The School of Life

How to Overcome Your Childhood

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  • focruhas quoted3 years ago
    A snob is simply someone without an independent centre of judgement, who can only value what the ‘in’ group in society happens to esteem at any point in time.
  • focruhas quoted3 years ago
    ‘There are lots of kinds of intelligence. Mine is fine.’

    Morose

    ‘I have to fix you.’

    ‘I’ll do my best, but I’m not ultimately responsible for your
  • focruhas quoted3 years ago
    Raising voice

    ‘It’s all my fault...’

    ‘This is their issue: I don’t have to feel bad.’
  • focruhas quoted3 years ago
    Patronising

    ‘I’m stupid.’

    ‘There are lots of kinds of intelligence. Mine is fine.’
  • focruhas quoted3 years ago
    Distracted, preoccupied

    Attention seeking: ‘Notice me.’

    ‘You’re busy. I’m busy, that’s OK
  • focruhas quoted3 years ago
    The answer is not to conclude the relationship, but rather to strive to deal with the compelling challenges with some of the wisdom of which we were not capable when we first encountered these in a parent or caregiver
  • focruhas quoted3 years ago
    We may describe someone as ‘not sexy’ or ‘boring’ when in truth we mean: unlikely to make me suffer in the way I need to suffer in order to feel that love is real
  • focruhas quoted3 years ago
    e may be constrained to look away from prospective candidates because they don’t satisfy our yearning for the pain we associate with love.
  • focruhas quoted3 years ago
    Some very real constraints around whom we can love and feel properly attracted to come from childhood
  • focruhas quoted3 years ago
    A sense of not mattering

    Over-achievement
    Development of a False Self
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