What should I do if I don’t have anything to enjoy and I don’t have a bright future to work for/ wait it?

As an extra note, I started to hate dealing with humans and I don’t have any friends.

  • shit sucks

    no fucking doubt about it

    antianxiety medicine helps but

    really you need to find you

    nothing else matters.

    once you can understand your self, telling others your limits and expectations is just the flow of life that you’re expecting

  • Like the wind...
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    210 days ago

    Change your name and/or pronouns. Half joking, a lot of us live overcast lives as a result of feeling trapped in someone else’s life. If you don’t have friends then what’s there to lose?

  • @green@feddit.nl
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    210 days ago

    This is a discussion to have with professionals in a professional setting. No one here is responsibly equipped to answer this in a chat forum. This obviously includes me.

    That being said, I do not think about the future - live your life second-by-second.

    Despite what people say, life is not meant to be enjoyed. We live in a time of lawlessness and over-abundance, so people often equate life with enjoying things. At your core, you are a biological package of electrical circuits and tools. When you do something your body deems beneficial, you enjoy it (as in signals reward your brain).

    If you want to enjoy, then a general tip is to return to the fundamentals. Eat healthy food, exercise, explore, learn, and talk to people in real life. If this doesn’t work, then you need to speak with a professional (probably a therapist) to find what does.

    Hating humans is not viable, you simply need to stop that. This is not to say let yourself be abused and runover, but you need to form bonds with people - this is our inescapable nature.

  • @Sunsofold@lemmings.world
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    49 days ago

    Been in that state a lot. That’s classic depression. Evo-psych has some stupid ideas but their read on depression is solid. That urge to withdraw from society is a human urge. The urge is designed to lead to either, you leaving your band of primates to seek another, or your fellow group members coming and finding you to show how much you matter to them. Modern life doesn’t let that happen though. So many of our relationships are digital or just shallow so no one can tell you’re leaving, and changing your group in a real way is hard. If you want to feel betterment you have to use your rational brain to seek out what your body is instinctively reaching for. Pick something that you have always cared about, and go to a real life event centered on that thing. This can be almost anything, as long as there are real people, really sharing a physical space. Talk to the people about that thing. Don’t do it just to tick it off the list, you have to pay attention to what they are saying because you need to be able to articulate their ideas and then respond to them.

    • @Soup@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      And to continue your real life event thing, even just going outside and watching something happen can help get the ball rolling. It won’t be quite the same, like you said, but it won’t at all be a waste of time. Even going for a regular walk in a somewhat busy area can help, especially if you get to say high to a dog or something(which plays into your interaction thing).

  • @thebestaquaman@lemmy.world
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    410 days ago

    Not ironic here: I was at a very low point, and what I did was ditch everything, brought some gear to sleep outside, and decided to see how long I could stay outside with just my fishing gear.

    To be fair, I brought freeze-dried food for a couple days, but after about a week I felt better enough to head back to society.

    What I did that week was primarily fish for dinner and gather firewood for the evening. Did wonders for my psyke.

  • @JayDee@lemmy.sdf.org
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    29 days ago

    As others have said, find a professional. It can take alot of tries before you find the right person, but it’s extremely helpful when you find the right person.

    As someone with ADHD I also get anxiety with changes in my day-to-day events. My coping mechanism for a while has been coming up with practical contingency plans. That makes it so I at least have an idea of what to do and at what point there is nothing left to do. It’s helped me get through many situations.

    As for your future and social problems, those likely need some personal analysis and personal change (professionals are meant to help with this). A lack of future is often not an actual lack, it’s usually a personal failure at seeing other potentials, seeing a new path to follow. It’s sometimes called learned helplessness and can be hard to deal with alone. Becoming antisocial (not wanting any human interaction) is also usually a difficult thing and is usually caused by a personal neuroticism. But we need purpose as humans, and we also need comradery quite often.

    Thinking of yourself as a collection of habits can be helpful for this. You should be asking yourself what exactly makes you upset about about other people, and try to relate it to something about yourself.

    You can’t change other people, but you can change how you react to other people. Quite often that requires a shift of perspective that acknowledges that you are a biased viewer enterpretting a limited view. Instead of “people talking about themselves are annoying” for example, “I am bothered by people when they talk about themselves” can be more useful. That way, you are talking about the emotional response you have to others rather than the perceived traits of others - your lense is now focusing on you instead of on others.

    That’s all I’ve got. The path to being content is difficult, and I wish you luck.

  • @some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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    510 days ago

    If possible, I recommend therapy. Been relying on it for decades and eventually learned to love myself. Everything good in my life now is because therapy helped me become a better person.

  • @rabber@lemmy.ca
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    2110 days ago

    There’s a meme in Norway for this where professionals always ask “did you try hiking?”

    Seriously though did you try hiking? There are no problems in the back country. Or people.

    • @Norin@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      Ain’t a bad idea.

      Round about 10 years ago I lived alone in a little cabin in the woods. I didn’t have much in the way of money, didn’t need much of it either. Wood stove, books from the library for entertainment.

      Shit, I was way calmer and happier when I lived in the woods.

  • Libra00
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    3210 days ago

    See a professional, seriously, because this sounds like textbook early depression.

    • GemOP
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      510 days ago

      Sadly, I saw 3 different professionals, it does not work.

      I was expecting that they won’t have a magic phrase to say and solve my issues before I go to them and I partially went due to the advice of the people around me.

      After going and finding out myself, I can confirm that I was right.

      • @paranoid@lemmy.world
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        310 days ago

        Therapy is a vehicle, and you are the driver. You’re only going to move forward if you drive.

        That being said, finding a therapist you work well with is hard, and, in my experience, takes quite a few tries before finding someone with whom you are comfortable.

