smileforme50
Posts: 1623
Joined: 1/24/2013 From: DelaWHERE(?) Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: BecomingV quote:
ORIGINAL: smileforme50 quote:
I think I know myself pretty damned well. And if there are things I don't know about myself....then he's not going to know about them either. ^^^That is a closed-minded adult version of the 2-year old who covers their eyes with their hands and says, "You can't see me." Why can't we know ourselves completely? 1. An extreme need for control, meaning... it comes from fear-based places. The need creates a rigidity in perspective because in the same way a drug addict's choices all lead to the attainment and use of drugs, so does the "control freak" make every decision based on how much control they will have. It's an inflexible and limited view. This covers un-healed abused kids and rebels without a cause, among others. I seriously wouldn't consider myself a "control freak", but I will admit that this is one reason I don't think someone can know something about me that I don't already know....because I have control over what I want them to know. But that's not really my question. My issue isn't with letting someone know me. My question about this is the idea of someone knowing something about myself that I don't already know. My assertion is that this is information that moves in ONE DIRECTION. It's like a natural progression of nature. Before a tree becomes a tree, it starts out as a seed and then a sapling. It doesn't go from sapling back down to seed. By the same token, I know something about myself and then I show it to others (If I so choose). Someone thinking they know something about me that I don't know is comparable to going backwards and in this case it doesn't happen. 2. Denial - The need to see things in a certain way, despite evidence to the contrary. More about this at the end. Like I said....I would have to see specific examples to know what you're talking about. I mean...I've never denied that I am fat and bitchy.....so someone telling me that isn't going to be "news". 3. Ignorance - none of us "knows everything." We learn from what we are exposed to. We can't be exposed to everything firsthand, so we must rely on others to expand our view. I have NEVER claimed to "know everything". I know I don't know everything. And I know that I may not know everything about myself as evidence by how my views on D/s and M/s have changed over the years. What I have continued to assert is that if there are things I don't know about myself, nobody else is going to know it either...and certainly not until I learn about it first. 4. Willful ignorance - Being so in love with our own point of view, that we reject the possibility that others may know more. This is especially true if the new information runs counter to what we want to believe. Not willful ignorance.....just questioning the logic of it. Someone may be able to figure out something about me without my actually telling them because they observe what I do. I eat seafood when I go out to eat. So someone may be able to deduce "Oh...you must like seafood" But I'm not going to respond with "OMG...you're right! I would have never guessed!". My response woud be "yes I do...I have enjoyed it since I was a child". They're not telling me something about myself that I don't already know. 5. Stupidity - For these purposes, I'll relate this quote, "Intelligence is the ability to not only learn from our own mistakes, but to also learn from the mistakes of others. Stupid people are limited to their own view(s). Oh....I won't deny being stupid at times Maybe even most of the time. But what does this have to do with the topic? Like I said....someone else telling me that isn't gong to be "news" to me. About denial - Decades ago, when I worked for an abuse agency, there was a new mother who feared that she would be like her own Mom, and not know it. The woman was a survivor of incest and could only fault her Mom with a failure to protect. Her Mom was blind to it and didn't know. Kind of important, yes? So, the woman asked, "How do I know if I'm in denial?" She asked this with the intensity of a Mama Bear who was committed to protecting her kids from herself, from her own weakness, faults or limitations, in this regard. Honorable, really, to have such emotional courage and fortitude, I think. The answer... you don't know when you are in denial. You need others to tell you that. If one person says it, and you trust their judgment, then look into it. If two people tell you, look into it even more. If a few, or more, people tell you... believe them and know that you aren't able to see it yet, but you will, if you truly want to. I suppose it's because nobody has ever told me anything of this nature. I mean...nobody has ever told me that I am a drunk or drug addict or in denial about an abusive relationship. Of course it helps that I've never touched drugs, hardly ever drink and I've never been abused by a man....and nobody I know has ever suspected it. I've never denied that I am overweight and enjoy food more than exercise....so there's isn't anything "new" or shocking that anyone is going to tell me there. Nobody needed to tell me that I was submissive....I've actually known that since I was about 7, although I didn't know what it really was and didn't put a label to it until I was about 10. But it wasn't something someone else saw in me that I was blind to until they told me. So, those are a few reasons why your assertion that you know you better than others know you, is a self-limiting belief. No, we are humans. That means we need each other. Well, broken humans don't - narcissists, psychopaths and liars... they only need themselves... the rest of us exist as things to be used by them, but their ability to connect on any deep or intimate level, is nonexistent. Now, psycho-babble aside, who knows best how the back of your body looks? You or the student sitting in the desk behind you for an entire semester? You can claim to know yourself. But, it's just plain old true that your ability to see yourself is LIMITED, and limited in specific ways which are NOT LIMITED, to others. We don't get to control what others see, although some do try. To become more open towards others requires us to accept some level of vulnerability. I would posit that anyone in D/s is vulnerable, so it goes both ways. But, I think the questions in the OP are human questions and not limited to BDSM. I feel comfortable saying that those who are open to the (at least occasional) superior views of others will know themselves better than those who are closed. Like I said...I'm just trying to figure out "what" someone else could know about me that I don't know about myself already. If they know something about me, I may be surprised to find out that they figured it out without my telling them....but whatever they tell me they have seen isn't going to surprise me as something I didn't know already. If I don't know something about myself, then it hasn't come to surface yet for anyone else to know either. And that student who sits behind me all semester? He never sees my back because I always have it covered by a shirt. And yes...I CAN know that shirt better than he can because I look at it in my closet every day. He knows nothing about the mole on my shoulder blade.... ETA....I just thought of ONE thing that may fit into this category. I have epilepsy and since no one has filmed it, I have never seen myself having a seizure. I have an old boyfriend who saw a half dozen of them. But do I have to actually SEE myself having a seizure in order for me to KNOW that I convulse violently and bite my tongue to the point of bleeding and swelling? No.... just because this is something I'm never going to see doesn't mean I'm not aware of it.
< Message edited by smileforme50 -- 9/14/2014 8:27:14 AM >
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“Give it to me!” she yelled “I’m so fucking wet! Give it to me now!” She could scream all she wanted…..I was keeping the umbrella.
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