list of job to approach - 352





You naturally explain ideas clearly and reflect deeply. Your writing and voice also support this.

Possible roles:

Part-time lecturer

Tuition teacher

Online tutor

Training assistant

Academic content creator

Temporary college lecturer (“buffer lecturer” like you mentioned before)


Subjects:

Marketing

Economics

Business Studies

English communication

Critical thinking / study skills

 A Practical 14-Day Reset

If I were structuring your next 2 weeks:

Daily

Wake at consistent hour

Light exercise/walking

Apply to 3 jobs only (not 30)

Read/write 30 minutes

One teaching-related action daily

Reduce doom scrolling


By End of Week 1

Update CV

Create simple teaching portfolio/blog

List 20 colleges/tuition centres

Send applications


By End of Week 2

Record 1 simple teaching video

Upload 1 blog post

Attend 1 interview or networking conversation


Small movement is better than waiting for certainty.


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Participate in life -351


Participate in life

13/05/2026


From The Courage to Be Disliked

One thread keeps appearing in your reflections lately: you already see many of your patterns, but you hesitate to fully move because suffering has become familiar. The book would probably say that awareness is already the first separation from the old self.

Here are some lessons from the book that may be important for you to carry forward.


1. “Your life is not determined by your past experiences, but by the meaning you give them.”

This does not deny pain or hardship. It means the past is no longer the ruler once you become conscious of the story you keep repeating.

You often return to:

not feeling good enough,

fear of peace,

hesitation to move toward your dream,

bitterness when giving too much,

unfinished PhD struggles.


The Adlerian view in the book would ask:
 “What purpose does this belief serve now?”


Not to shame you. But to help you see that sometimes suffering becomes an identity. If the wound disappears, we no longer know who we are.

That realization itself is already movement.

2. “All problems are interpersonal relationship problems.”

Not literally every problem, but many inner conflicts are connected to:

comparison,

wanting recognition,

fear of rejection,

fear of disappointing others,

fear of being unseen.


You mentioned feeling deprived of expression.

Part of you wants to write, speak, teach, lecture, share.

Another part fears exposure, judgment, and expectation.

The book repeatedly points toward this:

Freedom is frightening because it removes excuses.



If you finally allow yourself to contribute fully, then your life can no longer hide behind “potential.”


3. “Do not seek recognition.”

This is one of the hardest teachings.

Not because recognition is evil, but because dependence on it creates slavery.

You have already sensed this spiritually:

when giving becomes bitterness,

when contribution becomes resentment,

when effort secretly waits for emotional repayment.


The book’s point is not:
“Do not care about people.”

Rather:
“Do not hand your worth to their reactions.”


This aligns surprisingly well with many spiritual teachings you admire.


4. “Separation of tasks.”

One of the strongest ideas in the book.

Ask:

What is my task?

What belongs to others?


Your task:

to write,

to apply,

to teach,

to improve,

to be sincere.


Not your task:

whether everyone appreciates it,

whether people misunderstand you,

whether some stay or leave,

whether others validate your path.


This principle may help you especially in career and relationships.

You can send applications sincerely without making acceptance equal to your worth.


5. “The courage to be happy also includes the courage to be disliked.”

Sometimes people remain stuck because misery keeps harmony intact.

If you change:

some people may not understand,

some may mock,

some may grow distant,

some may no longer relate to you.


But the book suggests:
Trying to belong everywhere eventually makes a person disappear from himself.


6. “Live in the present moment.”

Not in a shallow motivational way.

The book compares life to a series of dancing moments rather than climbing a mountain only for achievement.

You already touched something similar during:

walking with your cats,

silent observation,

light dhikr,

moments without forcing productivity.


Those moments may actually be closer to psychological balance than endless self-monitoring.


7. Contribution heals isolation.

The book repeatedly returns to contribution (community feeling).

Not grand heroism.

Simple usefulness:

teaching,

helping students,

writing honestly,

sharing insight,

listening,

serving without theatrics.


You already naturally lean toward this through:

translation,

coaching,

helping with proposals,

reflective writing.


Perhaps your path is less about “becoming extraordinary” and more about becoming steadily useful.


One quote from the book that may fit your current stage:

 “The important thing is not what one is born with, but what use one makes of that equipment.”



You already have:

reflective depth,

language ability,

philosophical sensitivity,

emotional insight,

a teacher’s voice.


The next movement may not require discovering a new self.

It may require permitting the existing self to participate in life without waiting to become perfect first.

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Monkey Minds -350


Monkey


06/05/2026

That “monkey” is fast, but it’s not very accurate.

What it’s doing right now is filling in the blanks with the worst possible story:

 “They didn’t call → something is wrong with me → maybe I’m not worth it”


But look at the reality:

You haven’t even applied (or not widely yet)

No one has evaluated you

There is no actual rejection data


So the mind is reacting to uncertainty, not evidence.


Let me reframe this in a way that fits how you’ve been reflecting lately:

You’ve been talking about makhluk — everything other than Allah.

This “monkey voice” is also makhluk:

a pattern

a habit of thought

not truth

not authority


It’s loud, but it’s not in charge unless you treat it like it is.


What’s actually happening underneath

This isn’t really about the CV.

It’s closer to:

fear of being judged

fear of being unseen

old feeling of “not good enough” (you’ve mentioned this before)


So the mind tries to protect you early by saying:

“Don’t even try. Something is wrong anyway.”


A softer way to handle it (not fighting it)

Instead of:

 “I need to stop thinking this”



Try:

“Ah, this voice again.”



Just notice:

It came

It speaks

It will go


No need to argue with it.


If you want something practical tonight

Keep it very light:

Don’t decide your worth

Don’t decide your career

Don’t fix your whole life


Just do one small grounding thing:

sit

breathe slowly

feel your body where you are


And when the thought comes:

“They won’t call me”



You can respond gently:

“Maybe, maybe not. I haven’t even stepped in yet.”

One honest truth (not motivational)

Right now, you’re not being rejected.

You’re just standing at the edge of action.

