрын
This is how i feel too. Heartbreak after heartbreak it’s like we are feeling all the pain that we didn’t growing up because of numbness isn’t it. Pain is not bottomless though. Today i’m starting to realise that getting the guys that i love is not the solution. I don’t like to talk of limerence. It’s love what i feel. Thank you fairy of childhood traumas. ❤️
@ambraiezzi50372 жыл бұрын
This is how i feel too. Heartbreak after heartbreak it’s like we are feeling all the pain that we didn’t growing up because of numbness isn’t it. Pain is not bottomless though. Today i’m starting to realise that getting the guys that i love is not the solution. I don’t like to talk of limerence. It’s love what i feel. Thank you fairy of childhood traumas. ❤️
@AR_Sarv2 жыл бұрын
This video is a revelation! It's such a relief to know that my condition has a name, a cause and that there are others who suffer from it.
@rachelsuh83522 жыл бұрын
Exactly how I’m feeling now! It is so nice to have a term for it, and to begin to feel understood.
@carolynsager6069 Жыл бұрын
I know Limerence is hitting me because while shopping or anything that normally relaxes me my mind will start playing love songs. I have been sick so thats why I have not started your chat group yet. It is hard to focus right now. I love these videos thank you.
@NenneN... Жыл бұрын
This really resonated with me. I came to the conclusion myself that when I am ruminating and potentially limerent for people, it's when I am having a mental health crisis. This confirmed that. I am another person who suffered neglect and emotional abuse as a child and early loss of parents. Makes sense for it to be connected. I think this is linked to fearful avoidant attachment style too.
@charmedprince Жыл бұрын
The worst part about limerence is that once you become aware of it, you cannot know anymore the distinction of a potential partner or a limerent object. 😭😭😭😭😭
@really5453 Жыл бұрын
You can definitely do that look for red flags and how they treat you
@MagerialPage2 жыл бұрын
So true. I actually have time for hobbies now.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Thats great! -Cara@TeamFairy
@faithm.895810 ай бұрын
You are prayed for Sophia!!! ❤❤❤
@lilafeldman86302 жыл бұрын
Limerance has been a problem for me for a long time. I have a profound unmet emotional need leftover from my dad.
@mushroommagic16972 жыл бұрын
Yes, yes, yes! When I get limerence I know I am projecting some hidden emotions of mine on a person who does or expresses what I am hiding. (When I get limerent I tend to look at my inside, how I feel, and not at the other person. Because, if I look at the other person, I will get lost in a maze and go crazy or do crazy stuff which I will regret. But if I look inside myself I get to see that it is me projecting a hidden trait of mine on someone else.) It sounds so messed up but it really works for me, to look at myself because I am projecting my own self on someone else when I get limerent. The daily practice helped me do much, journaling and also thinking of things from my own perspective helped me alot with limerence. Also the best help was comparing the illusion person with the real person. And another help was to acknowledge that I like something someone does, like how they speak or how they dress. Thank you for this amazing channel. Sorry for my English, I am not a native speaker.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Your English is great and your encouraging message is loud and clear! -Cara@TeamFairy
@mushroommagic16972 жыл бұрын
@@CrappyChildhoodFairy :)
@ikigai12362 жыл бұрын
Some very good advice.. thank you
@upost-p6m Жыл бұрын
I'm here because I'm currently experiencing limerance. Never knew this terminology 'limerance', until I researched my condition. Videos like this help me sort out my thoughts.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
We are glad you feel supported here :) -Cara@TeamFairy
@Myperspectiveonthat Жыл бұрын
I went through this exact same thing lol. But I’m now going to start going to therapy, working out, eating healthier and being in nature more. I’m grateful because I realised my childhood wounds and I’m working through them. We meet everyone for a reason and I’ve realised rejection is redirection !!! There’s always better out there and a bigger and better picture I just can’t see it right now but I will ❤
@k-t24982 жыл бұрын
Yeah i struggle with this..I never knew this..Was in abusive relationships and it was bad..I latched onto the first guy that showed me the smallest of affection but he wasnt into me and only wanted a good time..My mom was 16 when she got pregnant with me..17 when she had me..She was a kid having a kid..So she was struggling and being a single parent..She also was abused and not supported and so she tried her best..I have the issue of wearing my heart on mt sleeve and ive cried for years over the rejection from the other guy..Ive been single for years because i want to heal and work on myself..I dont feel fit for a romantic relationship because i end up codepemdent..Now i am building myself back up.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Rooting for you! -Cara@TeamFairy
@nursejen11112 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this informative video! I'm 52 and I had an emotionally unavailable mom and a dad that was mostly loving but occasionally verbally and physically abusive. I suffered with limerence my entire adult life and it really is excruciatingly painful. In the past I obsessed over an ex boyfriend for almost 7 yrs every single day! It was all consuming:( what finally healed me was finding an amazing coach on KZbin named Abby Ruston she helped me to heal my inner child basically re-parenting my inner child. Its been so life changing! I no longer obsesss and ruminate in relationships. I know my worth and value now, I understand that the things I experienced growing up had nothing to do with my worthiness. I wish you all peace, love and light on your journey❤
@pkjk125510 ай бұрын
You're almost like the mom that a lot of us never got to have. Thank you for your wisdom and understanding!
