Borderline Personality Blog: Healing - Coping - Improving

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Almost on a daily basis, my mind plays games with me. It’s almost as if a voice comes out of no where and “challenges” me to do something. If I succeed, I will feel happy and disciplined; if I fail, I will feel weak and unworthy of facing any future challenges.

Usually these “challenges” take the form of little physical games, self control, or coordination tests.

Examples:

Overall, I think these little games are attempts at proving my own worth to myself, or validating feelings of inferiority. Also, as I have mentioned in other posts, I always feel like when it’s the “real time to perform” (ie. playing an instrument on stage, running a serious race, or taking the SATs) I choke and fall short of “rising to the ocassion”.

In the wake of a mediocre or worse performance, I fall back on these little games as a way to build myself back up, thinking: If I can do this simple challenge, the next time a real performance event comes around, I’ll have the strength, poise, and will to out-do myself.

Sadly, I think playing all these small games actually hurts my performance abilities. By constantly trying to validate myself on a daily, sometimes hourly basis, I feel like I lose my competitive “edge” or that extra “push” that regular people can set aside for times when performing the best you can really counts.

I’ve tried to stop these self abusive habits, but it is hard because I feel worthless without some quantifiable means to evaluate myself. Looking forward, I need to work on being relaxed and composed when I’m not performing (or when I don’t require exceptional concentration, energy, or thinking skills) and saving all my energies for when I do really need them.

That way, practicing for an event is more enjoyable, less self-toturing, and truly more beneficial in terms of saving crucial energies for when it comes to testing my true abilities.

Most importantly, even if I do drop these silly routines, and do manage to perform better in activities, I must always remember to measure myself by my own values, feelings of worth, and level of happiness. Having a million dollars, owning a world record, or doing 1000 push-ups are notable achievements, but in the reality they are not the true measure of a person.

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