Recovering/Former Hikkomoris? (100)

1 Name: Anonymous : 2008-01-24 01:09 ID:rQJgRSXU

Are their any recovering/former hikkomoris on here? I am one and want to know if anyone has similar experiences. Do any support groups exist for hikkomoris?

2 Name: Anonymous : 2008-01-24 06:25 ID:IM18t4TW

yeah, i'm recovering.. mostly recovered. I don't know if there are any support groups outside of japan... probably not? Usually i'm fine being around people now, but there are still lots of days when i feel anxious to some extent about having to go places.

3 Name: Anonymous : 2008-01-24 20:16 ID:rQJgRSXU

>>2
How did you recover?

4 Name: Anonymous : 2008-01-24 21:32 ID:aE6pfn0h

If by former hikikomori you mean once was a dependent, self-hating, isolated shut-in but now respects themselves and can function independently in public without fear, then yes.

5 Name: Anonymous : 2008-01-24 22:12 ID:3H3O/2Ve

I guess you could call me a 'hikki'. I dropped out of high school at 16 and spent the following year shut my room, leaving only occasionally to visit the fridge. I'm almost 18, and I just enrolled into a community college. I was never that social, but I'm a little nicer to people because that year gave me some time for introspection. That is, I'm nicer to people that deserve my respect. I just hate everyone else that much more.

6 Name: Anonymous : 2008-01-24 22:16 ID:3H3O/2Ve

>>5

I 'recovered' by a lengthy philosophical process, which basically equated to "get the fuck outside and try your luck, you're not an idiot and you know it".

7 Name: Anonymous : 2008-01-25 01:43 ID:/RkCHDzY

I'm 27, and was home schooled which resulted in years of isolation. I am taking classes at a community college starting tomorrow, so wish me luck. My goal is to transfer asap and get a four year degree. I just got disgusted with being so apart from the world.

8 Name: Anonymous : 2008-01-25 02:36 ID:3H3O/2Ve

>>7

Good luck. Don't lose hope.

9 Name: Anonymous : 2008-02-04 00:36 ID:ys54HJ5g

>>6
Gb2 /realist/, you realist.

10 Name: Anonymous : 2008-02-04 16:59 ID:Heaven

The more you do things, even just going for a walk, the easier it gets.

11 Name: Anonymous : 2008-02-04 23:23 ID:Vk2WRk2V

>>7
Go man!

12 Name: Anonymous : 2008-02-05 06:45 ID:DnxTLw4P

Dropping in to encourage everyone! Come on out! We'll be kind!

13 Name: Anonymous : 2008-02-05 20:39 ID:tTgRSOOG

I recovered afte reading Gantz and realizing trough the main character that I wasted my life.

14 Name: Anonymous : 2008-02-07 04:45 ID:aE6pfn0h

Don't set goals to high or too soon for yourself all at once, you might just feel miserable if you don't accomplish exactly what you set out to do.
Think of a woman who makes a new years resolution to lose 80 pounds and feels miserably guilty a week after for eating a quart of ice cream.
She should have resolved just to be more active, or watch what she eats.
Take each thing a step at a time and be proud of everything you accomplish.

I know you can do it.

15 Name: Anonymous : 2008-02-07 04:46 ID:wG4QGLu8

>>9

Right. I don't know about you, but I found wasting my intellect doing nothing was a bit.... Boring.

16 Name: Anonymous : 2008-02-07 05:26 ID:Chjqt78X

>>7

I'm confused... so you decided to do nothing after finishing home school?

I'm always confused with how relatively older people (I mean after high school) can get away with doing nothing for such a long time. I think in Japan a lot of hikki are high school aged or so, but most of the 4-ch ones seem to be adults.

Anyway, I was homeschooled too, started taking a few community college classes during my last two high school years, spent four more years in CC after high school, and recently transferred to uni.

I've never really considered myself a hikki since although there were times I just wanted to do nothing and ended up staying home for a long time (like during summers and a semester of college I ended up missing), I had always wanted to move foward. I suppose you could say I was one during the years I was homeschooled, but if so it was unknowingly. Also, it's not my hatred or fear of the world or somesuch that's stopping me, but rather my lack of social skills.

I have taken steps to gain them, but I'm still quite far off. I still can't make friends or really even talk to people my own age, outside of formalities. Even formalities I usually try to avoid if I think they won't notice it. However... I guess I'm taking babysteps?