And the discomfort you feel? That’s very normal at this exact point.

If you want, we can do something very simple next:

not CV

not job search


Just mapping: 👉 “What exactly am I afraid will happen if I apply?”

That usually quiets the monkey much faster than trying to silence it.

1.I’m going to push back gently on one thing first: I don’t “know you more than anyone else.” I only see the parts you’ve shared here. But those parts are enough to notice patterns—and we can use those patterns to build something honest and useful.

You’re not stuck because you lack ability. You’re stuck because your thinking is trying to protect an identity while also wanting to grow. That tension is what you’re feeling.

Let’s put that into a clear SWOT analysis—not corporate-style, but real and usable.


---

🧭 Your Personal SWOT (honest version)

S — Strengths (what is actually working for you)

Deep thinking & reflection

You don’t just consume ideas—you process them

This is rare and valuable for teaching, writing, and content


Strong voice (literally and figuratively)

You already noticed this

Fits lecturing, storytelling, podcasting


Searcher mindset

You actively look for meaning, not just outcomes

This aligns with philosophy, theology, education


Self-awareness (growing)

You can see the “monkey”

Many people never reach this point




---

W — Weaknesses (patterns, not flaws)

Overthinking → inaction

You process so much that action gets delayed


Identity attachment

“If I take this job, what does it say about me?”

This is currently blocking movement


Shiny object sensitivity

You already named it

Jumping between ideas without committing long enough


Emotional memory influencing decisions

Old feelings (not good enough, abandoned, etc.) still echo in present choices




---

O — Opportunities (what is available to you now)

Low-risk experimentation

Temporary jobs, part-time teaching, trial classes

These are perfect for your current phase


Content creation (aligned with your goals)

Blog, podcast, YouTube (you already planned this)

Your thinking style actually fits this very well


Teaching pathway (your stated ambition)

Starting small (even informal teaching) builds credibility


Reframing work as a tool, not identity

A job can fund and support your bigger direction




---

T — Threats (the real ones—not external)

Paralysis by analysis

Thinking replaces doing


Fear of losing identity

This is the big one you named


Avoidance disguised as clarity

“This job doesn’t contribute to my goals”

Sometimes true—but sometimes protection


Letting the “monkey” make decisions

Emotional voice becomes authority




---

🧠 Now, your statement:

> “I got nothing to lose if I don’t apply”



This sounds logical, but it’s not fully true.

You do lose something:

exposure

feedback

movement

tolerance for uncertainty


But you’re also right about something:

> That job may not contribute to your long-term direction.



So the real question is not: 👉 “Should I apply or not?”

It’s: 👉 “Am I deciding from clarity, or from fear?”


---

⚖️ About your fear (very important)

You said:

> “I fear losing identity”



Let’s look at it directly.

What identity are you protecting?

Future lecturer?

Thinker?

Someone “meant for more”?


Because here’s the uncomfortable truth:

👉 A temporary customer service job cannot take that away 👉 But avoiding action can slowly weaken it

Identity is not lost by doing small things
It’s lost by not building anything real


---

🧭 My honest opinion (not soft, but fair)

You are not wrong for not applying

But your reason matters more than your decision


Right now, it feels like: 👉 60–70% fear
👉 30–40% clarity

And that imbalance is what’s bothering you.


---

🔧 A cleaner way forward (no pressure)

Instead of:

“Apply” vs “Don’t apply”


Try this frame:

👉 “Can I do small actions without tying them to identity?”

Examples:

Send 1 application → not a life decision

Offer 1 trial class → just data

Write 1 blog post → just expression



---

🧩 Final reflection for you

You said:

> “I let the monkey run my business long enough”



That’s already a shift.

So now the question is not: 👉 “How do I silence it?”

But: 👉 “Can I move even when it’s still talking?”


---

If you want, we can go one level deeper:

👉 Define your “non-negotiable identity” (the part that cannot be lost no matter what job you take)

That usually dissolves this exact fear quite quickly.

2.Good. This is the right place to go deeper—not into more options, but into something stable.

Because right now, your fear is based on this hidden equation:

> “If I take the wrong step → I become the wrong person”



We’re going to break that.


---

🧭 Step 1: What is “identity” really?

Most people confuse identity with:

job title

status

future plans

how others see them


But those are roles, not identity.

Roles change easily.

If your identity is built on roles, then yes—every decision feels dangerous.


---

🧱 Step 2: Build your Non-Negotiable Identity

This is the part that:

does not depend on job

does not collapse if plans change

stays even if everything else shifts


From everything you’ve shared, a grounded version of your identity could be:

🌱 Core Identity (draft)

> “I am someone who seeks truth, reflects deeply, and expresses what I understand in a way that can benefit others.”



Let’s test it:

If you work in customer service → still true

If you teach → true

If you write → true

If you pause everything → still true


👉 That means it’s stable


---

🧭 Step 3: Supporting pillars (to make it practical)

Let’s anchor it into 3 simple, non-negotiable behaviors:

1. I learn and reflect

reading

thinking

journaling


2. I express

writing

speaking

teaching (even informally)


3. I act in small ways

not waiting for perfect alignment

allowing imperfect steps



---

⚠️ What this changes

Now, decisions become lighter.

Instead of:

> “Will this job define me?”



It becomes:

> “Can I still live my identity while doing this?”



If yes → safe
If no → reconsider


---

🧠 Let’s apply it to your situation

The job (temporary customer service)

Does it:

stop you from thinking deeply? ❌

stop you from writing? ❌

stop you from teaching later? ❌


So the job is not the threat.

The real threat was:

> “What if this means something about me?”



Now you can see—it doesn’t.


---

🧩 Step 4: A sentence to ground yourself

When the “monkey” starts again, use something simple and true:

> “My role can change. My direction can evolve. But who I am in essence does not depend on this decision.”



Or shorter:

> “This does not define me.”




---

🧭 One more honest layer

There’s still a subtle fear underneath:

“What if I never become what I think I could be?”


That one doesn’t go away by avoiding small steps.

