保持联系却依旧孤单?

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常联系多沟通的句子

常联系多沟通的句子

常联系多沟通的句子以下是一些表达常联系多沟通的句子素材,仅供参考:1.让我们养成常联系的好习惯,让友谊之花永不凋谢。

2.无论多忙,都不要成为失联的人,因为那些真正关心你的人会担心。

3.当我们分享彼此的喜怒哀乐时,那份情感的真实和深厚是通过常联系建立的。

4.我们虽然分隔两地,但经常联系却让我们感觉彼此就在身边。

5.联系不频繁,感情就淡了。

我们要常联系,感情才会越深。

6.常联系就是时常提醒对方,你并不孤单,因为有我陪着你。

7.无论意见多么不合,只要我们常沟通,总能找到共同的解决方法。

8.联系如清泉,常常流动,才能保持清新。

9.无论多远的距离,常联系都能让我们的心靠得很近。

10.常联系不代表每天都要通话,而是让彼此知道,当需要时,我都在。

11.不要小看一句问候的力量,它能让人们在忙碌中感受到温暖。

12.多和老师沟通学习问题,才能更好地提高自己的学习成绩。

13.无论是喜怒哀乐,都希望你能和我分享,因为我们在沟通中共同成长。

14.有时候,一句你在干嘛?也是一种联系的方式,表示你心中有我。

15.你的每一条信息,每一个电话,都是我生活中的小确幸。

16.记住,无论遇到什么困难,都可以通过沟通来找到解决之道。

17.在沟通中,我们可以学习对方的优点,改进自己的缺点。

18.每次和你聊天,都能感觉到时间在飞快地流逝,这就是常联系的魅力。

19.经常联系,可以让我们的关系更加紧密,更加熟悉彼此的生活。

20.现代社会,联系的方式可以千变万化,但不变的是那份想要沟通的心。

21.多沟通,少误会。

让我们敞开心扉,把话说明白。

22.真正的友情不怕沉默,但更需要常联系来滋养和维护。

让我们一起努力保持联系吧。

23.随着年岁的增长,愈发觉得常联系的珍贵。

因为时间越来越少,而感情越来越深。

24.常联系才能让对方知道你心中的位置,也才能更深入地走进对方的心里。

25.在工作中,多和同事沟通,才能更好地完成任务。

26.有些人虽然不常见面,但每次联系起来都仿佛从未分开过,这就是真正的友情。

TED英语演讲 为什么我们保持着联系却仍旧孤单Why we are connected but still feel alone (双语)

TED英语演讲  为什么我们保持着联系却仍旧孤单Why we are connected but still feel alone  (双语)

TED英语演讲Why we are connected but still feel alone?为什么我们保持着联系却仍旧孤单?TED简介:我们对技术的期待越来越多,同时,我们对彼此的期待却越来越少了?电子产品和网络角色似乎正重新定义着人们的沟通和交流,Sherry Turkle致力于研究这种影响,并引发这样的深刻思考:我们究竟需要怎样的沟通方式。