17 Name: Anonymous : 2008-02-08 05:01 ID:Heaven

>>16

http://www.childresearch.net/RESEARCH/RECENT/ED_INFO/0305_0308.HTM

"Over a 12-month period, 6,151 cases of "hikikomori" (defined as withdrawal from society for six months or more) were registered at 697 public health centers across the country. Almost a third of the sufferers had been withdrawn for over three years and, in a final blow to the lingering impression that withdrawal is a childhood condition, half of the total were over 21 years old"

18 Name: Anonymous : 2008-02-09 17:12 ID:Heaven

Hikkies! Don't give in to the herd-mentality! Their promise of "improving" and "a more useful life" is nothing but manipulation to get you to suffer the same pitiful existance as them! They will use every underhanded tactic available and bully you into submission!

      \∧_ヘ     / ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄
 ,,、,、,,, / \〇ノゝ∩ < BE STRONG, MY FELLOW HIKKIES!!        ,,、,、,,,
    /三√ ゚Д゚) /   \____________  ,,、,、,,,
     /三/| ゚U゚|\      ,,、,、,,,                       ,,、,、,,,
 ,,、,、,,, U (:::::::::::)  ,,、,、,,,         \オーーーーーーーッ!!/
      //三/|三|\     ∧_∧∧_∧ ∧_∧∧_∧∧_∧∧_∧
      ∪  ∪       (    )    (     )   (    )    )
 ,,、,、,,,       ,,、,、,,,  ∧_∧∧_∧∧_∧ ∧_∧∧_∧∧_∧∧_∧
      ,,、,、,,,       (    )    (    )    (    )    (    )

19 Name: Anonymous : 2008-02-19 01:16 ID:n8VC3BNt

OP here. I'm encouraged by all the (positive) replies I got to this thread. I started college classes last summer. I would recommend starting slow. I only took 4 credits at first. And then I took 7 in the Fall and now I am still taking 7 with a part-time job.
>>7
It's HARD the first day and I felt disgusted with the school. The first time I tried I didn't go back until the next semester. So even if go and you have trouble the first time you can always go again next semester. I think I also had trouble with the cold weather so when I finally started taking classes in the summer semester the sun helped me wake up in the morning.

20 Name: Anonymous : 2008-02-19 13:10 ID:StOQITZu

I have a question for former hikikomoris.

After recovering and returning to the work place/school what was the reaction you got from your peers? I'm specifically interested in the school yard but work place related answers are fine too.

I'm trying to go back to school but I've been told that technically I'm dead, at least to all the people at my school.

21 Name: Anonymous : 2008-02-19 13:18 ID:Heaven

>>20
Sorry, I posted prematurely and still have a few things to say.

I'm recovering, however I have not gone back to High School but I'm attending a comunity college once a week. I've found it easier to attend the community college because it takes an hour to get there by train and there's nobody who knows me. Generally I'm concerned about what people are saying.

22 Name: Anonymous : 2008-02-19 16:46 ID:eRvquGOJ

>>20 Thankfully I went right into the work place - nobody knew me. I got my high school diploma via a GED so I didn't have to re-attend school.

23 Name: Anonymous : 2008-02-19 17:19 ID:aE6pfn0h

>>21,22

> I have a question for former hikikomoris.

I could easily qualify for that category but I don't like the label.

> Generally I'm concerned about what people are saying.

The short answer is: Don't be concerned with what you think people are saying.

Longer answer:
If no one knows you at college (or knows anyone who knows you) they have no way of knowing what you've been doing for the last few years. So worrying about that is pointless.
If you've isolated yourself for a long period of time, your social skills have probably atrophied. You might be a little awkward or seem strange to some people.
If there's something about yourself you can readily change to make yourself more easily accepted, do it, but don't dwell on what you can't change.

24 Name: Anonymous : 2008-02-19 18:34 ID:6+phM+sE

When I and my girlfriend broke up, I got depressed and withdrew from the world. Looking back, its an entire two years of my life(20-22) with nothing to show for it but 12 college credits and a bunch of computer stuff and a credit card bill that's presently bumraping me(24).

My parents chipped on me to get a job, but didn't push the issue and just kept depositing 1,200 bucks a month for my hikkomori pad and my pathetic attempt at a college education. I was losing every sort of skill I had and gaining weight.

Anyways, the thing that shy people need to realize is that no one cares. No one in your lecture hall cares if your hair is unkempt or you're a super-senior or whatever. Random campus tards might lol if you fall over or sit down in the wrong classroom, but they're not really going to remember a couple weeks later.