        My suggestion is to find someone who specializes in cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), and literally read this post to them. I’ve had luck using Alma to find a therapist (in the US).

        I genuinely hope you are able to work through this - I’ve been there, as have many people. You can do this, and you’re not alone

      • Libra00
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        19 days ago

        You’re right, there is no magic ‘press button, receive well-adjusted and chemically balanced human being’ button, but that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t keep trying. Therapy is a process, especially with medication, psychoactive medication is notoriously fucky with a long adaptation phase and weird side effects, some of which stick around and some of which don’t after a few weeks. A couple weeks of therapy and medication isn’t going to cure anything, give them the time they need to work toward your goal, because the alternative is a deep, dark hole you don’t want to go down. Take it from someone who’s been there, and who is only here now, 30 years later, because someone convinced me to stick with the process.

      • Rhynoplaz
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        510 days ago

        I was expecting that they won’t have a magic phrase to say and solve my issues

        That is a logical expectation because that’s not what they do.

        After going and finding out myself, I can confirm that I was right.

        Ahh, so, you were expecting them to TRY to fix you with a magic phrase and when the magic phrase never came, you assumed that they had failed.

        You got it all backwards. Those people don’t fix you. They teach you, they point you in the right direction, they tell you the things your friends won’t, they ask the questions you’ve been avoiding.

        YOU fix YOU.

        If the athlete doesn’t show up for the competition, they can’t blame the loss on bad coaching.

        • DominusOfMegadeus
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          210 days ago

          Also go to someone who prescribes meds, and take them.

          That said, I feel you are right to hate the other humans. They are really, really stupid.

          • GemOP
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            110 days ago

            They kept making me try meds, they never work.

            • DominusOfMegadeus
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              110 days ago

              They take quite some time to get the full effect. Like it could be a couple of months before you start seeing improvement.

      • @cattywampas@lemm.ee
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        910 days ago

        Whether it’s through professionals IRL or strangers on the Internet, it’ll require effort on your part. You’re going to have to want to be an active participant and willing to work on yourself. It will be a process, not a single event.

        • GemOP
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          110 days ago

          What does “work on yourself” mean in this context?

          • Tywèle [she|her]
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            110 days ago

            Changing habits, thought patterns etc. A therapist can’t do that for you, that’s something you have to do yourself thus “work on yourself”

            • GemOP
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              10 days ago

              I am tired from people who talk in wide way that can be applied everywhere and would result in nothing.

              To add to this, I was following therapist orders, it did nothing.

              That is actually is kind of what I meant when I said that I assumed that they don’t have a magic pharse, meaning that they their orders and pills sadly did not work and I was right in the sense that they were unable to solve my issues as I expected.

              • @naught101@lemmy.world
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                210 days ago

                I don’t think it’s a therapist’s job to fix your problems. It’s a therapist’s job to help you figure out how to fix your own problems. If you don’t what that, they will absolutely be useless.

              • Tywèle [she|her]
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                110 days ago

                Your therapist should give you tools to change these things that’s why I mentioned them. You have to use them and want to use them (changing your thought patterns). I see this all the time with people coming here who don’t know how to proceed in life anymore and they always dismiss everything that is said to them. You have to want to change, nobody is doing that for you, they can just give you the tools to do so but ultimately it’s up to you.

              • Libra00
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                19 days ago

                For how long? Cause a couple weeks or whatever isn’t going to cut it, it’s a process that can take months or years.

      • @protist@mander.xyz
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        1710 days ago

        Therapy takes work, my friend. Professionals can’t help you unless you want help and are willing to work toward change. If you’re expecting some external factor to “fix it for you,” you’re going to be disappointed

        • @kitnaht@lemmy.world
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          10 days ago

          Therapy isn’t geared towards men who don’t know how to put their expressions into words. It’s geared towards women. Many professional therapists agree that Therapy is not suitable for all men. Therapy is W.E.I.R.D. Designed around White, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic. It’s only one tiny slice of the pie when it comes to human emotions, expression, and the science of psychology - which makes psychology – at best – a pseudoscience.

          • Libra00
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            19 days ago

            I would argue that therapy teaches everyone to deal with their emotions and since men have emotions too, therapy is for both. It’s just starting on the back foot with men because we’re taught depending to some extent on age and culture to push them down, bottle them up, and pretend they don’t exist. Some people are better or worse suited for therapy, it is more successful with some people than others, but as a man who would not be alive today if not for therapy, I openly scoff at the idea that therapy is not ‘geared toward men.’ Learning how to put your expressions and emotions into words is a big part of the process, because we think so much in language that having words for the things we feel is really important to recognizing, acknowledging, and addressing those feelings.

            • @kitnaht@lemmy.world
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              -510 days ago

              If you think me pointing out that therapy isn’t designed around how men operate somehow makes ME sexist, you need to step back and evaluate yourself.

              • @protist@mander.xyz
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                210 days ago

                Why’d you respond to this guy and not me, who posted a long, professional response ten hours before him? Btw, I agree your take is sexist, because you’re basing your view on stereotypes of men and not on any evidence.

          • @protist@mander.xyz
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            2010 days ago

            As a (male) psychotherapist, I really have to disagree with you on all counts. A common goal in psychotherapy is to learn how to recognize and describe your internal experience. Lots of people struggle with this, men and women. Every single person walks into therapy with a different set of circumstances and a different set of objectives, and I’ve never once heard a single psychotherapist say “therapy is not suitable for all men.” That doesn’t make sense.

            Anecdotally, it is true that men seem less likely to approach therapy with willingness. This is a trend I’ve noticed, and is by no means a rule. What this demonstrates is a difference in socialization and acculturation between genders, so that men and women tend to “start” psychotherapy in different places in regards to social/emotional development. But psychotherapy as a discipline is absolutely not geared toward women over men.