演讲者:Sherry Turkle片长:20:51|英文演讲稿|Just a moment ago,my daughter Rebecca texted me for good luck.Her text said,"Mom,you will rock."I love this.Getting that text was like getting a hug.And so there you have it.I embody the central paradox.I'm a woman who loves getting texts who's going to tell you that too many of them can be a problem.Actually that reminder of my daughter brings me to the beginning of my story.1996,when I gave my first TEDTalk,Rebecca was five years old and she was sitting right there in the front row.I had just written a book that celebrated our life on the internet and I was about to be on the cover of Wired magazine.In those heady days,we were experimenting with chat rooms and online virtual communities.We were exploring different aspects of ourselves.And then we unplugged.I was excited.And,as a psychologist,what excited me most was the idea that we would use what we learned in the virtual world about ourselves,about our identity,to live better lives in the real world.Now fast-forward to2012.I'm back here on the TED stage again.My daughter's20.She's a college student.She sleeps with her cellphone,so do I.And I've just written a new book,but this time it's not one that will get me on the cover of Wired magazine.So what happened?I'm still excited by technology,but I believe,and I'm here to make the case,that we're letting it take us places that we don't want to go.Over the past15years,I've studied technologies of mobile communication and I've interviewed hundreds and hundreds of people,young and old,about their plugged in lives.And what I've found is that our little devices,those little devices in our pockets,are so psychologically powerful that they don't only change what we do,they change who we are.Some of the things we do now with our devices are things that,only a few years ago,we would have found odd or disturbing, but they've quickly come to seem familiar,just how we do things.So just to take some quick examples:People text or do email during corporate board meetings. They text and shop and go on Facebook during classes,during presentations,actually during all meetings.People talk to me about the important new skill of making eye contact while you're texting.(Laughter)People explain to me that it's hard,but that it can be done.Parents text and do email at breakfast and at dinner while their children complain about not having their parents'full attention.But then these same children deny each other their full attention.This is a recent shot of my daughter and her friends being together while not being together.And we even text at funerals.I study this.We remove ourselves from our grief or from our revery and we go into our phones.Why does this matter?It matters to me because I think we're setting ourselves up for trouble—trouble certainly in how we relate to each other,but also trouble in how we relate to ourselves and our capacity for self-reflection.We're getting used to a new way of being alone together. People want to be with each other,but also elsewhere—connected to all the different places they want to be.People want to customize their lives.They want to go in and out of all the places they are because the thing that matters most to them is control over where they put their attention.So you want to go to that board meeting,but you only want to pay attention to the bits that interest you.And some people think that's a good thing.But you can end up hiding from each other,even as we're all constantly connected to each other.A50-year-old business man lamented to me that he feels he doesn't have colleagues anymore at work.When he goes to work,he doesn't stop by to talk to anybody,he doesn't call.And he says he doesn't want to interrupt his colleagues because,he says,"They're too busy on their email." But then he stops himself and he says,"You know,I'm not telling you the truth.I'm the one who doesn't want to be interrupted.I think I should want to,but actually I'd rather just do things on my Blackberry."Across the generations,I see that people can't get enough of each other,if and only if they can have each other at a distance,in amounts they can control.I call it the Goldilocks effect:not too close,not too far,just right.But what might feel just right for that middle-aged executive can be a problem for an adolescent who needs to develop face-to-face relationships.An18-year-old boy who uses texting for almost everything says to me wistfully,"Someday,someday,but certainly not now,I'd like to learn how to have a conversation."When I ask people"What's wrong with having a conversation?"People say,"I'll tell you what's wrong with having a conversation.It takes place in real time and you can't control what you're going to say."So that's the bottom line.Texting,email,posting,all of these things let us present the self as we want to be.We get to edit,and that means we get to delete,and that means we get to retouch,the face,the voice,the flesh,the body—not too little,not too much,just right.Human relationships are rich and they're messy and they're demanding.And we clean them up with technology.And when we do,one of the things that can happen is that we sacrifice conversation for mere connection.We short-change ourselves.And over time,we seem to forget this,or we seem to stop caring.I was caught off guard when Stephen Colbert asked me a profound question,a profound question. He said,"Don't all those little tweets,don't all those little sips of online communication,add up to one big gulp of real conversation?"My answer was no,they don't add up.Connecting in sips may work for gathering discrete bits of information,they may work for saying,"I'm thinkingabout you,"or even for saying,"I love you,"—I mean,look at how I felt when I got that text from my daughter—but they don't really work for learning about each other,for really coming to know and understand each other.And we use conversations with each other to learn how to have conversations with ourselves.So a flight from conversation can really matter because it can compromise our capacity for self-reflection.For kids growing up,that skill is the bedrock of development.Over and over I hear,"I would rather text than talk."And what I'm seeing is that people get so used to being short-changed out of real conversation,so used to getting by with less,that they've become almost willing to dispense with people altogether.So for example,many people share with me this wish,that some day a more advanced version of Siri,the digital assistant on Apple's iPhone,will be more like a best friend,someone who will listen when others won't.I believe this wish reflects a painful truth that I've learned in the past15years.That feeling that no one is listening to me is very important in our relationships with technology.That's why it's so appealing to have a Facebook page or a Twitter feed—so many automatic listeners.And the feeling that no