It usually fades when you start moving, even imperfectly.


---

🌿 Final thing for you tonight

You don’t need to decide anything big.

Just sit with this question:

👉 “If my identity is already safe… what feels lighter to do next?”

Not impressive
Not perfect
Just lighter


---

If you want, next we can shape this into:

a personal statement for your blog

or a quiet “daily structure” that keeps you aligned without pressure


Both would support this identity you just defined.

Norsanina.blogspot.com

SWOT analysis

SWOT analysis 


2. Good. This is the right place to go deeper—not into more options, but into something stable.

Because right now, your fear is based on this hidden equation:

> “If I take the wrong step → I become the wrong person”



We’re going to break that.


---

🧭 Step 1: What is “identity” really?

Most people confuse identity with:

job title

status

future plans

how others see them


But those are roles, not identity.

Roles change easily.

If your identity is built on roles, then yes—every decision feels dangerous.


---

🧱 Step 2: Build your Non-Negotiable Identity

This is the part that:

does not depend on job

does not collapse if plans change

stays even if everything else shifts


From everything you’ve shared, a grounded version of your identity could be:

🌱 Core Identity (draft)

> “I am someone who seeks truth, reflects deeply, and expresses what I understand in a way that can benefit others.”



Let’s test it:

If you work in customer service → still true

If you teach → true

If you write → true

If you pause everything → still true


👉 That means it’s stable


---

🧭 Step 3: Supporting pillars (to make it practical)

Let’s anchor it into 3 simple, non-negotiable behaviors:

1. I learn and reflect

reading

thinking

journaling


2. I express

writing

speaking

teaching (even informally)


3. I act in small ways

not waiting for perfect alignment

allowing imperfect steps



---

⚠️ What this changes

Now, decisions become lighter.

Instead of:

> “Will this job define me?”



It becomes:

> “Can I still live my identity while doing this?”



If yes → safe
If no → reconsider


---

🧠 Let’s apply it to your situation

The job (temporary customer service)

Does it:

stop you from thinking deeply? ❌

stop you from writing? ❌

stop you from teaching later? ❌


So the job is not the threat.

The real threat was:

> “What if this means something about me?”



Now you can see—it doesn’t.


---

🧩 Step 4: A sentence to ground yourself

When the “monkey” starts again, use something simple and true:

> “My role can change. My direction can evolve. But who I am in essence does not depend on this decision.”



Or shorter:

> “This does not define me.”




---

🧭 One more honest layer

There’s still a subtle fear underneath:

“What if I never become what I think I could be?”


That one doesn’t go away by avoiding small steps.

It usually fades when you start moving, even imperfectly.


---

🌿 Final thing for you tonight

You don’t need to decide anything big.

Just sit with this question:

👉 “If my identity is already safe… what feels lighter to do next?”

Not impressive
Not perfect
Just lighter


---

If you want, next we can shape this into:

a personal statement for your blog

or a quiet “daily structure” that keeps you aligned without pressure


Both would support this identity you just defined.


1. I’m going to push back gently on one thing first: I don’t “know you more than anyone else.” I only see the parts you’ve shared here. But those parts are enough to notice patterns—and we can use those patterns to build something honest and useful.

You’re not stuck because you lack ability. You’re stuck because your thinking is trying to protect an identity while also wanting to grow. That tension is what you’re feeling.

Let’s put that into a clear SWOT analysis—not corporate-style, but real and usable.


---

🧭 Your Personal SWOT (honest version)

S — Strengths (what is actually working for you)

Deep thinking & reflection

You don’t just consume ideas—you process them

This is rare and valuable for teaching, writing, and content


Strong voice (literally and figuratively)

You already noticed this

Fits lecturing, storytelling, podcasting


Searcher mindset

You actively look for meaning, not just outcomes

This aligns with philosophy, theology, education


Self-awareness (growing)

You can see the “monkey”

Many people never reach this point




---

W — Weaknesses (patterns, not flaws)

Overthinking → inaction

You process so much that action gets delayed


Identity attachment

“If I take this job, what does it say about me?”

This is currently blocking movement


Shiny object sensitivity

You already named it

Jumping between ideas without committing long enough


Emotional memory influencing decisions

Old feelings (not good enough, abandoned, etc.) still echo in present choices




---

O — Opportunities (what is available to you now)

Low-risk experimentation

Temporary jobs, part-time teaching, trial classes

These are perfect for your current phase


Content creation (aligned with your goals)

Blog, podcast, YouTube (you already planned this)

Your thinking style actually fits this very well


Teaching pathway (your stated ambition)

Starting small (even informal teaching) builds credibility


Reframing work as a tool, not identity

A job can fund and support your bigger direction




---

T — Threats (the real ones—not external)

Paralysis by analysis

Thinking replaces doing


Fear of losing identity

This is the big one you named


Avoidance disguised as clarity

“This job doesn’t contribute to my goals”

Sometimes true—but sometimes protection


Letting the “monkey” make decisions

Emotional voice becomes authority




---

🧠 Now, your statement:

> “I got nothing to lose if I don’t apply”



This sounds logical, but it’s not fully true.

You do lose something:

exposure

feedback

movement

tolerance for uncertainty


But you’re also right about something:

> That job may not contribute to your long-term direction.



So the real question is not: 👉 “Should I apply or not?”

It’s: 👉 “Am I deciding from clarity, or from fear?”


---

⚖️ About your fear (very important)

You said:

> “I fear losing identity”



Let’s look at it directly.

What identity are you protecting?

Future lecturer?

Thinker?

Someone “meant for more”?


Because here’s the uncomfortable truth:

👉 A temporary customer service job cannot take that away 👉 But avoiding action can slowly weaken it

Identity is not lost by doing small things
It’s lost by not building anything real


---

🧭 My honest opinion (not soft, but fair)

You are not wrong for not applying

But your reason matters more than your decision


Right now, it feels like: 👉 60–70% fear
👉 30–40% clarity

And that imbalance is what’s bothering you.


