Tiptoeing around a fragile mind.

in health •  7 years ago  (edited)

Shhh. Quiet. Don't say a word. Or if you do, be careful what you say.

Is there anyone that you feel you must choose your words for? I think that we all know people that we feel we need to either protect or fear them. Some break down in tears at the smallest perceived slight, some erupt into a rage at the tiniest criticism and some withdraw into themselves like a wounded animal whenever corrected, or lash out like a cobra backed into a corner.

So we tiptoe.

We say that these people are overly sensitive, even passionate but I disagree. If anything, they may be under-developed emotionally, immature. We watch our words with children in an attempt to keep them motivated or not damage their growing sense of self, to hold fears at bay and maintain a curious mind.

Children's minds. We try to keep them open so they can challenge what they know, question their world, discover new and build the skills to solve problems, create a life. We do it this way for they are inexperienced.

But that is not what we are doing with these adults. We fear them. We fear their reactions, their outbursts, their tears. We fear they will do something rash, even become violent or maybe harm themselves. We fear they may breakdown, never run again.

And we tiptoe.

It is not their emotions that cause this but an irrational mind, one that cannot gauge the power of communication, or the strength of their own response. Minds that cannot tolerate being wrong, embarrassment or negative feedback. Those that have no impulse control and no way to evaluate themselves. Minds that warp the world into one where they are always in the role of victim. Omit their persecutions.

Therefore we tiptoe.

We hold back our words and opinions, we hold back our fears and emotions. We hold back our questions and feedback. We hold back anything they could be perceived as a threat, anything they could interpret as an attack. We hold it all back, we hold back ourselves.

We cannot be who we are for who we are offends, our ideas are inappropriate, our words weapons. Our dreams differ, our actions too. We cannot be honest, open. We cannot let them see who we are for who we are will not meet their every expectation. So, we hide ourselves away.

Softly tiptoe.

We create safe zones to protect them, build walls so they feel secure. We wrap them in cotton wool, pat them on the back for the slightest achievement, ignore their bad behaviour and gloss over the tantrums. We adjust everything and ourselves to their special needs and instruct others to do the same.

We give them power and position, status by default. We bow to their every whim as if they are emperors and in a way they are. Who gets such treatment but a petulant child born into privilege, never asked to mature?

Because we tiptoe.

When their backs are turned and their ears out of reach, we talk in hushed tones of their inconsistencies, their rage and depressions. We whisper at how they could be something great if only they could learn to control their emotions, control themselves. Words and understanding nods back and forth are exchanged.

But we tiptoe.

If only they would look at themselves and see, the charade and disconnection, the fantasy they live, the concessions made, the soft gloves used. And, all of the pain they cause others who care for them.

But we play a role also, we stunt their growth. How can they course correct if their compass steers false? How do they know the pain their actions cause when we support them so?

Should we tiptoe?

Taraz
[ a Steemit original ]

One of my greatest personal fears in this life is being a burden on others whether physically, financially and especially, emotionally. I am writing something about this now and remembered this post from 8 months ago that looked at a similar topic but from a different perspective. I figure that perhaps in the comments section I will get a few more viewpoints to add to the coming post and, I also noticed a lot of grammatical errors so I cleaned it up a little.

Authors get paid when people like you upvote their post.
If you enjoyed what you read here, create your account today and start earning FREE STEEM!
Sort Order:  

I wouldn't walk on eggshells to appease someone else's sensitive nature. This only enables their behaviour and ensures you will have to do so more in future.

It is of course different is someone has suffered something worthy of being described as a trauma, be it the death of someone close or another shattering consequence of life. But, when someone is simply like this often, for no reason at all, it is not a great idea to tolerate the behaviour in my opinion.

I also don't think it is the case of an undeveloped mind, but rather an example of the susceptibility of the human mind to programming from our environment. People are sensitive little bitches because they look out into the world or on their TV's and they see so many people moaning, crying or murdering for the most insignificant reasons. So we learn that the shit that doesn't matter matters, and the shit that does matter isn't worth addressing. It's too big. Let's instead focus on how shitty the meaningless stuff is.

Just my thoughts, but nevertheless, this was a great read and very accurate in too many regards.

It is of course different is someone has suffered something worthy of being described as a trauma

Agreed but, there still comes a point where they must come to accept and move on. No one can fix them but themselves.

