this post was submitted on 08 Jan 2025
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Expressing your struggles is not the same as romanticizing them. You should self interrogate why you assume they are the same
Because a lot of people I know and see are like "lol I'm a mess" without seeming to do anything to address the situation.
Though that's aggravated by the capitalist hellscape that makes getting health care difficult.
But also I'm less generous about this because it's frustrating to be on the receiving end of someone's crippling anxiety.
And this comic is a cutesy, romanticized if you will, representation of it.
interrogate harder because “I feel impinged on by people with anxiety” is not it lmao
No, it's "I don't think you're doing enough to deal with your problems" first.
This is a pretty common mentality we have to deal with. Someone that doesn't have our problem, downplaying how big of a deal it is because they have never had to put much thought into it. It's a physical difference in the structure of our brain. While we can learn ways to cope with it, we can't ever "get over it". We find ways to minimize triggering it, and ways to ride it out with the least amount of stress. And one of the ways that helps is sharing our struggles with the rest of our community for support, and trying not to care about outsiders shitting on us as we do so.
A lot of the struggles and progress in this area isn't going to outwardly visible unless they decide to share that with you.
I'm aware but worth pointing out. It's easy to forget. Also to forget that our personal experience is not universal.
I had really bad anxiety in my youth. I'd get nauseous. Staying inside alone made it worse. So much worse. Taking the plunge and actually going out, talking to people, engaging, regularly, that lead to progress. Even if it meant throwing up in the bathroom sometimes. But that probably won't work for everyone.
But I guess some part of me has a visceral reaction that's just like "you're making it worse! You're just hiding from the problem and it's never going to get better this way! Just go outside and nothing bad will happen, and you'll stop freaking out eventually!". But that's not everyone.
But yes, to your point, a lot of the time it seems like they're not even trying, and I can't know their inner world. Sometimes they're not, sometimes they are.
I don't think it's an accurate assessment to say "everyone is doing their best" though because some people certainly are not.