25 Name: Anonymous : 2008-02-20 04:14 ID:zcff0qea

>>19
Hi this is >>7, and man are you right. My math is really low level, barely pre-algebra, and at times it alone makes me want to give up. And in English, while I have definitely learned things, I cannot help but think the topics I have to write essays about are dull and uninteresting.

And I just delivered a speech for my public speaking course in front of my class, without freaking out! So there is hope for me still.

26 Name: 20 : 2008-02-20 10:11 ID:StOQITZu

>>23
Sorry I should have made it clearer. I was concerned about the people at my High School, I do have some people I know who attend the same school and they tell me people are making a big deal out of it.

Top student (I was fairly popular too) suddenly disapears for no apparent reason, I can't bring myself to go back and tell people why, due to the fact I'm not even sure why myself.

One day I just woke up and couldn't go to school.

>>22
Is there an Australian equvilent of the GED? I've tried looking around, but obviously I haven't been looking hard enough/or there isn't one.

27 Name: Anonymous : 2008-02-20 11:49 ID:J87ujGcD

28 Name: Anonymous : 2008-02-21 02:49 ID:NOODbril

yup, STAT test :) It got me into uni. It's multiple choice, and extremely easy to score very high.

29 Name: Anonymous : 2008-03-29 19:02 ID:v9xhk6i2

>>25
That is pretty much the exact same thing that happened to me! I had to take pre-algebra and then take algebra. It was very hard for me and I spent many,many,many hours in the math tutoring center getting help. English is also easy for me BUT SO FUCKING BORING. Update us on what's going on!

30 Name: Anonymous : 2008-03-30 11:33 ID:cDlxi8uo

>>24
Well, I don't want to discourage anyone, but this isn't entirely true. I went to a college of 30,000 people, hoping that as long as I was nice when I interacted with people, I'd have nothing to worry about. I assumed people in college had better shit to do than make up stuff about others, but that's not entirely true. I tried the first one and a half semesters, got great grades the first and made it to a couple enjoyable parties, made a small set of friends I wasn't super-close, but very comfortable with. And then I started hearing the same whispers and giggles I had in middle in high school. I assumed I was paranoid, but eventually found out people were putting the same (untrue) shit on me they had before.

But, the key here is not to relapse. Just realise, everyone gets stuff made up about them at some time. You have to teach yourself (through a help group or meditiation) that it's the people you can trust that matter - it's them you'll be spending the most time with anyway. I stopped hanging out with people (I was actually not a shut-in until Sophomore year, I was paranoid but had friends in high school) and it only made things worse. It just gave people more of a chance to make up whatever they wanted, since others in the dorm didn't have any real me to compare it to.

You may want to pay for a small apartment. When you consider the mandatory meal plan with some colleges, it may be cheaper. I think my problem was an agriculture major and living in dorms, which group you with relatively small populations. You can do it, though. I've seen people more awkward than I be successful, you just have to ACT confident and not give up. Anyone can do it.

31 Name: Anonymous : 2008-03-30 17:31 ID:3nSRKIF7

>>18

I hope you're being sarcastic, if not you're a moron. It's one thing to have an extreme social phobia but it's quite another to be proud of it and encourage others to sequester themselves away and live the same pitiful existence that you have tailored for yourself.

32 Name: Anonymous : 2008-03-30 18:02 ID:v9xhk6i2

>>31
Reminds me of those "pro-anorexia" people.

33 Name: Anonymous : 2008-03-30 18:05 ID:v9xhk6i2

>>30
OP here. I live at home and go to college and I haven't had anyone make fun of me. Maybe living in dorms is prone to cause drama?

34 Name: Anonymous : 2008-03-30 21:00 ID:BEbTeCQX

Man, I'm still trying to get out of this phase, and it's hard going. I just kind of floated into a secluded lifestyle about 3 years ago, and when all (literally, all) my friends started playing WoW, it made it that much worse. I eventually moved to try and start over (it was a small town), but kept the old habits way too long.

At least for me, the biggest problem has been irrational fear in social situations - which just takes some good failure to get over. You won't learn anything if you constantly stay in situations where you are 100% comfortable, whether it's with your best friends or at home in front of the interwebs, and you'll never grow as a person.

The thing that keeps coming back to me, what makes me go to the dojo, get on okcupid, say hi and smile (which kills me), go with my friends to the overcrowded bars, is what my stepdad used to say: "The world does not care about your happiness. It cares about your attendance record at work, your productivity, and your taxes. Happiness is something you have to make, from scratch, for yourself, and then share it with those around you."