@mamat12132 жыл бұрын
I don’t know if anyone will see this months later, but I went thru something similar and I have a faith that I leaned on to get me out of the cycle… I literally could not leave this person alone and all I could do was PRAY with all my heart, to God, to my mom (who had also recently passed) and begged them to help me leave him alone bc I just couldn’t. It worked (so far, it’s been 2 years and I haven’t had a limerance experience)
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing! -Calista@TeamFairy
@Anjali-ct5mx6 ай бұрын
Wow, I call this daydreams ... These are my go to place in every bad situations and , lately daydreaming helps me sleep( start daydreaming as soon as i go to bed and slowly drift off to sleep...all of this makes so much sense now🎐
@adventure_lover27222 жыл бұрын
This video moved me so much. Anna, the way you speak with such compassion, love and understanding for Sophia is just beautiful! I've allowed myself to get caught up in an on-off addictive and co-dependent relationship for the past couple of years. I thought when I met the chap he could be the love of my life, the missing puzzle piece etc. But two years of therapy later, I'm now understanding I'm just longing for the unconditional love I never got from my father. Instead I'm repeating patterns, chasing after this man who blows hot and cold, shows me love and then disappears for weeks/months on end. The cycle is so painful, and today I decided enough was enough - and said I need some space and I can't keep up with the cycles any more. He's left me unread and I'm feeling the full force of the pain. This video was perfectly timed and exactly what I needed to hear. I'm so sorry to hear about your pain Sophia and the passing of your Mum and the empty void you feel. Sending so much love and support, stay strong and one foot in front of the other 💓💓💓
@briannenurse46402 жыл бұрын
So proud of you for recognizing what you needed to do and doing it! I know how hard and how painful it is, but it's also so courageous and so powerful.
@youtubename78192 жыл бұрын
He left you on read because he doesn’t know how to handle your strength, he only knows how to manipulate your pain. Ditch him for good.
@adventure_lover27222 жыл бұрын
@@briannenurse4640 Thanks so much for your kind message Brianne! 🥲 I really appreciate your words of support and encouragement. It's not easy making these decisions hey, but you know it will hopefully be worth it in the long run. It's just so hard walking away and wondering if you've made the right choice. It sounds like you might have been in a similar situation at some point? Sending love to wherever you are in the world 💞
@adventure_lover27222 жыл бұрын
@@youtubename7819 Thank you also for your lovely and supportive message! 💞 Funnily enough, he actually said to me once that he could never be as strong as me 🙃 Funny how someone can tell you everything you want to hear to keep you hooked and as soon as you stand in your strength, you're ignored 🙈
@briannenurse46402 жыл бұрын
@@adventure_lover2722 It will definitely be worth it. The hardest part is right now, sticking to your decision. It gets easier as you reclaim more and more of your power. Stay strong and keep growing!
@simonwilson7581 Жыл бұрын
MY HEART dropped at 2:20 when she read out "I fell in love with someone 17 years...." because I was worried that limerence could last that long.
@c.a.norwood34 Жыл бұрын
It can. Mine is going on 26 years. It’s waxed and waned, but it’s still there, and I think it will always be.
@maragirl16582 жыл бұрын
I experienced limerence for a two year period and was unable to move on until I cut him out of my life completely. I wish you all well and so appreciate this content. I beat myself up for so long and didn’t realize my unhappiness at the time made me vulnerable to this scenario.