People are sensitive little bitches because they look out into the world or on their TV's and they see so many people moaning, crying or murdering for the most insignificant reasons

I see this as a symptom of the undeveloped. Actually, poorly developed might be a better term.

Let's instead focus on how shitty the meaningless stuff is.

This is the state of the world. Everything collapsing and people worry about the irrelevant.

I see this as a symptom of the undeveloped. Actually, poorly developed might be a better term.

I see what you mean now. That's actually an interesting way to look at it.

If only they would look at themselves and see, the charade and disconnection, the fantasy they live, the concessions made

I can so relate to this, as it reminds me of someone very close to me...
But they don't see the fantasy, because I believe, at some point, the fantasy becomes to interwoven with their sense of reality and to realize they're living a lie would crush them. Honestly, I think this is a sign of great weakness on someone's part.
A lack of development is exactly the problem, I agree. If they were well-developed emotionally, they wouldn't live in this dream state and would understand that the people who tell them the unpleasant truths do it for their benefit.

Who gets such treatment but a petulant child born into privilege, never asked to mature?

Loved ones. I don't think we would tiptoe and hide the truth for a stranger, because we don't really care about hurting their feelings. It's a paradox, if you think about it - we hide the truth from the ones we love most, whereas it should be the other way around. Love should be epitome with sincerity.

Should we tiptoe?

Yes and no. As you said, these people are weak. They lack the strength to take what we tell them and use it constructively. Honestly, I think we tiptoe because we'd like to maintain a relationship with such people. Also, I think it's too late for some people...as I was saying, they've become too warped in their fantasy to be brought back to reality. They refuse to accept what we tell them as truth.
You've made me wonder why do I tiptoe? For the reasons above, yes, but should I? I shall have to think about it.

I tip toe often because if I didn't there would be an irrational, overly emotional reaction and I simply don't have the patience for it. Sometimes its easier to let people believe their crap and go on with your day.

Definitely. But what do you do when that person is someone close to you? I mean, if it was some random person, I wouldn't care if they believed in an illusion...
But you're right, maybe I should just let people believe their own bullshit and not let it interrupt the flow of my day...

Yes, I tiptoe around them and find a bubble I can snuggle in.

Probably is the reason that after some people spend enough time around other people they just want to live as a hermit.

I also feel it is a spectrum. The tip toe seems to be a requirement. Social dance. At a bare minimum to get along.

If the person in question is positioned in a way that is harmful to the world around them, then the tip toe should turn into a swift kick.

But then there's the bubble echo chambers that can be large and influential. What to do about those....

I don't know if I am making sense right now.

Yes, I understand.. enough :)

The problem these days is that there is so many forums and platforms where people can get their dosages of attention and a near unlimited of people to support their actions. Once some get tired of the continual compromise and move on, they will then run to others and say they were victimised and abandoned.

I deal with a lot of this sort of thing daily.
I have come to question if the person in each event it mentally capable to understand criticism or a difference of opnion.
It is easy to see a small framed figure, and realize that they are not capable of assisting in helping in heavy tasks.
It is not so easy to see a lacking mental capasity. But I feel that they are no more to blame for their short commings than the timy person that cant hold up the couch while I vaccume.

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

I've quite a number of them around me. Sometimes we tiptoe just to keep the relationships. Yes you're right. Perhaps they are not emotionally developed. But when we tiptoe we keep a lot from them. We hide the real us from them thus keeping some truths from them. Sometimes I can't mingle with them
the way I wish to and I still say I Love them...

Love is fearless too you know.

I gradually have to bring them out of this state because it's not healthy for them and me too.

Should we tiptoe?
Love is sincere. I can't tiptoe forever. There has to be a way out.

NICE POST UPVOTE ME

Will it complete you?

THANK YOU FOR 0.38 CENTS YOU KIND SIR !

If you would have said please sir in the first place, I would have given another 19c. But, you called me kind now so...

RESTEEM UPVOTE DONE SIR

Although it's a re-post, I'll give you an upvote! For a few reasons: 1. This is an awesome post, 2. I wasn't around 8 months ago to upvote you at the time, 3. This is an awesome post.

That is all :)


The world has people who can't handle "constructive criticism", or any criticism for that matter.