one is listening to me make us want to spend time with machines that seem to care about us. We're developing robots,they call them sociable robots,that are specifically designed to be companions—to the elderly,to our children,to us.Have we so lost confidence that we will be there for each other?During my research I worked in nursing homes,and I brought in these sociable robots that were designed to give the elderly the feeling that they were understood.And one day I came in and a woman who had lost a child was talking to a robot in the shape of a baby seal.It seemed to be looking in her eyes.It seemed to be following the conversation.It comforted her.And many people found this amazing.But that woman was trying to make sense of her life with a machine that had no experience of the arc of a human life.That robot put on a great show.And we're vulnerable.People experience pretend empathyas though it were the real thing.So during that moment when that woman was experiencing that pretend empathy,I was thinking,"That robot can't empathize.It doesn't face death.It doesn't know life."And as that woman took comfort in her robot companion,I didn't find it amazing;I found it one of the most wrenching,complicated moments in my15years of work.But when I stepped back,I felt myself at the cold,hard center of a perfect storm.We expect more from technology and less from each other.And I ask myself,"Why have things come to this?"And I believe it's because technology appeals to us most where we are most vulnerable.And we are vulnerable.We're lonely,but we're afraid of intimacy.And so from social networks to sociable robots,we're designing technologies that will give us the illusion of companionship without the demands of friendship.We turn to technology to help us feel connected in ways we can comfortably control.But we're not so comfortable.We are not so much in control.These days,those phones in our pockets are changing our minds and hearts because they offer us three gratifying fantasies.One,that we can put our attention wherever we want it to be;two,that we will always be heard;and three,that we will never have to be alone.And that third idea, that we will never have to be alone,is central to changing our psyches.Because the moment that people are alone,even for a few seconds,they become anxious,they panic,they fidget,they reach for a device.Just think of people at a checkout line or at a red light.Being alone feels like a problem that needs to be solved.And so people try to solve it by connecting.But here, connection is more like a symptom than a cure.It expresses,but it doesn't solve,an underlying problem.But more than a symptom,constant connection is changing the way people think of themselves.It's shaping a new way of being.The best way to describe it is,I share therefore I am.We use technology to define ourselves by sharing our thoughts and feelings even as we're having them.So before it was:I have a feeling,I want to make a call.Now it's:I want to have a feeling,I need to send a text.The problem with this new regime of"I share therefore I am"is that,if we don't have connection,we don't feel like ourselves.We almost don't feel ourselves.So what do we do?We connect more and more.But in the process,we set ourselves up to be isolated.How do you get from connection to isolation?You end up isolated if you don't cultivate the capacity for solitude,the ability to be separate,to gather yourself.Solitude is where you find yourself so that you can reach out to other people and form real attachments.When we don't have the capacity for solitude,we turn to other people in order to feel less anxious or in order to feel alive.When this happens,we're not able to appreciate who they are.It's as though we're using them as spare parts to support our fragile sense of self.We slip into thinking that always being connected is going to make us feel less alone.But we're at risk,because actually it's the opposite that's true.If we're not able to be alone,we're going to be more lonely.And if we don't teach our children to be alone,they're only going to know how to be lonely.When I spoke at TED in1996,reporting on my studies of the early virtual communities,I said, "Those who make the most of their lives on the screen come to it in a spirit of self-reflection." And that's what I'm calling for here,now:reflection and,more than that,a conversation about where our current use of technology may be taking us,what it might be costing us.We're smitten with technology.And we're afraid,like young lovers,that too much talking might spoil the romance.But it's time to talk.We grew up with digital technology and so we see it as all grown up.But it's not,it's early days.There's plenty of time for us to reconsider how we use it,how we build it.I'm not suggesting that we turn away from our devices,just that we develop a more self-aware relationship with them,with each other and with ourselves.I see some first steps.Start thinking of solitude as a good thing.Make room for it.Find ways to demonstrate this as a value to your children.Create sacred spaces at home—the kitchen,the dining room—and reclaim them for conversation.Do the same thing at work.At work,we're so busy communicating that we often don't have time to think,we don't have time to talk,about the things that really matter.Change that.Most important,we all really need to listen to each other,including to the boring bits.Because it's when we stumble or hesitate or lose our words that we reveal ourselves to each other.Technology is making a bid to redefine human connection—how we care for each other,how we care for ourselves—but it's also giving us the opportunity to affirm our values and our direction.I'm optimistic.We have everything we need to start.We have each other.And we have the greatest chance of success if we recognize our vulnerability.That we listen when technology says it will take something complicated and promises something simpler.So in my work,I hear that life is hard,relationships are filled with risk.And then there's technology—simpler,hopeful,optimistic,ever-young.It's like calling in the cavalry.An ad campaign promises that online and with avatars,you can"Finally,love your friends love your body,love your life,online and with avatars."We're drawn to virtual romance,to computer games that seem like worlds,to the idea that robots,robots,will someday be our true companions.We spend an evening on the social network instead of going to the pub with friends.But our fantasies of substitution have cost us.Now we all need to focus on the many,many ways technology can lead us back to our real lives,our own bodies,our own communities,our own politics,our own planet.They need us.Let's talk about how we can use digital technology,the technology of our dreams,to make this life the life we can love.Thank you.(Applause)几分钟前,我接到了我女儿的短信,她说你一定会震惊全场,我太喜欢这个了,接到这条短信就像得到了她的拥抱。

