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.

What if ‘fixing’ a mental condition changes the person you are?
Assassin or patsy? How can you trust any of the players in this case?
Love & Hope — Episode 13:
Peace won’t come until you quit obeying long-gone programmers
Without real human connection, we’re just living in a simulation
FRIDAY FUNNIES
Don’t believe the words they say: Politicians revert to their incentives