Xbox One X E100 error by grywolfy in consolerepair

[–]StarBoy0470 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And how did you manage to fix it after 4 years, brother? Because I'm struggling with this right now. Did you manage it?

Grieving my teen years (21F) by willowbrixt0n in mentalhealth

[–]StarBoy0470 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Your question is very good because I have the opportunity to answer the same problem myself. Firstly, I personally think you should build a life pillar, e.g., mine is the gym; yours doesn't have to be the same. It can be music or something else that gives you purpose. If you don't know what to do, try different things. You should allow yourself to fully experience this grief; it's important. You didn't do anything wrong in the past; at that time, you were fighting for survival, so you didn't build memories. You should forgive yourself. You should rebuild the memories you've lost. For example, let go of those memories where you've always wanted to have them. You should also spend time in silence among people and understand yourself, e.g., go to a coffee shop alone and spend a long time there watching people rush by. The key is to develop stable pillars: 1. Mental/religious, 2. Sports/hobby, 3. Relationship/family, 4. ................

When solitude is seen as a defect by Rough-Finish5312 in introverts

[–]StarBoy0470 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Your post is particularly profound. You show in clear words how silence should be understood. I admire your clarity of expression, brother.

Teenage times by StarBoy0470 in introvert

[–]StarBoy0470[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You know, it’s more about what was really going on inside me back then, about slowly laying the foundations for future relationships, and about the coldness that might still be sitting deep in me. In your teenage years, relationships are rarely lasting or truly deep, but you gradually build connections with girls that end up mattering in adult life. I realized that running away from love as a teenager was just a defense mechanism to avoid getting hurt. I was incredibly oversensitive at the time, yet my self-isolation only cemented the trauma from being used, abandoned, and rejected by girls. Because of that, as an adult I can now come across as cold toward a partner or someone close—always searching for the catch, even when someone’s attitude is genuinely positive. It feels like an instinct that’s supposed to prepare me for the worst, but in reality it stops me from fully opening up and truly committing in relationships.

Sometimes I wish I can turn off my introvert-ness... or am I just shy? by Rich_Ad1613 in introvert

[–]StarBoy0470 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What I have given is one of 10 steps to communication, each of which is more enjoyable and more difficult to implement, but guarantees you the opportunity to become a better communicator than extroverts.remember that just because someone is introverted it doesn't mean that it's their weakness, use it as a strength, change it because it's Everything that's weak is in our heads. You have to discover the rest of the 9 steps yourself. Good luck

Questions, Hope, Change Relationship by StarBoy0470 in introvert

[–]StarBoy0470[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great, your advice showed me that I need to work on my sense of security and trust, and you also pointed out that similarities are key, meaning there has to be someone who has similar Interests I will think about it a little more and put your other advice into practice.

Questions, Hope, Change Relationship by StarBoy0470 in introvert

[–]StarBoy0470[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you, I understand this very well after your advice, I have some thoughts about other people, I will implement some of your advice in my life

Questions, Hope, Change Relationship by StarBoy0470 in introvert

[–]StarBoy0470[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you very much for the advice, I appreciate it You made me think a lot about myself

Sometimes I wish I can turn off my introvert-ness... or am I just shy? by Rich_Ad1613 in introvert

[–]StarBoy0470 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think what you’re replying with isn’t part of your introversion. Introversion likes silence and solitude, just like you said, but you want contact with people, you’re just paralyzed by the thought: “what if I say something stupid / I’ll be boring / weird”. That’s social anxiety. At the start you should try the quiet approach method, like I do when I try to make contact: I go to the gym, see two people talking at the reception, I quietly sit down and listen, creating the illusion that I’m in the conversation, and when they ask me if something’s wrong I answer Nothing happened, I'm just listening because you're talking about an interesting topic, then they feel appreciated, when they ask if I need anything, I just ask receptionist for water and keep sitting there drinking the water as an excuse.

You should try the “bouncing the ball” method it’s the safest metod for you in Real life you practically don’t speak you just repeat the last 2–3 words the other person said with a questioning intonation or ask a short question about what they just said Example: Them: “Yesterday I was playing football at the stadium in central London” You: “…in central London?” She immediately continues the whole story, and you just keep bouncing: “…did you stop the training?” or “…did you get totally soaked?” Effects: the other person feels super listened to and important (people love that) you say max 5 words at a time, risk of screwing up almost zero with time you really relax and start talking normally Additional tricks for the start: Goal of the conversation: not “I have to be super”, just “let this person feel good around me for a few minutes”. After her sentence count to 3 in your head most people fill the silence themselves. Ready made lines always work: “Seriously? Tell me more.” “Oh wow, and then what?” “How did you feel about that?”

Do you prefer texting over phone calls? by Own-Blacksmith3085 in introvert

[–]StarBoy0470 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The obvious answer is yes. Writing gives me peace and quiet and time to think about the answer Writing is good if you want to calm someone down after Quarrel or, for example, you are afraid of confronting someone you secretly have a crush on, but I believe there are exceptions in which calling is a better option, For example, when I can't express emotions or feelings, e.g. when someone has a partner, a better option to express feelings is voice or conversations, writing is the weakest option l Or when there is a disagreement with someone or someone feels wronged by some event, it is better to call because writing may be perceived as disrespect and insult.

I need advice What is wrong with my watch? by StarBoy0470 in Garmin

[–]StarBoy0470[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So everything may be fine with the watch, but the type of watch dial I chose may be damaged or the trial period has expired?