Do You Ever Feel Like You’re Totally Invisible?

Do you ever feel like you’re totally invisible? I often do, having felt that way far too much, and so has a number of my good friends as well.

A good example with one of them came about a month ago when they went to a social event where they knew quite a number of people. Yet, not a single one said hello or carried on any bit of a conversation with them the entire time they were there. It was as if they were completely invisible. Ironically, I’ve actually observed this very thing happen to them in various social settings where I’ve been present as well. I’ve watched as people we both knew would walk right on by them only to say hello to me, but not them. Sadly, I wholly relate to this every time it happens given how many times I’ve been in those very same shoes. And frankly, it sucks every time it occurs, especially when it comes to where it’s been occurring the most as of late, which is with my partner’s family.

Over the five years I’ve been in this relationship, I’ve spent a considerable amount of time at my partner’s family events and get-togethers. There, at any of them, unless I engage someone into conversation with a question, no one ever talks to me. What’s even more frustrating than this was my realization the other day that I don’t think a single one of them truly knows anything about me, other than what I’ve purposely shared just to get someone to talk to me.

Another good example of me feeling totally invisible came just the other day when my home phone rang. On the other end of the line was someone I knew pretty well. They wanted to know if my partner was home, and when I said he wasn’t but that he had his cell phone on him, they said thanks and hung up. There was no hello how are you doing Andrew? There was no what’s going on in your life Andrew? There was simply no interaction with me at all.

This is ultimately what I mean about feeling totally invisible. It’s as if people don’t even see you, like you don’t exist, and it’s something I’ve known my entire life ever since I was a young kid. What’s interesting though is that there was a long period in my life when this didn’t happen, when I was far from feeling invisible.

That period was when I was heavily engaged in addictions, in addictive behaviors, like gossip and judgment, and other low spiritual conduct. Back then, people flocked to me, loving all that craziness. But I don’t want to ever become visible like that again, by resorting to any of that former existence, as it all was so spiritually unhealthy for me.

So while I continue to clearly observe the many times I’m feeling totally invisible in life these days, I’ve come to a conclusion as to why it keeps on happening. I tend to believe it’s because I beat to my own drum, because I dare to be different, because I like to act different, and well because, I also enjoy looking different. I’m a rather odd duck if you may. And odd ducks really do tend to be overlooked in life, to become totally invisible to the rest of the populace, because well, they’re odd and many people flat out don’t like odd.

But I do.

I truly like to be different, mainly because Christ was different, and I’d rather be like Christ and remain invisible to the majority, then be like who I once was. As back then, being as visible as I was always came with a price, a dark price. And that’s not a price I’m willing to ever pay again, just to overcome any of my current invisibility status in life…

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Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson

Question To Ponder For The Day

Most of us have probably chased after various things in life to get a high from them at some point or another. Perhaps, some of them were eventually deemed unhealthy by you, while others were considered far healthier. Can you name one for each from your life?

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Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson

The Thrill Of The Chase For Sex And Love Addicts

For active sex and love addicts, there is usually one thing that drives them the most in their disease. In my case, when mine was at its worst, which was just before I came to recovery for it, it was constantly the thrill of the chase.

Why I once liked the chase as much as I did was solely because it was one of the quickest ways to get my dopamine receptors going at full throttle. And just in case you’re wondering what kind of chasing I’m talking about, here are three of the most prominent examples from my old sex and love addiction playbook.

  1. The chase of finding the juiciest piece of porn on the web.
  2. The chase of seeking out the best individual on any given late evening to have a phone or cybersex based conversation with.
  3. The chase of looking for the most unavailable person, like someone who was married and supposedly straight, hoping to lure them into a sex/love relationship.

What’s sad about the chase though in any of these examples was that as soon as the end result was ever achieved for me, boredom always set in at some point and when it did, I’d immediately start the next chase in some fashion. It was a constant vicious cycle that never had any end point, hence why I was once was so addicted to sex and love.

What’s even more difficult for so many sex and love addicts who love the thrill of the chase is what happens when they attempt to settle into a long-term monogamous relationship. At first, it’s not too hard because the thrill of the chase is even there when the courtship begins. But when all those gushy-gushy feelings and early-on romance dissipates and when the honeymoon phase is finally over, it’s then that the boredom generally settles in. And when it does, it usually proves to be the major triggering factor for a great number of relapses.

In each of my previous relationships that’s precisely what happened to me. Every time this boredom showed up, I’d frequently go to porn or cyber/phone sex to deal with it. Then I’d make excuses in my head that I wasn’t cheating because those behaviors weren’t physically being with someone else. Eventually all those relationships failed because of doing things like this and when they did, I always jumped right back into the thrill of the chase with someone or something else.

Things are vastly different for me these days with the almost five-year relationship I’ve been in. While I have experienced the boredom on many different occasions, I realize now that’s only coming from having lived in the thrill of the chase for over two decades. My mind is quite geared for living in that pattern, thus it’s going to take some time to deprogram it all.

I know I am doing the healthiest thing I can now, by not engaging in this pattern, as none of it was ever spiritually healthy for me nor did it lead anywhere except into despair and depression. That’s why I constantly thank God I’m not living in that thrill of the chase anymore, because if I was, I surely wouldn’t be writing these words right now and instead would probably be in a dopamine high that would only lead to a crash later…

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Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson