Here's the order you chose to handle things!
In a moment of crisis, you held the crying Baby first, opened the Bell next, took care of the burning Rice, and pushed the important Phone call to the very end.
"The person who chose erasing themselves over ending up alone."
You cannot bear the moment a relationship breaks off. So in order not to be abandoned, you choose adapting yourself to the other person before protecting yourself.
It is easier for me to choose erasing myself than ending up alone. The problem is that inside the relationship I preserve that way, I slowly disappear.
Your Love
You are someone who cannot cut off relationships easily.
Once you grow close to someone, you look for both stability and a reason for being inside that relationship.
You feel far safer when you are connected to someone than when you have to endure things alone.
So even when a relationship begins to shake, you do not turn your back easily.
You try to stay attached somehow.
Your affection is not cold.
If anything, it is so intense that you cannot bear imagining the loss of the relationship.
But your love often flows in the direction of protecting the relationship before protecting yourself.
If the other person wants something, you adjust.
If they dislike something, you erase it.
If it feels like they might leave, you change even more.
You feel that you are protecting love, but in the process, you slowly become fainter.
At first, this can look like consideration.
But over time, you stop being someone who is loved and become someone shaped to fit the relationship.
You are not someone who lacks love.
You are someone who cannot bear the anxiety of being alone, so you shrink yourself just to keep the relationship alive.
The Pattern You Repeat
You keep adjusting yourself so you will not be abandoned.
You are more used to accommodating than to choosing what you like, and you notice what the other person wants before what you want.
You say it is okay even when you are uncomfortable, let things slide even when you are hurt, and force yourself into versions of yourself that do not even fit.
The moment keeping the relationship intact becomes the most important thing, you begin existing in a form tailored more and more to the other person.
A relationship maintained that way may last a long time, but the version of you inside it keeps fading.
The Choice You Regret
You changed yourself a great deal in order to keep the relationship.
Your likes, dislikes, boundaries, and even the way you spoke were all adjusted to the other person.
At the time, you believed that was love, and at least it felt better than ending up alone.
But later, the most painful scene is usually the same.
The relationship remained, but inside it, I had become almost completely invisible.
LDMP’s biggest regret lies in this: I tried to protect love and ended up losing myself.
task_alt What You Need Right Now
- • Before adapting, look first at what you really want
- • Learn the difference between protecting the relationship and erasing yourself
- • Ask yourself whether you are changing to be loved, or erasing yourself out of fear
Connections Linked to You
A type whose strong lead can feel like it is guiding me
A type where anxiety and control lock together and bind us tighter
A type whose standards and evaluations immediately collapse my emotional safety
A type whose delayed decisions and ambiguity keep my anxiety activated for a long time
Share this with a friend and compare your desire order! It can be the first step toward understanding yourself.