For years, I assumed everybody felt the way I did. I wasn’t even quite conscious of the need for a long time. It was just a vague hunger that I felt — more strongly with an occasional person — to be understood.
When I could finally put it into words, I realized that I often felt invisible. I didn’t feel understood. I didn’t feel that anyone saw my worth in the ways I needed it to be seen. I didn’t need for everyone to see me and to understand me. But from certain people — who rarely came along — I craved something which was hard to put into words.
I wanted love. Acceptance. To be seen. To be understood. I wanted for someone who I saw as my equal to be able to see me in the same way.
I eventually discovered this isn’t a universal need. Most people don’t seem to care that much about being understood. And after a lot of reading and therapy and thinking, I finally realized that my fierce need was related to a very old abandonment wound.
I wasn’t even aware the wound was there, but it was changing the relationships I cared about the most.

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Is Paul Krugman serious or is this some kind of weird performance art?
Santa checked his list twice — and some of you’ve been naughty
Just a sandwich: Why do people make everything so political?
Right of secession? In a sane world, we could talk about it in 2011 without talk of slavery
Can we find way to separate love of home from worship of state?
Sometimes we should ignore idiots who yell about non-existent racism
THE McELROY ZOO: Meet Bessie, the beautiful girl who’s still scared
Without the state, who would plow roads? We and our neighbors will