A good friend once asked if I was an introvert or an extrovert. When I said I thought of myself as an introvert she laughed and defined me in a very accurate way, so accurate that it shocked me: she called me a traumatized extrovert.
Same with the optimist/pessimist dichotomy. I'd say I'm a traumatized optimist. I always wanted to have hope, I always wanted things to turn out alright, I dreamed of happy endings. Life has taught me different. These past few months have destroyed me emotionally and made me give up hope on getting back on my feet to keep on fighting. I thought I could trust again and love again and believe in myself and in the possibility of having a better life and accomplishing my dreams...and then life kicked me again in the fucking face.
I find that most people conflate social awkwardness and introvertism (and vice versa), which isn't always the case. 'Traumatized extrovert' is very intriguing, I've never heard someone put it that way, and I like how much depth it provides compared to plain 'extrovert/introvert'.
And, yeah, introvert/extrovert and optimist/pessimist dichotomies are somewhat silly, since the side one leans towards is highly situational and prone to change.
I hope you're able to catch a break from your situation. If only the world didn't traumatize all our optimists!
Can you explain why? I'm definitely curious
I've found that worrying mostly accomplishes nothing, and I'm fortunate enough to have developed the ability to stop myself from unnecessarily freaking out about things (in most cases). This has sort of led me to have a 'whatever happens, happens' mindset.
Surprisingly, having suicidal episodes seem to make me more optimistic. It starts off as a nihilistic optimism (nothing matters, it's fine that I don't do X, it won't matter in the long run if there is no long run), but it eventually simmers down to a gentle appreciation of whatever I have. It really is a freeing feeling, to not excessively worry about everything all the time. Idk, I tend to see my relationship with suicide as loving (I personify a lot of my emotions), which seems to have framed the way I perceive the world.
I'm also good at just Not Thinking about things I'd rather not recall.
A question for you OP, do you think these traits are more inherited or, learned? I imagine it's a mixture although, probably more learned I imagine.
Most definitely learned, I'd say (nurture trumps nature imo). I'm pretty sure I know why I think the way I think, and I can say the same for those I'm close to.
Somewhere between a pessimist and a realist I guess... it's hard to tell if I'm catastrophizing or if reality just really is that bad.
Yeah, and that's the problem with pessimism for me. Whenever I feel pessimistic (doomer mindset, as I would put it) I can feel how it poisons everything I do. Nihilistic pessimism feels like shit compared to nihilistic optimism. I much prefer being a fun silly guy who's just floating around