S

Supreedha

@supreedha


  • And to live in your own story is to set your own arc — to find your own voice that rings sweetly through the silence. To recognize and accept your desires instead of running from them — whether they are selfish, absurd, mundane. And to accept responsibility for your choices. Choosing who you love. Choosing what you love. Hildegard: we cannot live i
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from internal confidence by Substack


  • Katherine Anne Porter in an interview once said "I made the mistake of thinking I was quite like anyone else, of trying to live like other people. It took me a while to realize that simply wasn’t true. I had my own needs, and I had to live like me.”
  • from internal confidence by Substack

  • from internal confidence by Substack

  • internal confidence

    by Nicole (startingfromnix)

    3 highlights

    Thumbnail of internal confidence

    Personal Development


  • People who are anxious tend to experience limerence more often than people who are not; it bears a lot of similarity to anxious-preoccupied attachment
  • from The Agony of Eros: On Limerence - By Ava - Bookbear Express by Substack


  • It's the feeling of being possessed by desire. When you ask people about being limerent it’s not atypical to hear “It almost ruined my life,” sometimes followed by “I miss the intensity of it.”

    from The Agony of Eros: On Limerence - By Ava - Bookbear Express by Substack


  • It involves compulsive daydreaming about the limerent object

  • It's predicted on uncertainty; when you are sure of reciprocation, it naturally disappears over time

    from The Agony of Eros: On Limerence - By Ava - Bookbear Express by Substack

  • from The Agony of Eros: On Limerence - By Ava - Bookbear Express by Substack

  • from The Agony of Eros: On Limerence - By Ava - Bookbear Express by Substack