爱情中的孤独感如何克服

爱情中的孤独感如何克服

爱情中的孤独感如何克服在爱情的世界里,孤独感是一种常见却又常常被忽视的情绪。

当我们陷入爱河时,往往期待着温暖、陪伴和理解,然而,有时却会在这份亲密关系中体验到一种深深的孤独。

这种孤独并非来自于身边无人,而是即便有人相伴,内心深处仍感到一种无法言说的疏离。

那么,爱情中的孤独感到底从何而来呢?首先,沟通不畅可能是一个重要的原因。

当双方无法真正理解对方的想法和感受,或者在交流中存在障碍,就容易产生一种“虽近犹远”的孤独。

比如,一方倾诉工作的压力,而另一方却只是敷衍回应,没有给予真正的关心和支持,这种情况下,倾诉者可能会感到孤独。

其次,价值观的差异也可能导致孤独感的产生。

如果两个人对于生活的目标、未来的规划以及重要的事物有着截然不同的看法,那么在相处的过程中,就容易觉得自己的想法不被认同,从而产生孤独的感觉。

再者,过度依赖对方也可能引发孤独。

当一个人把自己所有的情感需求都寄托在对方身上,一旦对方无法满足,就会感到失落和孤独。

那么,我们应该如何克服爱情中的孤独感呢?首先,要建立良好的沟通方式。

这意味着双方都要学会倾听和表达。

在倾听时,要全身心地投入,不打断对方,真正去理解对方的感受和需求。

在表达时,要坦诚清晰,避免含糊不清或者拐弯抹角。

比如,当你因为对方的某个行为感到不满时,不要只是生闷气,而是直接告诉对方你的感受和期望。

同时,要尊重彼此的差异。

认识到每个人都是独立的个体,有着不同的成长背景、性格和价值观。

不要试图强行改变对方,而是在差异中寻找共同点,求同存异。

当遇到分歧时,可以通过理性的讨论来达成共识,或者至少互相尊重彼此的选择。

此外,培养自己的独立性也非常重要。

在爱情中,我们需要彼此,但不能完全依赖对方来满足自己所有的情感需求。

要有自己的兴趣爱好、朋友圈子和个人目标,这样即使在独处时,也能充实和快乐。

比如,你可以参加一些兴趣小组,学习一门新的技能,或者独自去旅行,拓宽自己的视野。

另外,增加共同的经历也是克服孤独感的有效方法。

保持联系却依旧孤单

保持联系却依旧孤单

Inspiration Actually, we have everything before technology, but we lost something after it. Today, the world is a village, but everyone is an island. Technology is shaping our modern relationships and redefining human connection, and now is the very time for us to have a reflection of a real essential way of communication we need. Put down the phone in our hands and wake up to the real connection, listen to each other by heart, only in this way can we connect in a warm and feeling way.
Imitation
And that third idea, that we will never have to be alone, is central to changing our psyches. Because the moment that people are alone, even for a few seconds, they become anxious, they panic, they fidget, they reach for a device. Just think of people at a checkout line or at a red light. Being alone feels like a problem that needs to be solved. And so people try to solve it by connecting. But here, connection is more like a symptom than a cure. It expresses, but it doesn’t solve an underlying problem. But more than a sympanging the way people think of themselves. It’s shaping a new way of being. The best way to describe it is “I share therefore I am.”

