Fleeting memories of happiness

I have known true happiness: As a child on holiday in Devon, at Clifford Bridge caravan-site. Pure freedom and calm, each moment a bearer of joy, abundant energy and optimism. The world was my oyster, the future there for the taking. The contrast between then and now is painful, bitter, and sweet. I am but a shadow of my former self, a sad case of decay and the death of self. Wordsworth speaks true in  his 'initimations of immortality, or recollections of early childhood':'where is it now the visionary gleam?'.

I died long ago. My true self is dead. Can it be resurrected? . I want to feel totally relaxed again, free, at peace, able to take in nature' s sights, sounds, and smells without the heavy weight of anxiety closing in on me at every breath. I mourn for the self that has died, particularly when I think about the zest for life that I experienced when very young.

Adulthood, to put it crudely, sucks. Fear, uncertainty and trepidation have replaced the old security, happiness and joy.

Parents
  • Something I struggle with on a daily basis, but which I think is good advice, is:

    Just 'be', and don't 'try to be'. That is, be yourself, and not the self you think others want you to be. The hardest part of this is often realising that the self you are is the self you think others expect of you.

    And, as KaloJaro sort of said: look for wonder, and the unexpected, in the world, and embrace it.

Reply
  • Something I struggle with on a daily basis, but which I think is good advice, is:

    Just 'be', and don't 'try to be'. That is, be yourself, and not the self you think others want you to be. The hardest part of this is often realising that the self you are is the self you think others expect of you.

    And, as KaloJaro sort of said: look for wonder, and the unexpected, in the world, and embrace it.

Children
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