Social Sciences, asked by santoshcrathod05, 7 months ago

For many it’s whichever one we REALLY don’t want the answer to, often a personal question which probes our vulnerability or pain, such as:

“What am I genuinely, ultimately afraid to admit?”

“Who am I really?”

“Am I enough?”

“Is what I feel for her/him actually love?”

“Do I still my significant other?” (Or “Does s/he still love me?”)

“When do I give up?” (i.e., stop trying to save or slow the passing of my dying loved one)

“How will I ever feel safe and innocently happy again after the trauma I faced and the depression and nightmarish terrors I suffer?”

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

For many it’s whichever one we REALLY don’t want the answer to, often a personal question which probes our vulnerability or pain, such as:

“What am I genuinely, ultimately afraid to admit?”

“Who am I really?”

“Am I enough?”

“Is what I feel for her/him actually love?”

“Do I still my significant other?” (Or “Does s/he still love me?”)

“When do I give up?” (i.e., stop trying to save or slow the passing of my dying loved one)

“How will I ever feel safe and innocently happy again after the trauma I faced and the depression and nightmarish terrors I suffer?”

Similar questions