应对亲密关系中的孤独感

应对亲密关系中的孤独感

应对亲密关系中的孤独感亲密关系在我们的生活中扮演着重要的角色,它能够带来爱、支持和安全感。

然而,有时我们可能会在亲密关系中感受到孤独感。

这种孤独感可以是在感情上的隔阂或沟通不畅,也可以是因为个人的内在需求没有得到满足。

本文将讨论如何应对亲密关系中的孤独感,以帮助我们建立更加健康和亲密的关系。

1. 沟通和表达需求亲密关系中的孤独感常常源于沟通不畅。

如果我们感到被忽视或被误解,我们可以通过积极的沟通来解决这个问题。

首先,我们需要认识到自己的情感和需求,并尝试以非攻击性的方式表达。

避免指责对方,而是分享自己的感受和期望。

同时,倾听对方的观点和需求,寻找共同的解决方案。

良好的沟通可以帮助我们更好地理解对方,增进亲密关系。

2. 个人空间和独立性在亲密关系中保持一定的个人空间是非常重要的。

有时候,我们需要独处一段时间来重新连接自己,并满足个人的需求。

这并不意味着我们不爱我们的伴侣或朋友,而是要为自己创造时间和空间,以便放松、反思和恢复精力。

同时,也要尊重对方的个人空间和独立性,给予彼此足够的自由和信任。

3. 培养共同兴趣和活动为了减轻亲密关系中的孤独感,我们可以寻找并共同培养一些共同的兴趣和活动。

这可以为我们提供交流和互动的机会,增进彼此的了解和关系。

无论是共同参加运动、学习新技能,还是一起旅行、看电影,都可以增强我们的联系,减少孤独感。

4. 寻求专业帮助有时候,孤独感可能是由于更深层次的问题,如心理健康问题或不健全的依恋模式所引起的。

在这种情况下,寻求专业帮助是一种明智的选择。

心理咨询师或夫妻治疗师可以帮助我们更好地理解和解决亲密关系中的孤独感。

他们提供的指导和支持有助于我们建立更健康、更满足的关系。

5. 自我关爱和自我成长最重要的是,我们要学会自我关爱和自我成长。

建立良好的自我价值感和自信心,培养个人兴趣和爱好,关注自己的身心健康。

当我们对自己充满爱和关怀时,我们更有能力去爱和关怀他人,也能更好地处理亲密关系中的困难和孤独感。

如何应对恋爱中的孤独感

如何应对恋爱中的孤独感

如何应对恋爱中的孤独感恋爱是人生中一段美妙的旅程,但在这段旅程中,我们往往会经历一些孤独感。

无论是在两地相隔的异地恋,还是在同城但彼此独立的恋爱中,孤独感都可能会影响我们的情绪和关系。

那么,如何应对恋爱中的孤独感呢?首先,我们需要明确孤独感的来源。

孤独感往往是因为我们在恋爱中感到与伴侣的距离,或者自己内心的空虚。

在两地相隔的异地恋中,由于时间和空间的限制,我们无法与伴侣共度每一天,这种分离感会导致孤独感的产生。

而在同城但彼此独立的恋爱中,我们可能因为对方的忙碌或者自己的孤独而感到心灵的空虚。

其次,我们需要学会独立。

恋爱中的孤独感往往是因为我们过于依赖对方而产生的。

我们可以通过培养自己的兴趣爱好和朋友圈,来丰富自己的生活。

参加社交活动、读书、运动等都是很好的方式。

通过这些活动,我们可以认识更多的人,扩大自己的社交圈子,减少对伴侣的依赖,从而减轻孤独感。

另外,我们还可以通过沟通来缓解孤独感。

与伴侣保持良好的沟通是维持恋爱关系的重要一环。

我们可以通过电话、视频聊天等方式,与伴侣分享自己的生活和情感。

同时,也要倾听对方的心声,关心对方的感受。

通过沟通,我们可以更好地理解对方,减少误解和猜测,从而增进感情。

此外,我们还可以寻求亲朋好友的支持。

恋爱中的孤独感并不是我们一个人的问题,很多人都会经历。

我们可以向身边的亲朋好友倾诉自己的感受,听取他们的建议和安慰。

他们的支持和理解可以帮助我们度过难关,同时也能为我们提供一些建议和思路。

最后,我们要学会享受孤独。

孤独并不一定是坏事,它可以给我们提供独处的机会,让我们更好地思考和成长。

我们可以利用孤独的时间,阅读书籍、反思自己的内心,培养自己的情感和智慧。

通过这种方式,我们可以更好地理解自己,提升自己的情商和自我认知,从而更好地应对恋爱中的孤独感。

总之,恋爱中的孤独感是正常的,我们需要学会应对。

通过独立、沟通、寻求支持和享受孤独,我们可以减轻孤独感,保持良好的情绪和关系。

保持联系却仍旧孤单演讲稿

保持联系却仍旧孤单演讲稿大家好,我是今天的演讲者。

今天我想和大家分享的主题是“保持联系却仍旧孤单”。

这个话题或许在我们每个人的生活中都有一些共鸣,因为在这个信息爆炸的时代,我们似乎越来越难以真正地和他人建立起深刻的联系,即使我们在社交网络上有着众多的朋友,但内心却感到孤独。

那么,为什么我们会有这样的感受呢?我想通过这次演讲,和大家一起探讨这个问题,并寻找一些解决的办法。

首先,让我们来看看为什么我们会感到孤单。

在这个快节奏的社会中,人们往往忙于工作、学习等各种事务,时间都被安排得满满的,很少有时间去和朋友们坐下来好好聊聊天。

即使我们在社交网络上能够随时和朋友们保持联系,但这种联系却往往只停留在表面,缺乏真正的沟通和交流。

另外,现代科技的发展也让我们更容易沉溺于虚拟世界,忽略了身边真实的人际关系。

这些因素都导致了我们在人际交往中感到越来越孤单。

那么,面对这样的情况,我们应该怎么办呢?首先,我认为我们需要更多地关注身边的人。

无论是家人、朋友还是同事,我们都需要花更多的时间和精力去倾听他们的心声,关心他们的生活。

只有通过真正的交流,我们才能建立起深厚的情感联系。

其次,我们也需要主动融入到社交活动中去。

可以参加一些兴趣小组、志愿者活动,结识更多的朋友,拓展自己的社交圈子。

通过参与各种社交活动,我们可以更好地融入社会,减少孤独感。

最后,我们也需要学会适当地利用科技手段,比如视频通话、语音聊天等,来和远方的朋友保持联系,让他们感受到我们的关心和思念。

总的来说,保持联系却仍旧孤单是一个现代人普遍面临的问题。

但是,只要我们用心去经营人际关系,主动融入社交活动,适当利用科技手段,就能够有效地缓解这种孤独感。

希望我们每个人都能够在这个快节奏的社会中找到属于自己的情感归属,让我们不再感到孤单。

谢谢大家!。

有人喜欢 却为什么依然单身

还是有人喜欢,为什么依然单身?为什么依然单身?有人会说:没有人喜欢我;有人会说:对的人没有出现;有人会说:单身和有无人喜欢没关。

而我就是这其中的一个——有人喜欢,却依然单身。

工作学习时,我们身边围绕着同事同学,闲暇时光,我们陪伴家人朋友,可当一个人时,我们都会反思自己的一切,而我也正是在这辗转反侧之时,探寻着依旧单身的答案。

世界上没有一个人是可以完全为你准备好,完全与你相吻合。

所谓那些准备好的人,大抵都是某一些方面吸引了你,感动了你,那些不合适的原因为此而被忽略掉,如此便可以在一起,成了准备好的人。

记得我和一个曾经很喜欢我的男孩说:如果说两步是我们之间最佳的距离,那么当你走近到一步时,我就会把你推向三步之外。

这是我当时最真实的感受,没有夸张,没有欺骗,而我也都是这么做的。

现在,我正试图用弗洛伊德老先生的观点来剖析一下这个真实的我。

当然这只是我自己的想法,可能荒诞不堪,可能微有道理。

我为什么会拒绝一个对我很好又门当户对的人呢?我想这其中有两个原因,一个是本我欺骗了超我,本我最真实的想法是我不喜欢这个人,没有心动的感觉,而超我在一遍一遍的告诉自我,他喜欢你,对你很好,你以后会幸福的,这样自我就被迫处在这样一个纠结矛盾的境地——我到底是喜欢还是不喜欢他呢?这时本我和超我进行来了激烈的争斗,最后本我胜出,我不喜欢他,不能接受。

另外一个原因是本我就像是一个曾经受过伤害的兔子,很容易受到惊吓,这个惊吓的康复期还没结束,一旦有人靠近,本我就会迅速逃离,并用超我来当挡箭牌。

我想如果你能站在那个对我来说是安全的范围之外,默默的关注我,保护我,那样超我才可能会对你放松警惕,同时本我才会有接近你的勇气。

如果要进一步说明拒绝的原因,可能会和投射有关。

对于很有优越感的人,她们可能很挑剔,因为优秀,所以眼光要求很高,因为优秀,所以不能降低标准,因为优秀,最后导致曲终和寡。

这是优秀人的悲哀,也是那些太看得起自己的人的悲哀。

而对于像我这样太自卑的人来说,投射发挥了它淋漓尽致的作用。

如何应对感情中的孤独感

如何应对感情中的孤独感当人们进入一段感情关系时,往往期望能够从中获得幸福和满足感。

然而,有时候在感情中我们可能会经历到孤独感,这是一种独特且普遍的感受。

当我们感到孤独时,我们可能会认为自己在关系中没有被理解或被关注,这可能会给我们带来负面情绪和不安。

如何应对感情中的孤独感?这是一个非常个人化和复杂的问题,因为每个人的情感体验和背景都是不同的。

然而,下面我将分享一些可能会对您有所帮助的方法来应对感情中的孤独感。

1. 与伴侣沟通:首先,与伴侣坦诚地交流是解决孤独感的关键。

分享自己的感受和需求,试着找到解决问题的方法。

只有通过沟通,我们才能更好地理解彼此的内心世界,进而建立更深入的联系。

2. 关注自己:感情中的孤独感有时可能源于我们自己对自我价值的怀疑。

在这种情况下,我们需要更加关注和照顾自己。

建立一些属于自己的兴趣爱好,参加一些与个人成长和自我提升相关的活动,让自己的生活充实起来。

重视个人价值和自尊心,不要过分依赖他人的认可。

3. 培养个人关系:在感情关系中,我们有时会放弃或减少与朋友和家人的联系,这可能导致孤独感的加剧。

因此,保持和培养与他人的联系至关重要。

与朋友聚会、参加社交活动,与家人保持亲密关系,这些都可以帮助我们减少感情中的孤独感。

4. 寻求专业支持:如果感情中的孤独感持续存在且影响到我们的日常生活和幸福感,寻求专业心理咨询的帮助是明智的选择。

心理咨询师可以帮助我们更好地理解和应对孤独感,提供相关的技巧和策略。

5. 学会独立:通过培养独立的能力,我们可以更好地应对感情中的孤独感。

独立不仅指独自完成任务和处理问题,还包括对自己情感的管理和自我满足的能力。

当我们学会独立时,我们能够更好地在感情中找到平衡和满足感。

在感情中体验孤独感是正常的,但重要的是要积极处理并找到适合自己的方法。

通过与伴侣的沟通、关注自己、培养个人关系、寻求专业支持和学会独立,我们可以更好地应对感情中的孤独感,建立更健康、平衡和满足的关系。

一辈子走下去的朋友圈说说

一辈子走下去的朋友圈说说1. 朋友圈就是你我之间的精神家园,陪伴着我们一辈子走下去。

2. 能够一直保持联系的朋友,是我人生中最宝贵的财富。

3. 虽然时光荏苒,但我们的友谊却始终如一。

4. 即使岁月已经改变了我们的容颜,但我们的友情依旧坚如磐石。

5. 感谢每一位朋友陪伴我度过了人生中的种种风风雨雨。

6. 无论何时何地,朋友圈永远都是一个温暖的港湾。

7. 每一个微笑,每一次握手,都是朋友圈中美好的瞬间。

8. 朋友圈是一座桥梁,将我与我的挚友们紧密相连。

9. 在朋友圈里,我们可以无拘无束地分享喜怒哀乐。

10. 朋友圈里的每一次聚会,都是我们的美好回忆。

11. 朋友圈中的每一个祝福,都让我感受到无尽的温暖。

12. 只要还有朋友圈,就永远不会孤单寂寞。

13. 朋友圈是一本书,每个人都是其中的一章,共同创造着美好的故事。

14. 没有围墙的朋友圈,让我感受到无限的自由。

15. 朋友圈就像是一个大家庭,充满了关爱和互助。

16. 真正的朋友圈,不在乎你的身份地位,只在乎你的真诚和善良。

17. 朋友圈里的陪伴,让我觉得生活一直都充满了阳光。

18. 在朋友圈中,无论遇到什么困难,我从来不会感到孤独。

19. 真挚的友情从不问曾经,只看现在和未来。

20. 每个人都是朋友圈的一颗星,共同照亮彼此的人生道路。

21. 朋友圈让我明白,友情的力量是无法估量的。

22. 真正的朋友圈并不只在数字上看,而是关系的密切程度。

23. 在朋友圈中,我们可以彼此扶持,共同成长。

24. 朋友圈是沟通的桥梁,让我不再感到孤单。

25. 每一个朋友都是价值连城的,因为我们一起度过了无数个美好时光。

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(演讲者:Sherry Turkle )Just a moment ago,my daughter Rebecca texted me for good luck.Her text said:”Mom,you will rock.”I love this.Getting that text was like getting a hug.And so there you have it.I embody the central paradox.I’m a woman who loves getting texts,who’s going to tell you that too many of them can be problem.Actually that reminder of my daughter brings me to the beginning of my story.1996,when I gave my first TEDTALK,Rebecca was five years old and she was sitting right there in the front row.I have just written a book that celebrated our life on the internet and I was about to be on the cover of Wire magazine.In those heady days,we were experimenting with chat rooms and online virtual communities.We were exploring different aspects of ourselves.We were exploring different aspects of ourselves.And then we unplugged.I was excited.And as a psychologist,what excited me most was the idea that we would use what we learned in the virtual world about ourselves,about our identity, to live better lives in the real world.Now fast-forward to 2012.I’m back here on the TED stage again.My daughter’s 20.She’s a college student.She sleeps with her cellphone,so do I.And I’ve just written a new book,but this time it’s not one that will get me on the cover of Wired magazine.So what happened? I’m still excited by technology,but I believe,and I’m here to make the case,that we’re letting it take us places that we don’t want to go .Over the past 15 years,I’ve studied technologies of mobile communication and I’ve interviewed hundreds and hundreds of people,young and old,about their plugged in lives.And what I have found is that our little devices,those little devices in our pockets,are so psychologically powerful that they don’t only change what we do,they change who we are.Some of the things we do now with our devices are things that,only a few years ago,we would have found add or disturbing, but they’ve quickly come to seem familiar, just how we do things. So just to take some quick examples:people text or do email during corporate board meetings. They text and shop and go on Facebook during classes,during presentations,actually during all meetings.People talk to me about the important new skill of making eye contact while you’re texting .(laughter) People explain to me that it’s hard,but that it can be done.Parents text and do email at breakfast and at dinner while their children complain about not having their parents’s full attention.But then these same children deny each other their full attention.This is a recent shot of my daughter and her friends being together while not being together. And we even text at funerals.I study this.We remove ourselves from our grief or from our revery,and we go into ourphones.Why does this matter?It matters to me because I think we’re setting ourselves up for trouble--trouble certainly in how we relate to each other,but also trouble in how we relate to ourselves and our capacity for self-reflection. We’re geting used to a new way of being alone together. People want to be with each other. but also elsewhere connected to all the different paces they want to be. People want to customize their livers. They want to go in and out of all the place they are because the thing that matters most to them is control over where they put their attention. So you want to go to that board