@melanieholstra43972 жыл бұрын
because of my childhood I tell my teen I will always be there for her. I will never throw her away. And she can be herself with me. I love your videos!!
@liljohn069611 ай бұрын
Wow. Now I have a word for it. I never knew why I would attach myself to people I knew didn't want me or were no good for me
@igobyjazz2 жыл бұрын
I struggled severely with OCD as well as limerence it was a nightmare. I am just now realizing it has been happening most of my life. Now I realize its unhealthy and not realistic.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
You are on your way to freedom! -Cara@TeamFairy
@EKR12422 жыл бұрын
Such a great video. I learned about limerence a couple years ago and all my behaviors suddenly made sense! Obsessive thoughts about men I would date, creating fantasies when all I was getting were crumbs. I was adopted at 5 weeks old and taken from my birth mother and put in a nursery with probably the bare minimum in care and nurturing. I could relate to Sophia’s story. The good news is I’m better, and have managed to work through the limerence. Sometimes I have to monitor my thoughts with dating but Healing is possible!
@yuk4982 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing your story Elsa. How did you heal yourself...?
@EKR12422 жыл бұрын
@@yuk498 lots of therapy and CCHFairy has been extremely helpful and stabilizing.
@elvansavkl79722 жыл бұрын
I was not adopted but my mom is cold and always she wasobssed with my father who alwasy cheated other and she and my father were always abusiev with horrible words towards me. and they were mirroring their hat and insecurities on me and the all myeline said things which was not true I felt like everything I feared and said or did were wrong ... I am coming from a culture which is oppressive and two-faced. people say one thing and do other...even though alwasy feared things very very conservative , all my life I felt like I was walking around naked so on.. I could not connect with opposite sex . I alwasy had crush to someone from far away. after my divorce , I though I met someone , now I know he was a narsistic charmer. however , I could not forget him... just yesterday and today I was so upset again thinking why this person was not nice to me... I even cried today.
@rul787 Жыл бұрын
How did you do it? What's the fastest way? It's 4 am and i couldnt sleep properly because that someone didn't communicate with me just one day. I hate being like this :c
@Sanskriti_si4 ай бұрын
Thank you so much!!! My mother too was leaving constantly in childhood for months and coming back. She had severe depression and a mental dissorder. I went into the profession of therapist, coach and did not yet connect limerance with the loss of my mother many, many times in life. I can see for years that there is tons of grief. Just have not yet found the way to channel it through the body and let it pass. It is like my subconscious is holding on to the grief so tightly. And writing this brings more clearity, because it looks like that if I could not have my mother I can atleast have and hold on to (her life long grief and) my grief for her. I have not spent much time with my mother, but I do have spent years with the grief for here, so paradoxically this grief is my constant and all that I have from my mom.
@msives11 ай бұрын
What I am struck by is how much empathy you show when reading out and replying to these people. It is truly moving and quite frankly inspiring. Thank you so much for your channel
@CrappyChildhoodFairy11 ай бұрын
Wow, thank you
@gaurav61925 ай бұрын
Oh my god Sofia, I feel for you so much. It hit me so hard I couldn't stop crying. As a man who is currently suffering through limerence myself and recently learning that I have severe C-PTSD and emotional malnourishment, there was a lot I could relate with. But what you had to go through is so much more awful. Although I don't want to pity that. I know I don't like being pitied myself so instead I want to acknowledge how strong you are, to be able to dredge through this and come out on the other side, hold onto that. I'm watching this after a year it was posted so I hope you've been able to find the love, support and peace that you deserve. I assume that as a nun your relationship and understanding with desire might be complicated, but we are human and its ok to have desires and I hope you find healthy ways that work for you to meet them. I don't know why I'm rambling here in the comments and if you'll even read it, but I couldn't stop myself from posting. After having suppressed myself for years and years, I don't want to keep suppressing my emotions now, so I just wanted to relase them through writing. To anyone who is suffering through similar situations, please hold onto yourself. Sorry for the long, emotional post.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy5 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing your kindness! Nika@TeamFairy
@findingfaye285911 ай бұрын
I’m in menopause. All of my whimsical emotions are gone. I have no real libido. It seems like romance is more about hormones. Worried about this because I’d, technically, like to have another serious relationship, and yet, I don’t. 🤷🏽♀️
@mariambatool28525 ай бұрын
Thank God I found this video I was 3 years old when my father left us for work.He moved to another country and visited us for a few months every year.May be that's why I've been craving a loving caring man to be in my life.I've been experiencing such feelings since very young age and now it makes sense.