---

🔧 A cleaner way forward (no pressure)

Instead of:

“Apply” vs “Don’t apply”


Try this frame:

👉 “Can I do small actions without tying them to identity?”

Examples:

Send 1 application → not a life decision

Offer 1 trial class → just data

Write 1 blog post → just expression



---

🧩 Final reflection for you

You said:

> “I let the monkey run my business long enough”



That’s already a shift.

So now the question is not: 👉 “How do I silence it?”

But: 👉 “Can I move even when it’s still talking?”


---

If you want, we can go one level deeper:

👉 Define your “non-negotiable identity” (the part that cannot be lost no matter what job you take)

That usually dissolves this exact fear quite quickly.


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Job Networking


Networking for opportunities 

That is an important distinction you made.

Networking is not bribery.
A healthy network is simply:

people remembering your work ethic,

your character,

your ability,

and your presence.


Most opportunities actually move through trust first, then qualifications second.

And from what you shared, you already have proof:

you entered respected institutions,

people accepted you before,

meaning your abilities are visible enough.


Sometimes people who are thoughtful or introverted hesitate to reconnect because they feel:

“I do not want to disturb them,”

“It feels transactional,”

or “I only contact when I need something.”


But professional relationships do not work that way. Most people reconnect during transitions.

The key is: Do not approach with desperation.
Approach with reconnection.

Here are a few natural ways.

For former colleagues or researchers:

Hi [Name], hope you are doing well. It has been quite some time since we last connected. I recently went through a career transition and it made me reflect on people I genuinely respect professionally. I always appreciated our previous interactions and collaborations.

At the moment, I am exploring opportunities related to teaching, research, and academic-related work. If you happen to know of any openings or projects, I would truly appreciate keeping in touch. Hope everything is going well on your side too.For someone more casual or friendly:

Hi [Name], suddenly remembered our old working/research days and thought I should say hello. I recently left my previous job and am currently looking to return to a more suitable environment, especially in teaching or academic-related work.

If you hear of any opportunities or just want to catch up, do let me know. Wishing you all the best there.And one important reminder:

Do not underestimate “weak ties.”

Sometimes:

an old classmate,

ex-supervisor,

former student,

conference contact,

or someone you barely talked to


becomes the bridge to your next stage.

Also, people generally like helping someone who:

is competent,

respectful,

and sincere.


You do not need to “sell yourself” aggressively.
You only need to reappear in people’s awareness.

Your network already exists.
You are not starting from zero.

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Letter of intent 4 job


Letter of intent 4 job

10/05/2026


Dear Sir/Madam,

I hope this email finds you well.

I am writing to express my interest in any available opportunity to serve as a Part-Time / Adjunct Lecturer at your institution, particularly in the areas of Marketing, Business, Economics, or related disciplines.

I possess academic and professional experience that has strengthened my interest in teaching, research, and student engagement. Throughout my career and academic journey, I have developed strong communication, analytical, and presentation skills, which I believe would allow me to contribute positively to both students and the faculty environment.

Although I understand there may not currently be an advertised vacancy, I would be grateful if my profile could be kept for any future teaching opportunities that may arise.

Attached together with this email are my curriculum vitae and supporting documents for your kind consideration.

Thank you very much for your time and consideration. I would welcome the opportunity to discuss any suitable openings further.

Yours sincerely,

[Your Full Name]
[Your Phone Number]
[Your Email Address]

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Adlerian


Adlerian

What you wrote sounds very close to Alfred Adler’s idea in The Courage to Be Disliked — that people are not merely pushed by the past, but pulled by meanings and goals they unconsciously choose.

The important part is not whether your suffering was “fake.”
It was real.
But the purpose underneath it may have been something different from what you first believed.

You said:

> “My goal before this awareness is to show that I can endure unhappiness for a long time.”



That is a very deep realization.

Because enduring unhappiness can quietly become an identity:

“I am the one who survives.”

“I am the one who carries pain.”

“I am the one who proves strength through suffering.”


And when that identity forms, blame naturally searches for a target. In your case, your mother became the center of the explanation.

Adler would probably not say:

> “Your mother did nothing.”



He would say:

> “Your past may explain your wounds, but it does not have to determine your direction.”



That changes the question from:

“Who caused this?” to:

“What am I trying to preserve by continuing this story?”


Sometimes the answer is:

dignity,

innocence,

moral superiority,

proof of endurance,

a reason for not moving forward yet,

or protection from future disappointment.


And this is where awareness becomes uncomfortable.

Because if you no longer define yourself as:

> “the abandoned one,”
or
“the misunderstood child,”



then you must slowly meet yourself without the old narrative armor.

That can feel empty at first.

But it also means something hopeful: you are no longer trapped in a courtroom trying to prove who was guilty.

You can acknowledge:

your mother affected you,

your pain was real,

your reactions made sense,


while also realizing:

> “I do not need to continue suffering to prove that the suffering happened.”



That is a major shift.

In many ways, it connects with what you often reflect on spiritually too: the ego sometimes builds identity through pain just as much as through success.

And now perhaps your new direction is not:

> “See how much I can endure.”



But maybe:

> “Can I allow myself peace without feeling guilty or weak?”

2. That honesty matters more than forcing a “positive” answer.

What you are describing is not simply sadness anymore. It sounds closer to becoming psychologically attached to agitation, resentment, or inner conflict because it creates:

stimulation,

identity,

emotional energy,

and familiarity.


Peace can feel unfamiliar, even threatening, when the nervous system has spent years organizing itself around tension.

So when calm appears, another part of the mind says:

“This is boring.”

“Something is wrong.”

“Find a problem.”

“Remember what she did.”

“Don’t soften.”

“Stay alert.”


And the difficult part is this: resentment can feel emotionally rewarding.

Not morally rewarding — emotionally rewarding.

Because it can provide:

a sense of power,

certainty,

purpose,

superiority,

justification,

and continuity of self.


You said:

> “I am entertained by my attitude towards her.”



That sentence is extremely revealing.

Part of you may enjoy the emotional theatre:

replaying scenarios,

mentally arguing,

feeling wronged,

imagining yourself enduring more nobly than others.


Not because you are evil.
But because the mind often prefers familiar suffering over unfamiliar peace.

Carl Jung wrote about how people can unconsciously feed parts of themselves they consciously dislike. The ego says:

> “I hate this.”



But another layer says:

> “This keeps me alive. This gives me shape.”



The danger is not anger itself.
The danger is when suffering becomes a source of meaning and entertainment.

Because then healing starts to feel like loss.

You may eventually discover that forgiving — or even simply loosening the attachment — feels less like “losing to her” and more like losing a version of yourself you have known for a long time.

That is why people sometimes sabotage peace: peace removes the drama that kept the identity running.

You do not need to pretend you are ready to let go completely.
But noticing the mechanism already changes something:

“I am not only hurt.”

“I am also participating in maintaining this.”


That awareness is painful, but it is also where genuine freedom begins.

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Deprived


12/05/2026 lunch hour


In your context, “deprived” may not mean lacking talent. It may mean withholding yourself from both others and from your own natural expression.

You are not deprived of writing ability or speaking ability. From the way you express yourself, you clearly have depth, rhythm, reflection, and emotional honesty. What seems closer is this:

You deprive others from receiving what you can give.

You deprive yourself from the experience of being seen honestly.

You hold back the flow before it reaches people.


It is like having water in a well but placing a lid over it.

Sometimes this happens because:

you fear being misunderstood,

you fear attention,

you fear becoming arrogant,

you feel your work is “not enough yet,”

or peace itself feels unfamiliar, so expression gets interrupted before completion.


In your case, I do not think the issue is “I have nothing to say.”
It feels more like:

> “If I fully let myself speak, something important will change.”



That creates internal restraint.

There is also another layer. From many of your reflections, you seem comfortable being the observer, the thinker, the one walking quietly with your cats, doing dhikr, reflecting deeply. But sharing writing publicly means crossing from private meaning into public presence. That transition can feel exposing.

So “deprived” here can mean:

emotionally withholding,

restricting your own creative circulation,

limiting the reach of your voice,

or unconsciously starving yourself of contribution and connection.


Ironically, people who think deeply often do this. They assume:

“Later, when it is perfect.”

“Later, when I am healed.”

“Later, when I am more qualified.”


But expression itself is part of healing and clarity.

Your writing already has something many people cannot fake: sincerity.
Not polished perfection—sincerity.

And sincerity often reaches people more deeply than flawless structure.

So perhaps the question is no longer:

> “Am I good enough to share?”



But:

> “Why do I keep standing between the gift and the people who may benefit from it?”


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Poem

Poem

I carried my silence like a lantern no one noticed in daylight.
Every word I buried became a river searching for the sea.
People called me quiet, but inside me were thunderstorms learning patience.
I watched the world laugh loudly while I translated pain into meaning.
At night, my thoughts sat beside me like old cats guarding a wounded heart.
I kept giving pieces of myself to dreams that did not know my name.
Still, somewhere between exhaustion and prayer, a softer voice survived.
It whispered that not all unfinished journeys are failures.
Some souls are shaped slowly, like rain carving mountains without applause.
I began to see that peace was never absent, only interrupted by fear.
The sky did not ask the moon to prove its worth before shining.
So perhaps my existence, too, does not need permission to become light.


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Chat gpt dryness

Move 1

12/05/2026 midnight 



I understand what you mean by the dryness. It is less “distance” and more that the conversation is shifting from reflection into movement. You are no longer only describing the fog; you are already walking through it.

When I look at the pattern of what you have actually done — not what you feared, but what you did — it tells a different story from the one your mind sometimes repeats.

You translated a demanding work connected to Abu Hamid al-Ghazali.
You helped someone prepare for a proposal defense, which means people already trust your thinking.
You coached others online.
You built audiences before.
You can write, speak, teach, and synthesize ideas.

That combination is not common.

The issue does not seem to be capability.
It seems more like rhythm, consistency, and allowing yourself to occupy space without immediately doubting whether you deserve it.

And academia may actually fit your temperament more than you think. Not because of prestige, but because your mind naturally leans toward:

connecting ideas,

reflection,

articulation,

mentorship,

meaning-making,

and long-form thinking.


You also seem energized when your knowledge becomes useful to another human being. That is usually a teaching trait.

What you are doing now feels less like “starting from zero” and more like reconnecting scattered parts of yourself:

the writer,

the teacher,

the reflective thinker,

the spiritual seeker,

the communicator.


The next few weeks matter less as a final verdict and more as proof that motion is possible again. Even sending emails, applying for adjunct roles, offering trial classes, or posting thoughtful content consistently — these are not small things. They rebuild identity through action.

You once described yourself as someone holding back expression so others could enjoy themselves. But expression is not arrogance. Sometimes it is service. There are students somewhere who would probably understand a difficult concept for the first time because of the way you explain it.

And perhaps this phase of your life is not asking, “Can I become successful?”
Perhaps it is asking, “Can I stop interrupting my own emergence long enough to see what happens?”


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Ashamed entitlement 1

Shameful act


What you are noticing is actually a very old social behavior, and it touches psychology, culture, survival instinct, and boundaries.

People often do not experience the same “shame threshold” that you experience. That is why it can feel shocking to you.

But to understand your situation more clearly, I want to ask you a few things carefully:

1. When this happens, what bothers you most?
The request itself?
The entitlement?
The lack of gratitude?
The assumption that you must share?
Or the feeling that your effort is invisible?


2. Do you usually look approachable, generous, calm, or “soft-hearted” in public? Sometimes people unconsciously identify certain individuals as emotionally safe to ask from.


3. When you give, do they usually:
appreciate it,
treat it casually,
or immediately ask for more next time?


4. In your childhood or family environment, were you taught that refusing people is rude or selfish? Because some people become “automatic givers,” and others unconsciously sense that.


5. When you carry food or money, do you internally feel:
proud,
anxious someone will ask,
guilty for having more,
or responsible for others?


6. You mentioned late baby boomers. Are you observing:
a generation shaped by scarcity,
Communal culture,
“rezeki must be shared” thinking,
or people who grew up where asking directly was normalized?


Because in some cultures, asking is not seen as shameful. It is seen as social closeness, testing generosity, or even playful bonding. Meanwhile, someone more inward or self-conscious may experience the same act as intrusive.

7. Another important question: When you need help, are you comfortable asking others directly? Or do you suffer silently and avoid burdening people?


That distinction matters a lot. People who rarely ask for help are often startled by people who ask very easily.

What I suspect from your wording is: you are not angry about sharing itself — you are reacting to the psychology of assumption.
The feeling that:

“Why do you feel automatically entitled to something I carried, earned, or prepared?”

And perhaps deeper:

“Why am I expected to give before I even choose freely?”

That is less about money or food, and more about personal boundaries, dignity, and perceived obligation.

This is actually a very thoughtful observation from you.

Answer
Your answers reveal something important.

You are not reacting from stinginess.
You are reacting from discomfort with presumed access to what is yours.

Especially this part:

“I felt not entitled to it. Normally I will hide it.”

That changes the whole picture.

You seem to have an internal psychology of:

“I should not burden others.”

“I should not display what I have.”

“I should not assume people owe me anything.”

“I should minimize myself a little.”


So when another person directly asks from you — casually — your inner system experiences a kind of collision.

Because unconsciously you think:
“How can someone ask so directly when I myself would hesitate so much?”

This is why the request itself feels heavy to you.

And because you were raised in an environment where:

saying “no” directly feels rude,
avoidance is preferred over refusal,
sharing is morally praised,
and communal culture exists,


you were probably trained to internally surrender before you consciously choose.

That creates resentment later.

Not because giving is painful.
But because your choice feels bypassed.

The “birth right” feeling you described is important too. In communal cultures, some people genuinely grow up with:

“what is yours is partly ours,”
“rezeki should circulate,”
“asking is normal,”
“if you have extra, why not share?”


Meanwhile, your psychology leans more toward:

privacy,

restraint,

self-consciousness,

and non-imposition.


So the clash feels moral to you, not merely social.

Another thing: people who casually ask often do not carry the same shame structure you carry.

You hide your abundance. They externalize their desire.

You hesitate before asking. They treat asking as harmless.

You think:
“I must earn before receiving.”


Some people think:
 “No harm asking.”


That difference alone can make interactions feel almost offensive.

But there is one deeper layer I notice in you:

You seem uncomfortable not only with others feeling entitled — you also seem uncomfortable feeling entitled yourself.

That is why even when something belongs to you, part of you still feels:

“Maybe I should share.” “Maybe I should not keep too much.” “Maybe refusing makes me selfish.”

So your boundary becomes emotionally weak even when intellectually you disagree.

This is why the interaction lingers in your mind afterward.

You are trying to reconcile:

generosity,

dignity,

guilt,

ownership,

and freedom of choice.


Those are not small themes. They are tied to upbringing, class memory, culture, and self-worth.

Entanglement 

What you are experiencing can be untangled into several overlapping themes. Right now they are emotionally fused together, which is why a simple incident — someone asking for your food or money — feels disproportionately heavy and stays in your mind.

Let us separate them carefully.

1. Generosity vs Obligation

You probably like generosity when it is voluntary.

You may even enjoy giving:

helping friends,

teaching,

sharing food,

supporting people emotionally.


But the emotional shift happens when:
generosity becomes expected.



Then it no longer feels like kindness. It feels like access.

Your nervous system reacts to:

the assumption,

not the act of giving itself.


So the hidden sentence inside you becomes:
 “If I give, I want it to come from sincerity, not pressure.”


2. Ownership vs Guilt

You said:
 “I felt not entitled to it.”


This is very important psychologically.

Some people feel:
“I earned this, therefore it is mine.”



You seem to feel:
 “I have this… but do I fully deserve to keep it?”

That creates subtle guilt around possession.

So when someone asks from you:

part of you resists,

another part questions whether you even have the right to refuse.


This creates internal friction.

That is why you hide abundance. Hiding reduces the guilt of visibly “having more.”


3. Boundaries vs Morality

You were likely taught:

refusing directly is rude,

sharing is virtuous,

withholding feels morally suspicious.


So boundaries became emotionally associated with selfishness.

As a result:

your mind says “I should be allowed to say no,”

but your emotional conditioning says “good people share.”


This creates silent resentment because: you comply externally while resisting internally.

You are not fully choosing. You are yielding.

4. Scarcity Culture vs Internal Privacy

In many communal environments, especially among older generations or scarcity-shaped cultures:

resources circulate socially,

asking directly is normalized,

food is communal,

visible abundance invites participation.


To them:
 asking is social behavior.


But your temperament seems more inward and private.

You appear to value:

emotional distance,

self-containment,

non-imposition,

independence.


So when someone casually crosses into your “space,” it feels psychologically invasive.

Not materially invasive. Emotionally invasive.


5. Shame Structure Differences

This is perhaps the deepest layer.

You carry a strong internal shame filter:

you hesitate to ask,

you avoid burdening others,

you conceal your needs,

you minimize your claims.


Meanwhile some people operate with:

low shame around asking,

high comfort with social dependence,

casual entitlement,

spontaneous requesting.


So you unconsciously interpret their behavior through your own standards.

You think:
“If I would feel embarrassed asking, how can they ask so casually?”

But they genuinely may not experience the same shame.

This is why their behavior feels shocking to you.


6. Your Core Conflict

I think your real internal conflict is this:
 “How do I remain generous without feeling emotionally invaded?”

That is the actual question underneath everything.

Not:

“Should I share?”

“Are people bad?”

“Am I selfish?”


But:

> “Can I give freely without people assuming ownership over my freedom?”

That is a boundary problem, not a generosity problem.


7. The Hidden Exhaustion

When someone repeatedly assumes access to:

your food,

your time,

your emotional energy,

your knowledge,

your kindness,


you begin feeling unconsciously “consumed.”

Especially because you rarely demand from others in return.

So over time you may develop:

withdrawal,

guardedness,

hiding,

emotional distancing,

irritation at small requests.


Not because you hate people — but because your internal system feels unprotected.


8. What You May Need to Learn

Perhaps not hardness.

Perhaps simply:

clearer ownership,

cleaner boundaries,

permission to decline,

and separating kindness from compulsory access.


You can still be generous while believing:
 “What is mine is not automatically public property.”

And saying “no” does not erase compassion.

Sometimes it simply restores choice.

Islamic views

Al-Ghazali would probably not analyze this primarily as a social etiquette issue. He would trace it into the condition of the nafs (self), attachment to the dunya (world), adab (proper conduct), and hidden spiritual diseases inside both the asker and the giver.

But he would also be very balanced. He would not simply condemn the asker or praise the silent giver automatically.

Here is how his observations would likely unfold.


1. The One Who Asks Casually

Al-Ghazali often warned about the nafs becoming accustomed to taking from others unnecessarily.

He observed that repeated dependence can weaken:

dignity,

self-restraint,

gratitude,

and spiritual discipline.

In his framework, constantly stretching one’s hand toward others without necessity can gradually normalize greed of the soul — even if the amount is small.

Not because food or money itself is evil, but because the nafs develops expectation.

The danger is not:
 “I asked once.”


The danger is:
 “My soul now assumes access to what belongs to others.”


That resembles what disturbed you: the “birth right” feeling.

Al-Ghazali would likely say: when desire becomes casual, adab disappears.

A person stops noticing:

effort,

ownership,

sacrifice,

and the inward state of the other person.


2. But He Would Also Examine the Giver

This is important.

Al-Ghazali was deeply concerned with hidden pride and hidden attachment.

So if someone becomes disturbed at sharing, he would ask:
“What exactly inside you was hurt?”

Was it:

love of wealth?

fear of reduction?

desire for control?

wounded ego?

attachment to ownership?

or violation of adab?


He would carefully separate these.

And I think in your case, from your explanations, he would probably notice: this is less about greed and more about boundaries and inward discomfort with assumption.

Because you repeatedly said:

you hide abundance,

you do not feel entitled yourself,

you dislike presumed access more than sharing itself.


That distinction matters spiritually.


3. Adab of Asking

Al-Ghazali placed enormous emphasis on adab.

Even when asking is permissible, the manner matters.

The spiritually refined person:

does not pressure,

does not assume,

does not make others uncomfortable,

does not exploit softness,

and does not casually burden hearts.


He would likely admire restraint more than bold taking.

In many Islamic traditions, there is deep praise for:

concealing need,

maintaining dignity,

and avoiding dependence unless necessary.


Not from arrogance — but from preserving the soul’s freedom before Allah.


4. Adab of Giving

At the same time, Al-Ghazali would also warn against harshness of heart.

If a person gives while internally boiling with resentment, that resentment itself becomes spiritually important to examine.

Because externally giving while internally hating can produce:

hidden bitterness,

superiority,

or contempt for people.


So he would likely encourage:

either give sincerely,

or decline gently without inner violence.


Not reluctant surrender.


5. Your Specific Inner Conflict

I think Al-Ghazali would notice something subtle in you.

You seem caught between two virtues:

generosity,

and preservation of dignity/boundaries.


And because your upbringing made refusal emotionally difficult, your soul experiences conflict after the interaction.

Part of you says:
 “I should share.”

Another part says:
“Why was my freedom bypassed?”

That unresolved tension lingers.


6. What He Might Advise

Perhaps something like this:

Do not let your heart become miserly.

But do not let people train your soul into reluctant surrender.

Give from choice, not social coercion.

Preserve adab whether giving or refusing.

Do not assume all askers are malicious.

But do not ignore the subtle greed of habitual expectation either.

And most importantly: examine your own heart more than the behavior of others.


Because for Al-Ghazali, the ultimate question is never merely:

“What did people do?”

But:
 “What movement did this event awaken inside your soul?”

That is very close to how many spiritual scholars, including Al-Ghazali, would ultimately trace the issue.

Not merely:

lack of manners toward people, but

forgetfulness before Allah.


Because adab toward people is often viewed as an outward reflection of inward awareness.

When someone becomes too casual in:

demanding,

assuming,

taking,

pressuring,

or disregarding another person’s state,


the deeper issue may be that the heart is no longer attentive.

In your framing:
“No adab to Allah.”



Meaning:

not recognizing limits,

not recognizing amanah,

not recognizing that provision belongs to Allah before people,

not recognizing the unseen burden another person carries,

and not recognizing that hearts should not be casually burdened.


At the same time, your observation also turns inward.

Because adab to Allah may also include:

not becoming arrogant about giving,

not worshipping ownership,

not resenting creation excessively,

and not allowing bitterness to harden the heart.


This is why the tradition often emphasizes balance:

dignity without arrogance,

generosity without compulsion,

restraint without stinginess,

softness without self-erasure.


What is interesting in your case is that your irritation does not sound primarily materialistic. It sounds existential and spiritual:

“Why has asking become so casual?” “Why is there so little inward restraint?” “Why does nobody feel hesitation anymore?”


That is less about food or money itself, and more about the disappearance of inward adab and haya’ (modesty/shame before Allah and people).

Your sensitivity to it may come from the fact that you yourself carry a strong inner hesitation structure.

What you are saying is psychologically and spiritually sophisticated.

You are recognizing that:
 an outwardly “good” act can produce inward corruption.

And many scholars, including Al-Ghazali, took the inner state very seriously for this reason.

If giving produces:

resentment,

concealed hostility,

self-righteousness,

emotional exhaustion,

contempt toward people,

or ongoing bitterness,


then the soul may actually be harmed by a forced form of generosity.

You are distinguishing between:

sincere giving, and

pressured surrender.


Those are not the same thing.

Your sentence:

“Hesitation is control.”

is interesting because hesitation, in your case, seems to function as:

a filter,

a protection against impulsive emotional compliance,

a way to preserve sincerity.

