I'm not a robot

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I'm not a robot

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As children, we dream of becoming singers, actresses, musicians, cake bakers, astronauts, test pilots. And some are even... hole diggers! But now we grow up, and adults explain to us that an economist, lawyer, programmer or banking analyst is more in demand than musicians and hole diggers. And we give up our childhood dreams for the sake of adult reality. We begin to earn money, fuss and forget our childhood dreams. And so, when the time comes to have and raise our own children, we again get the opportunity to return to the magical land of childhood, as if it were a car time takes us back several decades. We again learn to be surprised and rejoice with our children at every little thing. The main thing is not to lose this little child inside you, not to forget him, to be true to your dreams. After all, they are also a part of ourselves, our personality. By refusing them, we betray ourselves, as if we turn off the light in the hidden room of our memory. We stop rejoicing and looking at the world with surprised and admiring eyes. This is exactly what happened with the heroine of the film “Big Little Me.” You can forget your childhood friends, your dreams, but then what will remain for you? And what do you say to a little man who looks so much like you? And how will you understand it? Thanks to unexpected letters, Margaret has a unique chance to return to her fairy-tale childhood and relive episodes of the difficult life of a 7-year-old girl. And find your true self. Being yourself, bringing the “real self” and the “ideal self” closer together is one of the main goals of therapy in the client-centered (or person-centered) approach of Carl Rogers. Maybe the comedy “Big Little Me” will help You need to remember your real self and laugh at yourself. Or even become yourself in the tradition of Carl Rogers! In March 2016, I wrote a letter to myself and sealed it, marked “Open in the summer of 2019.” There were these lines: “I will go to study as a psychologist (humanistic). I will work in the Rogers tradition. In a few years I will be practicing and consulting.” Recently, I was rummaging through old papers and found a letter. Later than it should have been opened. Or, conversely, on time? In the summer of 2019, I received a diploma in psychology. And since January 2020, I began to study the Carl Rogers approach to group therapy, first as a group member, and since the fall of 2020, as an online psychotherapist student. I had already forgotten about the letter and what I wrote in it. The message from my past was a truly pleasant surprise. I intuitively found exactly what I was looking for! Be true to your dreams!

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