  • The question becomes: How did these people come to exist?
  • The answer: The last generation raised them this way.

Sure, some people just can't be taught .. but is that really the case? Or is it that the teachers just didn't know the correct way to teach these individuals. Did you post recently about how teachers are not the problem? The students need to be willing to learn? That's true, but the teacher needs to be willing to be flexible in their teaching methods as well.

Yeah, I think it was you. "If you can't do, teach". It's all a learning process for everyone; the teacher, the student, the parents, friends, family, others who we interact with .. everyone is constantly learning about each other (if we're willing to pay attention to our surroundings for a few moments).

So where am I going with this? I honestly don't know :) This was your topic, not mine!

Ok, final thoughts: If we all treat each other with respect and understanding as opposed to worrying about what FOMO we're having because we're in a situation that isn't resulting in any discernible benefit to ourselves, maybe we all would get along better and society would become a little less hateful. Knowledge is power in that we fear what we do not understand. So if we spent more time trying to understand one another, we would no longer have the compulsion to fear one another for our differences.

/endpost

:) Thanks

Yes, guilty, it was me. I agree that the last generation has issues, as does every 'last generation' as they teach for what they know but it will inevitably change. Teaching how to learn makes people more adaptive to the changing environment, therefore more intelligent. this would also provide a deeper level of situational awareness including how we affect our surroundings too. A continual self-check to make sure that what we are doing is what is best in the moment.

You are 100% right here and we need to stop tiptoeing for so many reasons. There are plenty of people in our society that have been sheltered and coddled and now can't handle reality and they need some tough love, not only for the sake of our society as a whole but for those of us that are forced to tip toe, unable to be open about who we really are. People need to begin to understand that other people are not responsible for their emotions. We are all responsible for how we feel. How we handle stress, whether it be our jobs, school, debt, crowds, or controversy, is completely within our own control. We simple need to refuse to tip toe any longer.

How we handle stress, whether it be our jobs, school, debt, crowds, or controversy, is completely within our own control.

So many think that they handle stress well... until they are in stressful situations

@tarazkp Takes great courage nowadays not to tiptoe. People tend to do it to avoid isolation, scared of loneliness.

I do it because I am scared that the people will do something silly to themselves or others. Emotional instability nearly always leads to loneliness as there is only so much people are willing to put up with, even when they care. It is up to the individual to sort this out though but more and more, very few are willing and instead blame their state on others.

I see you. That's an even more responsible and mature view on the issue and what impressed me the most in your post in the first place. Thank you for this insight.

I was in a relationship for a very long time with someone that required tiptoeing all over. You think you are doing it because you care about the person but ultimately you aren't forcing them to improve themselves and you are only building resentment, until you can't hold it back any more,

People with mental health issues deserve love and it's ok to have a relationship with them. You can be sensitive and supportive of them. But just as you need to be supportive of them, they have a duty if they are choosing to be in a relationship to work on managing their issues. If they aren't willing or are unable to then the relationship can quickly become toxic and abusive.

Follow me also please!

Don't I already?

No :(
Also, we shouldn't tiptoe... Being a "good citizen" sucks ..
We can be good to each other AND have emotions.

I corrected that.
Yes, no problem with emotions but they are personal which means the decision to show or not is up to the individual. A lack of control means unnecessary harm inflicted on others, even if later we regret it.

I'm guilty of tiptoeing around people's feelings because I'm scared that I'm gonna push one domino and everything will crash. So, maybe just for a little longer, I'll tiptoe. But because of this, I'll remember that I'll have to work on stopping it.

Should we tiptoe?

Well, at these heights of my life. If I find myself in front of someone who most ppl need to be tiptoeing around them..

I'm always gladly ready to kick their asses hard with the iron tiptoe of my boot to send them quickly Express Way to the Pent House, so that they see the wider picture clearly and gain more awareness about how things work. }:)

Nice writing. I can feel the impact this has had on you.

I personally no longer tiptoe. The strain of doing so takes too much energy. I have lost some friends, sure. But were they really friends?

Most importantly, I am now a better friend to myself!! Living more authentically had made me more sane.

People that play the role of the victim and all the other mind games are just using techniques they found that work – at least in their minds. We can’t tell them when they are wrong or being irrational because they will perceive it as a threat. They often act as if they are never wrong so they can forgo the embarrassment or even guilt of having to admit they were wrong. And if they happen to be family members we often have no other choice but to do the next best thing and placate them. It becomes a vicious cycle and we are the enablers.

Another aspect of “emotional immaturity” comes from deep-seated insecurity. People that lash out at others are usually covering up their own lack of ability. Ever notice that the biggest critics often have no talent themselves? They pretend to know all about a subject by criticizing it to no end but they would be hard pressed to provide a real workable solution themselves. It’s the persistent fear of being exposed as a fraud that produces a lot of the bad behavior you describe.

They pretend to know all about a subject by criticizing it to no end but they would be hard pressed to provide a real workable solution themselves. It’s the persistent fear of being exposed as a fraud that produces a lot of the bad behavior you describe.

Right on.

In terms of nature versus nurture, I'm beginning to form the opinion that while nature may have more of an impact on our genes, the environment we are raised in and our exposure to certain stimuli has a far more dramatic and consequential effect on our learned behaviour than we are being led to believe and certainly there are many among us who would be lucky to srtuggle if left to their own devices since society has afforded them the luxury of serving the self. The trouble is that a lot of us have no parenting skills of our own and allow this behaviour to develop to a point where it can be extremely difficult to change and these children grow up selfish and spoiled, more often than not never having been punched in the face and experiencing the reality of life. It's no surprise when those around them allow them to continually get away with the behaviour they do.

Don't tiptoe. Punch them in the face. :)

Out of all the animals, humans are the most affected by nurture and the best equipped to combat nature. The punch in the face definitely is needed for everyone I think.

I find most people are a drain so I just avoid them. Who has time to deal with such childishness. I do watch every word I say to pretty much everyone but a few friends.

Yes, you never truly know who the crazies are.

If we look positively this criticism is always a booster for success in life. If we take it on positive node it can be a huge achievement towards our future learning and if not then only we come with boiling minds like wounded animals.

Yes, there is no such thing as bad criticism when the attitude accepts all as a learning experience.

Those who don't tiptoe are either madman or geniuses

Your words are in the right place, and the way you connect to the message is more than wonderful, whenever a person grows up and grows his mind with him

the best par of your blog
'One of my greatest personal fears in this life is being a burden on others whether physically, financially and especially, emotionally. I am writing something about this now and remembered this post from 8 months ago that looked at a similar topic but from a different perspective. I figure that perhaps in the comments section I will get a few more viewpoints to add to the coming post and, I also noticed a lot of grammatical errors so I cleaned it up a little.'
Heart teaching.

Having to always go on tiptoe is exhausting and I think nothing positive for relationships with that person. Having to always measure each word that we are going to say is not natural and I think that we end up having an invoice.
Relationships should be natural and if they are not, I think it is better to create distance with these people.

I deal with a lot of this sort of thing daily.
I also feel it is a spectrum. The tip toe seems to be a requirement. Social dance. At a bare minimum to get along.

each person has a different perception structure.
we have to adapt for our loved ones

@tarazkp

I agree and disagree on the adaption. One can also choose to walk away at some point as to continually adapt to the whims of others is damaging to the self.

Exactly, these big babies don't realize how their emotional immaturity affects the people around them. They only worry about how the people around them affect them, which is childish and a little narcissistic. Meanwhile everyone else is deprived of real human connection, candid & progressive conversations, and most heinously, comedy. Leave our stand up alone! Its supposed to be offensive, that's why we like it!

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

I agree with the sentiment of this post, but I'm still in two mind's about not tiptoeing around such people. For one, yes, not being up front about your opinions only enables them and puts you in a position where you'll have to put up with this facade for a very long time. It also results in them believing that no one disagrees with them, and living in such a fantasy land is just harmful.
But on the other hand, you gotta ask yourself if it's YOUR responsibility to change such people and how mentally equipped you are to handle them in the initial tantrum phase at least. For me, personally, I can live just fine with pretending to agree with some people because I usually don't have the motivation to engage with further emotional reactions which are bound to happen.

Very nic post

in fact, yes, there are more fragile minds than others, stronger than others and there are more perceptive and intuitive minds.

Great post man very interesting....

If you notice, I don't vote on these kinds of comments as they are not relevant or add anything of use to the conversation.