Putting yourself into an echo chamber of people constantly telling you you’re perfect is not improvement, it’s a detriment.
NuclearCommando on
I went through a very nasty fallout with a best friend earlier this year.
One of my coworkers, trying to give me encouragement, said “Sometimes, something has to die in order for something better to bloom.”
And something better did bloom. I made some new friends when I went to visit an old friend I recently reconnected with, and I am currently running a DnD campaign with them.
I lost a friend, but I’m in a much better place now. It still sucks, but time does heal some wounds. And the more I look back, the more I realize it did need to die due to some red flags.
2 Comments
Putting yourself into an echo chamber of people constantly telling you you’re perfect is not improvement, it’s a detriment.
I went through a very nasty fallout with a best friend earlier this year.
One of my coworkers, trying to give me encouragement, said “Sometimes, something has to die in order for something better to bloom.”
And something better did bloom. I made some new friends when I went to visit an old friend I recently reconnected with, and I am currently running a DnD campaign with them.
I lost a friend, but I’m in a much better place now. It still sucks, but time does heal some wounds. And the more I look back, the more I realize it did need to die due to some red flags.