mistersaturn123:

cpt-glasses:

angel-macabre:

“jealousy is so disgusting” “anger is so toxic” did u know? these are emotions every human has

I’ve always been a fan of an analogy I heard once. Your emotions are like one of the lights on your car’s dash. When one of them turns on, it means you need to check under the hood and fix them. It’s not bad that the light turned on, per se, and it doesn’t always mean something is broken. But what IS toxic, dangerous, and likely to break something, is when you let that light stay on, pretending it’s normal, until that braking fluid finally fails and you crash into someone, or your engine fails completely.

Feel jealous. Feel anger. 

Just don’t let it fester. You need to look inside of yourself, find out why you’re feeling the way you are, and bring yourself to a satisfied, stable state of mind. You can look at philosophy, meditation/introspection, religion, or actual therapy, or at least talking to someone about it. You’ll find you’re much more content and happy when you do something about those feelings, and come to some sort of conclusion or resolution.

That is a  wonderful way of looking at it, thankyou. Makes me feel better about myself when I DO feel that way.

Friendship, romance, childhood, Sherlock

unreconstructedfangirl:

normaldeviate:

I have a daughter who’s almost five, and this year in preschool she’s had a Best Friend. She had friends before at her previous daycare, but this one is different – whether it’s because of age or personality or something specific about the chemistry between them. Best Friend has really big feelings about my kid. Best Friend doesn’t merely squee when my kid shows up; she also gets morose when Kid doesn’t come to school (to the point of crying at home, her mom tells me), and jealous when Kid wants to play by herself or with someone else, and one time I even saw her attempt to make Kid jealous in return (it didn’t really work; Kid just got upset that she was being misunderstood). Big Feelings!

It’s been so fascinating to watch this unfold over the last year, if somewhat unnerving at times, and I’ve been working to help Kid set up good boundaries. (She’s done surprisingly well.) If we were seeing this kind of behavior in middle-childhood, we would definitely think “puppy love.” In a teen or adult, I’d have my ears perked up for signs of intimate partner violence. In a preschooler? I don’t really know. Are possessiveness or mild obsessiveness normal in friendships at this age? Is Best Friend going to look back at this intense friendship in 20 years and think, yep, that’s when I knew I was gay?

Anyway, thinking about this brought me back to that question of love and Sherlock (what doesn’t?). Possessiveness is not normal for adults in friendship – I mean, it’s not healthy in romance either, but we have a frame for understanding it. That’s what makes John’s side of the equation hard to understand: Mr. It’s All Fine Except When You Imply It About Me gets upset when Sherlock appears romantically interested in anyone else. And everything in his body language at those moments, everything in the way he talks about Sherlock on the blog, tells us he knows exactly how fucked up this is. That doesn’t suggest wedding bells, exactly, but it does raise questions we want answers to (or at least, I do).

But then there’s Sherlock, who is possessive in a really different way – a way that suggests he thinks the right and proper state of affairs is for John’s world to revolve around him. He maintains this thoughtless self-centeredness until halfway through that wedding speech in TSoT, at which point a switch flips and his love for John takes on a character that is both selfless and undeniably romantic. I’ve seen plenty of meta about how this speech serves as an accelerated puberty for Sherlock, and I think that works here. Growing up for him happens when he learns how to love like an adult. Where possessiveness is what triggers my suspicions with John, my certainty about Sherlock emerges in its absence.

Tagging @unreconstructedfangirl who had a good thread about love and friendship not long ago.

Thank you for tagging me! I love your last paragraph, SO MUCH.

Where possessiveness is what triggers my suspicions with John, my certainty about Sherlock emerges in its absence.

Yes. YES. Exactly.

However! I’m not sure I agree that possessiveness, jealousy and obsessiveness aren’t “normal” in friendship. I have felt all of those things in relationships that were clearly and unambiguously friendships, which is to say not romantic relationships (though, I must say that I am increasing unsure why these two things are somehow defined as mutually exclusive categories – why isn’t a friendship a kind of romance?). Maybe these feelings aren’t admirable, but they are real things that people feel in all kinds of relationships. Perhaps it’s not useful to view them as not normal, or unhealthy, or even as things that sort the relationship into a category of love vs. friendship where those two relationship concepts mutually exclude one another? Perhaps, as you say, the issue is learning to love in a more mature way – a way that recognises the personhood and agency of the beloved; A way that recognises the limits of one’s right to act upon those feelings in a way that curtails the freedom of the beloved.

Also? I don’t feel like the territory of friendship is so unlike the territory of love. I think those territories overlap one another in all kinds of ways and cannot be cleanly separated. The ambiguity of the relationship between John and Sherlock doesn’t bother me at all, and that is because an undefined intensity of connection that is neither one thing nor the other, or is both, feels REAL to me. It feels like a think that exists, and that I feel, and that we don’t know how to talk about because our words to describe what a relationship is excludes that territory. That unnamed land is uncomfortably unsayable, so we want to push it to a point – force it to define itself – and I think that definition would be reductive of it’s beauty and complexity. Maybe your daughter’s friend will grow up and realise that she has always loved girls… or maybe not. Who knows! What I don’t quite understand is the rage we all seem to have for applying labels that don’t quite seem to fit.

All that said, I agree with you about this difference between the character of Sherlock’s love and John’s as it is realised on the show. I think it’s why John beating Sherlock up didn’t surprise me and felt exactly in character. It’s probably why there is a draft of a controversially titled and never published post in my draft box from months ago called “John Watson, Self-obsessed Arsehole”, which is not to say that I don’t love John as a character, just that I cannot approve of his actions and think he has his head up his own arse when it comes to Sherlock.

I do think Sherlock learns to love selflessly, and I agree that John isn’t there yet, and his love is selfish. It’s why I find him harder to love than Sherlock.

But, that’s just me, maybe.

I am interested in all the points being made here and don’t want to detract from them at all, as this post relates to Sherlock, but I’m a teacher, so here are my 2 cents on preschool behavior: This behavior is completely normal on both their sides. Some kids at this age experience an intense and jealously guarded bond with one friend and others are more like butterflies flitting from friend to friend, and every shade in between those polarities. Some kids understand the jealous ones and some are completely baffled by it. However, normal isn’t always the same thing as acceptable. It is normal for children to act out aggressive feelings physically, but we still correct it, and they still have bathroom accidents at that age too, but we are guiding toward complete and consistent potty training of course. The same is true with more clingy or obsessive friendships. It is great that she loves your daughter so much, but hopefully teachers are involved in guiding her to understand that sometimes people need to play with others or by themselves. If this isn’ t guided, it can eventually manifest as exactly the kind of obsessive/possessive behavior we find in abusive relationships, but there are years and years for helping this child find balance. Learning boundaries and consent does start that young, so it is great you are helping your daughter with that. If people are treating the other girl’s behavior as cute, you might want to talk about shaping the behaviours over time, but it seems like you have a very positive relaxed attitude about the whole thing, which is lovely. (As for the point about sexuality, I haven’t seen any correlation to sexuality at all, though if the friend was a boy I’m sure people would be assigning sexual or romantic overtones to it. Sometimes the jealous behavior is a sign people look back on as ‘yep that was my first crush’ and other times it is more indicative or not having learned to share yet.)