I had this post in Don Juan discussion forum earlier today, but I post in this forum instead, due to older age and more experience.
Spinning plates is NOT the sollution
The community says to cure oneitis you must spin plates. Pook recommends that you must have several girls in your head at once so you don't become needy. Having one girl in your head means that you begin to act like an afc, he claims.
To spin more plates is not the cure of an afc behaviour. The thougt of that as a cure is due to the dysfunctional dating scene and society we live in. Almost everybody are inflicted by this disease. Therefore we have grown wrong methods in relationships. The methods does work though, but the setting and outcome is wrong.
So what is this disease? It's called love addiction and millions are afflicted by it. The love addiction makes you act like an afc. A Love Addict seeks to enmesh, to blend into another person. Underneath all of this is both a fear of abandonment and a fear of healthy intimacy, even if they pretend to look for it. The respond to this love addiction is love avoidance. When you begin to act needy and afc the girl withdraw. You are addicted to what the girl can give you, either love or se(x).
Love avoidance is the systematic putting up of walls in a relationship to prevent feeling emotionally overwhelmed by another person. Consequently, it prevents true intimacy. It can be described as a form of emotional anorexia. The love avoidant perceives love as being an obligation or duty, so relationships are experienced as an emotional drain. The love avoidant tends to become involved with love addicts, and puts up walls to decrease the intensity within the relationship. However, the more the avoidant distances, the more the love addict pursues.
Why are you addicted? Because you did not get enough attention during your childhood. The craving after love and attention continues in adult life.
Here are typical symptoms of love addiction:
Lack of nurturing and attention when young
Feeling isolated, detached from parents and family
Compartmentalization of relationships from other areas of life
Outer facade of "having it all together" to hide internal disintegration
Mistake intensity for intimacy (drama driven relationships)
Hidden Pain
Seek to avoid rejection and abandonment at any cost
Afraid to trust anyone in a relationship
Inner rage over lack of nurturing, early abandonment
Depressed
Highly manipulative and controlling of others
Perceive attraction, attachment, and sex as basic human needs, on a par with food and water
Sense of worthlessness without a relationship or partner
Feelings that a relationship makes one whole, or more of a man or woman
Escalating tolerance for high-risk behavior
Intense need to control self, others, circumstances
Presence of other addictive or compulsive problems
Insatiable appetite in area of difficulty (sex, love or attachment / need.)
Using others, sex & relationships to alter mood or relieve emotional pain
Continual questioning of values and lifestyle
Driven, desperate, frantic personality
Confusion of sexual attraction with love ("Love" at first sight.)
Tendency to trade sexual activity for "love" or attachment
Existence of a secret "double life"
Refusal to acknowledge existence of problem
Defining out-of-control behavior as normal
Defining "wants" as "needs"
Tendency to leave one relationship for another. (Inability to be without a relationship.)
Attempts to replace lost relationships with a new one immediately
Love addiction is often perceived to be "less serious" than other process addictions i.e. compulsive sexual addictions, eating disorders or self-harm / mutilation addictions. Perhaps because it sounds "softer." In reality it is extremely painful and can be very dangerous to both the addict and their partners. Many suicides, murders, stalkings, rapes and other crimes of passion have their roots in this addiction. Our culture has traditionally glorified love addiction with the notion that we fall in love and live "happily ever after." This ignores the groundwork that relationships require. Many love relationships depicted in the media are really love addicted relationships.
So what is the cure for this? Many things, but you will find out more by reading about it. I recommend these two books:
http://www.amazon.com/Facing-Love-Ad.../dp/0062506048
and
http://www.amazon.com/Taming-Your-Ou...3122201&sr=1-1
So the sollution is NOT spinning plates, but rather cure your love addiction.
Spinning plates is NOT the sollution
The community says to cure oneitis you must spin plates. Pook recommends that you must have several girls in your head at once so you don't become needy. Having one girl in your head means that you begin to act like an afc, he claims.
To spin more plates is not the cure of an afc behaviour. The thougt of that as a cure is due to the dysfunctional dating scene and society we live in. Almost everybody are inflicted by this disease. Therefore we have grown wrong methods in relationships. The methods does work though, but the setting and outcome is wrong.
So what is this disease? It's called love addiction and millions are afflicted by it. The love addiction makes you act like an afc. A Love Addict seeks to enmesh, to blend into another person. Underneath all of this is both a fear of abandonment and a fear of healthy intimacy, even if they pretend to look for it. The respond to this love addiction is love avoidance. When you begin to act needy and afc the girl withdraw. You are addicted to what the girl can give you, either love or se(x).
Love avoidance is the systematic putting up of walls in a relationship to prevent feeling emotionally overwhelmed by another person. Consequently, it prevents true intimacy. It can be described as a form of emotional anorexia. The love avoidant perceives love as being an obligation or duty, so relationships are experienced as an emotional drain. The love avoidant tends to become involved with love addicts, and puts up walls to decrease the intensity within the relationship. However, the more the avoidant distances, the more the love addict pursues.
Why are you addicted? Because you did not get enough attention during your childhood. The craving after love and attention continues in adult life.
Here are typical symptoms of love addiction:
Lack of nurturing and attention when young
Feeling isolated, detached from parents and family
Compartmentalization of relationships from other areas of life
Outer facade of "having it all together" to hide internal disintegration
Mistake intensity for intimacy (drama driven relationships)
Hidden Pain
Seek to avoid rejection and abandonment at any cost
Afraid to trust anyone in a relationship
Inner rage over lack of nurturing, early abandonment
Depressed
Highly manipulative and controlling of others
Perceive attraction, attachment, and sex as basic human needs, on a par with food and water
Sense of worthlessness without a relationship or partner
Feelings that a relationship makes one whole, or more of a man or woman
Escalating tolerance for high-risk behavior
Intense need to control self, others, circumstances
Presence of other addictive or compulsive problems
Insatiable appetite in area of difficulty (sex, love or attachment / need.)
Using others, sex & relationships to alter mood or relieve emotional pain
Continual questioning of values and lifestyle
Driven, desperate, frantic personality
Confusion of sexual attraction with love ("Love" at first sight.)
Tendency to trade sexual activity for "love" or attachment
Existence of a secret "double life"
Refusal to acknowledge existence of problem
Defining out-of-control behavior as normal
Defining "wants" as "needs"
Tendency to leave one relationship for another. (Inability to be without a relationship.)
Attempts to replace lost relationships with a new one immediately
Love addiction is often perceived to be "less serious" than other process addictions i.e. compulsive sexual addictions, eating disorders or self-harm / mutilation addictions. Perhaps because it sounds "softer." In reality it is extremely painful and can be very dangerous to both the addict and their partners. Many suicides, murders, stalkings, rapes and other crimes of passion have their roots in this addiction. Our culture has traditionally glorified love addiction with the notion that we fall in love and live "happily ever after." This ignores the groundwork that relationships require. Many love relationships depicted in the media are really love addicted relationships.
So what is the cure for this? Many things, but you will find out more by reading about it. I recommend these two books:
http://www.amazon.com/Facing-Love-Ad.../dp/0062506048
and
http://www.amazon.com/Taming-Your-Ou...3122201&sr=1-1
So the sollution is NOT spinning plates, but rather cure your love addiction.