meeting, but you only want to pay attention to the bits that interest you. And some people think that’s a good thing. But you can end up hiding from each other,even as we’re all constantly connected to each other. A 50-year-old business man lamented to me that he feels he doesn’t have colleagues anymore at work. When he goes to work,he doesn’t stop by to talk to anybody, he dosen’t call.And he says he doesn’t want to interrupt his colleagues because,he says” They’re too busy on their email.”But then he stops himself and he says,” You know,I’m nottelling you the truth.I’m the one who doesn’t want to be interrupted.”I think I shoud want to,but actually I’d rather just do things on my Blackberry.” Across the generations, I see that people can’t get enough of each other, if and only if they can have each other at a distance, in amounts they can control.I call it the Goldilocks effect: not too close, not too far, just right.But what might feel just right for that middle-aged executive can be a problem for an adolescent who needs to develop face-to-pace relationship. An 18-year-old boy.who uses texting for almost everything says to me wistfully, “someday ,someday,but certainly not now,I would like to learn how to have a conversation.” When I ask people”What’s wrong with having a conversation?” People say,”I’ll tell you what’s wrong with having a conversation. It takes place in real time and you can’t control what you’re going to say.” So that’s the bottom line. Texting,email,posting,all of these things, let us present the self as we want to be. We get to edit,and that means we get to delete,and that means we get to retouch,the face,the voice,the flesh,the body--not too little,not too much,just right.human relationship are rich and they’re messy and they’re demanding. And we clean them up with technology. And when we do,one of the things that can happen is that we sacrifice conversation for mere connection. We short-change ourselves.And over time,we seem to forget this,or we seem to stop caring. I was caught off guard when Stephen Colbert ask me a profound question, a profound question. He said, “don’t all those little tweets, don’t all those little sips of online communication, add up to one big gulp of real conversation?” My answer was “no,they don’t add up.” Connecting in sips may work for gathering discreet bits of information,they may work for saying, they may work for saying, “I’m thinking about you”or even for saying, “I love you.”I mean,look at how I felt when I got that text from my daughter--but they don’t really work for learning about each other,for really coming to know and understand each other.And er use conversations with each other to learn how to have conversations with ourselves. So a flight from conversation can really matter because it can compromise our capacity for self-reflection. For kids growing up,that skill is the bedrock of development. Over ans over I hear, “I would rather text than talk.” And what I’m seeing is that people get so used to being short-changed out of conversation,so used to getting by with less,that they’ve become almost willing to dispense with people altogether. So for example,many people share with me this wish,that someday a more advanced version of Siri,the digital assistant on Apple’s iPhone,will be more like a best friend,someone who will listen when others won’t.I believe this wish reflects a painful truth that I’ve learned in the past 15 years. That feeling that no one is listening to me is very important in our relationship with technology. That’s why it’s so appealing to have a Facebook page or a Twitter feed--so many automatic listeners. And the feeling that no one is listening to me makes us want to spend time with machines that seem to care us. We’re developing robots,they call them sociable robots,that are specifically designed to be companions to the elderly,to our children,to us. Have we so lost confidence that we will be there for each other?During my research I worked in nursing homes,and I brought in these sociable robots that were designed to give the elderly the feeling that they were understood. And one day I came in and a woman who had lost a child was talking to a robot in the shape of baby seal.It seemed to be looking in her eyes.It seemed to be following the conversation.It comforted her. And many people found this amazing.But that woman was trying to make sense of her life with a machine that had no experience of the arc of a human life.That robot put on a great show. And we’re vulnerable.People experience pretend empathy as though it were the real thing. So during that moment,when that woman was experiencing that pretend empathy, I was thinking “That robot can’t empathize.It doesn’t face death.It doesn’t knowlife.” And as that woman took comfort in her robot companion, I didn’t find it amazing;I found it ane of the most wrenching,complicated moments in my 15 years of work. But When I stepped back, I felt myself at the cold,hard center of a perfect storm. We expect more from technology and less from each other. And I ask myself, “why have things come to this?” And I believe it’s because technology appeals to us most where we are most vulnerable. And we are vulnerable.We’re lonely,but we’re afraid of intimacy. And so from social networks to sociable robots,we’re