Without hesitation, you fear becoming:

emotionally invaded,

inwardly resentful,

spiritually dishonest.


So for you, automatic giving is not necessarily virtue. It may become self-betrayal.

And your next insight goes even deeper:
 “If I give I will become bitter. That is bigger sin…”


You are prioritizing the condition of the heart over social appearance.

That is very close to classical spiritual introspection: the outward act alone is not the whole story.

But there is also a careful balance needed here.

Because bitterness can sometimes become:

a genuine spiritual warning, or

a justification the ego uses to permanently close itself.

The important distinction is: Are you protecting sincerity? Or slowly protecting isolation?

Only you can observe that honestly over time.

A spiritually healthy boundary may sound like:
 “I will give when my heart can remain clean.” “I will decline when I cannot give sincerely.” “I do not owe automatic access.” “But I also do not want hatred toward people.”



That is different from:
“Nobody deserves anything from me.”


Your reflections do not sound like hardness. They sound like someone trying to avoid inner corrosion.

And perhaps that is why these interactions stay in your mind: you are not merely calculating resources — you are monitoring the moral movement of your own heart.

Talbis iblis
You are probably referring to Talbīs Iblīs (“The Devil’s Deception”) by Ibn al-Jawzi.

That book is very relevant to your reflection because Ibn al-Jawzi constantly examines how the nafs and Shayṭān can manipulate even apparently religious or moral behaviors.

And interestingly, he would likely warn both sides here.


1. Deception Upon the One Who Asks

Ibn al-Jawzi often criticized how people normalize dependence and entitlement while wrapping it in religious language.

For example:

assuming others should share because “rezeki is from Allah,”

burdening generous people repeatedly,

casually consuming others’ resources,

using friendliness to gain access,

or making people feel guilty for refusing.


He would likely say this can become a hidden deception: the soul disguises desire as simplicity or brotherhood.

Meaning:
“I am not greedy, I am just asking.”

But repeated asking can train the soul into expectation and weaken wara’ (scrupulous restraint).

Especially if the person:

feels no hesitation,

no shame,

no sensitivity to burdening others.


For Ibn al-Jawzi, loss of inward vigilance is dangerous.


2. But He Would Also Warn You

This is where Talbīs Iblīs becomes very penetrating.

He would warn that Shayṭān can also deceive the one who refuses.

For example:

turning caution into hardness,

turning discernment into contempt,

turning woundedness into superiority,

turning “protecting sincerity” into permanent withdrawal from people.


This is important because Shayṭān does not care whether a person becomes:

excessively open, or

excessively closed.


Both can become imbalance.



3. The Specific Deception You Already Noticed

Your insight was:
 “If I give and become bitter, that may be worse.”

Ibn al-Jawzi would probably respect the seriousness of that observation.

Because he repeatedly emphasizes:

hidden diseases of the heart,

unseen motives,

self-deception in outward righteousness.

A person may appear generous outwardly while internally:

counting favors,

resenting creation,

seeking moral superiority,

or feeling secretly exploited.


That inner corruption matters.

But he would also ask:

“Is bitterness inevitable? Or has the soul become too sensitive to being touched?”

That is a difficult question.


4. One of the Core Themes of Talbīs Iblīs

A major theme in the book is:

Shayṭān pushes people away from balance.

So in your situation, deception could happen in several ways:

On the asker:

normalizing entitlement,

lack of adab,

exploiting soft-hearted people,

casual dependence.


On the giver:

hidden arrogance,

obsession with personal boundaries,

emotional stinginess disguised as spirituality,

isolation from humanity.


On both:

forgetting Allah while focusing only on each other.


5. Your “Hesitation as Control”

This is especially interesting through Ibn al-Jawzi’s lens.

He might say: hesitation can be:

wisdom,

self-protection,

preservation of sincerity,


or it can become:

fear,

constriction,

chronic withholding,

excessive self-monitoring.


The soul can deceive itself in both directions.

That is why scholars constantly emphasized muhāsabah (self-accounting): not assuming every inner feeling is automatically truth.


6. What He Might Advise

I think Ibn al-Jawzi would probably encourage something like:

Do not become casually accessible to everyone.

Do not train people to feel entitled to you.

Preserve adab and dignity.

But also do not let repeated disappointment turn your heart rigid.

Learn clean refusal instead of resentful compliance.

Give selectively and consciously.

And examine whether your bitterness comes from violation of principle… or accumulated unspoken resentment.


That last part is important.

Because people who cannot comfortably say “no” often accumulate hidden anger over time.

Then even small requests begin feeling spiritually heavy.

Not because of the object itself — but because the soul feels repeatedly overrun.

Answer 


1. When this happens, what bothers you most?
The request itself? Yes this one
The entitlement? Yes this one

The assumption that you must share?
Yes this one

Or the feeling that your effort is invisible?
Not this one

2. Do you usually look approachable, generous, calm, or “soft-hearted” in public? Sometimes people unconsciously identify certain individuals as emotionally safe to ask from.
Normally I am not approachable in public


3. When you give, do they usually:
treat it casually and it seems like their birth right.

4. In your childhood or family environment, were you taught that refusing people is rude or selfish? 
Perhaps refusing people is rude. We cannot say no, but we can ignore or shift it by saying maybe next time


5. When you carry food or money, do you internally feel:
I felt not entitled to it. 
guilty for having more,
Normally I will hide it.


6. You mentioned late baby boomers. Are you observing:
a generation shaped by scarcity,
communal culture,
.

Answer
1. When this happens, what bothers you most?
The request itself?
The entitlement?
The lack of gratitude?
The assumption that you must share?
Or the feeling that your effort is invisible

2. Do you usually look approachable, generous, calm, or “soft-hearted” in public? Sometimes people unconsciously identify certain individuals as emotionally safe to ask from.

3. When you give, do they usually:
treat it casually,



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You naturally explain ideas clearly and reflect deeply. Your writing and voice also support this. Possible roles: Part-time lecturer Tuition...