@gracia130 Жыл бұрын
obsession is not love. obsession is the result of childhood traumas that isn't healed. Healing and forgiveness is very crucial to have a better life.
@glowupjess2 жыл бұрын
I just want to say thank you . I started watching you in 9 months ago, and I’ve made so much progress. I’ve develop self love, boundaries, hobbies… that I don’t suffer from limerence anymore when with a romantic relationship
@dovikachenko30012 жыл бұрын
I am just coming out of limerence for a priest. The scales have fallen from my eyes and I feel like I'm no longer under a spell. My faith is stronger than the obsession but when he did something inappropriate it shocked me that he was capable of it. Worst of all HE lit the match that started a fire in my heart to fall for him and I'm only realising now in therapy that he never intended to love me. He wanted both worlds. Limerence is one of the most destructive states to stay in.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Glad you are getting free of that one! -Cara@TeamFairy
@juliap56352 жыл бұрын
Oh my gosh I am suffering through this now very similar story. How did you get out of it?
@dovikachenko30012 жыл бұрын
I'm currently in the process of making a formal complaint. He will be so shocked but I have to do it so that other women aren't in this position. There is a lot of crying and mixed emotions but i know it will pass. Prayer is a must :)
@dovikachenko30012 жыл бұрын
@@juliap5635 Hi, i how you can get through this, because it doesn't end well with these situations. I confronted him when he started touching my hand when giving me communion. It was so shocking that he would use the eucharist for his own fleshly desire. Keep praying and I'll be praying for you too.
@Filosofodecabrobó Жыл бұрын
You are an adult who got emotionally involved with another adult. Did he force you? Did he abuse you? Why are you going to complain about that? C’mom…would you still complain if he had left his priesthood to satisfy your desires?
@solarqueen25552 жыл бұрын
This guy and I are limerant over each other. It's a very repressed connection and we are either very close or extremely avoidant. Both of us have abandoned wounds. This is really helping me see what's happening.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Glad it was helpful! Sending you encouragement! -Calista@TeamFairy
@queenesreina74242 жыл бұрын
I recently heard a program featuring an author called Lisa Turkhurst (sp?) (I think the book she was being featured about was called Good Boundaries and Goodbyes) and she said something along the lines of, "Mental health is an unwavering commitment to reality." Reality. In light of what I've heard so far in this video, that begins to make more sense. I felt to share it here because it seems connected. I hope it helps 💛🌻
@asmitadhungana3790 Жыл бұрын
Wow! This one line seems so profound!
@Clovergirl143 Жыл бұрын
I am just now learning about Limerence...and it makes SO MUCH SENSE. Every time I would fall in love with people, especially because most of the time they would at least start out as long-distance relationships, I would obsess about them. It was almost as if I couldn't think about anything else. And then because I would have these fantasies about them (which would lead me to believe I was very much in love with them WAY too early), it would greatly contribute to me overlooking red flags. I'm in therapy now trying to work through childhood trauma and this helps me better understand why I felt so obsessive about romantic partners or potential romantic partners. Thank you so much for helping those of us with childhood wounds better understand.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
Glad you are here! Nika@TeamFairy
@Ydce1891 Жыл бұрын
I really admire the woman who wrote in. It takes a great deal of vulnerability to show this side of yourself and especially for a woman of her position as a nun, i wouldn’t expect this level of openness in regards to her emotions ❤
@CrappyChildhoodFairy Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing your support! Julie@TeamFairy
@SikhaB2 жыл бұрын
You helped me the most last year. Actually, your videos made me snap out of my limerence. Made me realise the trauma I had been through but never believed to be true. Now, I feel the opposite. I am kind of averse to dating/relationships, having had such crazy bad experiences. But reading people's lovely stories here of how they went from being limerent to finding someone emotionally healthy and mature gives me hope.
@CrappyChildhoodFairy2 жыл бұрын
Sending you encouragement! Glad you're here :) -Calista@TeamFairy