designing technologies that will give us the illusion of companionship without the demands of friendship. We turn to technology to help us feel connected in ways we can comfortably control.But we’re not so comfortable. We are not so much in control. These days,those phones in our pockets are changing our minds and hearts because they offer us three gratifying fantasies. One,that we can put our attention where we want it to be; two,that we will always be heard; and three,that we will never have to be alone. And that third idea,that we will never have to be alone, is central to changing our psyches .Because the moment that people are alone, even for a few seconds,they become anxious, they panic,they fidget,they reach for a device.Just think of people at a checkout line or at a red light. Being alone feels like a problem that needs to be solved. And so people try to solve it by connecting. But here ,connection is more like a symptom than a cure.It expresses,but it doesn’t solve an underlying problem.But more than a symptom,constant connection is changing the way people think of themselves.It’s shaping a new way of being.The best way to describe it is “I share therefore I am.” We use technology to define ourselves by sharing our thoughts and feelings even as we’re having them.So before it was: I have a feeling,I want to make a call.Now it’s:I want to have a feeling,I need to send a text. The problem with the new regime of “I share therefore I am” is that ,if we don’t have connection, we don’t feel like ourselves. We almost don’t feel ourselves.So what do we do?We connect more and more , But in the process,We set ourselves up to be isolated. How do you get from connection to isolation?You end up isolated if you don’t cultivate the capacity for solitude,the ability to be separate,to gather yourself.Solitude is where you find yourself so that you can reach out to other people and form real attachments. When we don’t have the capacity for solitude,we turn to other people in order to feel less anxious or in order to feel alive. When this happens,we’re not able to appreciate who they are. It’s as though we’re using them as spare parts to support our fragile sense of self. We slip into thinking that always that always being connected is going to make us feel less alone. But we’re at risk,because actually it’s the opposite that’s true.If we’re not able to be alone,we’re going to be more lonely. And if we don’t teach our children to be alone,they’re only going to know how to be lonely. When I spoke at TED in 1996, reporting on my studies of the early virtual communities ,I said, “Those who make the most of their lives on the screen come to it in a spirit ofself-reflection. ” And that’t I’m calling for here,now:reflection and,more than that,a conversation about where our current use of technology,may be taking us,what it might be costing us. We’re smitten with technology. And we’re afraid,like young lovers,that too much talking might spoil the romance. But it’s time to talk.We grew up with digital technology and so we see it all grown up. But it’s not,it’s early days. There’s plenty of time for us to reconsider how we use it,how we build it.I’m not suggesting that we turn away from our devices,just that we develop a more self-aware relationship with them,with each other and with ourselves.I see some first steps.Starting thinking of solitude as a good thing.Make room for it.Find ways to demonstrate this as a value to your children.Create scared spaces at home--the kitchen,the dining room-- and reclaim them for conversation.Do the same thing at work.At work,we ;re so busy communicating that we oftendon’t have time to think,we don’t have time to talk,about the things that really matter.Change that.Most important,we all really need to listen to each other,including to the boring bits.Because it’s when we stumble or hesitate or lose our word that we reveal ourselves to each other.Technology is making a bid to redefine human connection--how we care for each other,how we care for ourselves--but it’s also giving us the opportunity to affirm our values and our direction.I’m optimistic.We have everything we need to start.We have each other.And we have the greatest chance of success if we recognize our vulnerability.That we listen,when technology says it will take something complicated and promises something simpler.So in my work,I hear that Life is hard,relationships are filled with risk.And then there’stechnology--simpler,hopeful,optimistic,ever-young.It’s like calling in the cavalry.An ad campaign promises that online and with avatars,you can “Finally,love your friends,love your body,love your life,online and with avatars.”We’re drawn to virtual romance,to computer games that seem like worlds,to the idea that robots.Robots will someday be our true companions. We spend an evening on the social net work instead of going to the pub with friends.But our fantasies of substitution have cost us.Now we all need to focus on the many,many ways technology can lead us back to our real lives,our own bodies,our own communities,our own politics,our own planet.They need us.Let’s talk about how we can use digital technology,the technology of our dreams,to make thislife,the life we can love.Thank you.。

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