35 Name: Anonymous : 2008-03-30 21:40 ID:nXL1qf9m

>>34

>>"The world does not care about your happiness. It cares about your attendance record at work, your productivity, and your taxes. Happiness is something you have to make, from scratch, for yourself, and then share it with those around you."

So, we should get out of the house just because it's expected of us. Because it's what were "supposed to do".

That's encouraging.

36 Name: Anonymous : 2008-03-30 21:40 ID:nXL1qf9m

>>35

  • we're "supposed to do".

37 Name: Anonymous : 2008-03-30 22:19 ID:BEbTeCQX

>>35

Hardly, but OP is asking about former/recovering Hikikomoris, implying a set of people who found it to be unsatisfying...So, yeah, it's a somewhat reasonable idea to say that one such person might be interested in getting out of the house. They might even be interested in "social interaction".

And the whole point of the quote is that you're not doing what's expected of you; you're taking an interest in your own development as opposed to being a mindless cog who overlooks their own well-being. Now, whether you find happiness shut in at home 24 hours a day or out screaming "CITY NAME SPORTS TEAM BEEEEEEEEER HULAGULAGULAG" or somewhere in between (I'm looking for a dirty woman to talk astronomy to me), well, that's up to you. Just make sure that you're trying to seek some self-fulfillment and that you're not just floating on the waves hoping for everything to happen for you.

38 Name: Anonymous : 2008-03-30 22:30 ID:3nSRKIF7

>>18

I have one more nit to pick with this poster, you are quoting something that wasn't even posted. You just put the phrase "a more useful life" in your post as if someone had said. This leads me to believe that you just assume you know what other people are going to say before it's been said, and that displays an unbelievable amount of arrogance. You probably weren't socially isolated by choice, I know I wouldn't want to hang around someone who puts words in my mouth.

39 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-08 01:56 ID:v9xhk6i2

>>34
OP here again,(this is making me contemplate getting a name)
WoW seems to be a big social skills killer. MMORPGS aren't my thing so I don't completely understand the allure but, I have heard so many stories of people's lives being ruined by them. I'd say to enjoy them in moderation...
Right now I go out and have fun with people and I've found that it helps being around people who AREN'T my own age. Older people seem more mature and they are usually less judgemental. Younger people also work but being suspected of being a pedo isn't very good for your ego.

40 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-08 04:54 ID:RyRS9eMp

I'm gonna be honest with you, it's not so great out here

When I stopped being a shut in I just charged out into the world and decided to do all the things I should've done in as little time as possible. Like getting a job, moving out, learning how to drive, finishing school etc

It made me super fucking stressed and I just wanted to die every night so i didn't have to face tomorrow

But it got better, eventually you stop caring what other people think of you

However, life isn't exactly great either, sometimes I feel like i'm on a road to a mediocre office job where I will spend the rest of my life, then retire, and i get real depressed that i'll ultimately achieve nothing

but then again, you can't exactly lead a hikki life forever...

41 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-10 00:54 ID:v9xhk6i2

>>40
Maybe you should of slowed down?

42 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-10 02:52 ID:coz3rnSh

ALL RIGHT LOOK:

Here's the dish.....I was once one of you. Hikikomori. As it is called.

I honestly never thought I would be...but I was. The last part of '05 to all of '06. I'd gotten back from Iraq doing the bullshit contracting thing.

Bounced around a few 'chans...spewing Right wing rhetoric, fascist ideology, and even helping a few people with my workshops.

I didn't bathe hardly...my hair grew long...I lost 40 pounds. I'd devolved into a bad place. My day was...

Listening to music, spewing fascist ideology, posting pictures of the same "figurehead" that reminded me of one of my past loves...and...helping people with my workshops and advice.

Then I started following my own. It's as simple as getting off your ass....

Now to be fair...I had some money so it wasn't a big deal to live a whole year doing jack shit. But the fact remains.

YOU NEED SOMEWHERE TO GO EVERYDAY AND SOMETHING TO DO. Getting paid for it helps. Seriously, you NEED SOMEWHERE TO GO AND SOMETHING TO DO.

I'm pretty antisocial, but you also need to talk to people.

Look...another thing. Set attainable goals. Get a job. Do it for a few months, even if it sucks. Just say "You know...I wish this shit would suck MORE!" and just be so fucking squared away that people take notice.

Get physically active. Don't be a body nazi, but fuck...walk at least a few miles every other day.

Don't fear rejection, don't fear acceptance.

Fear nothing but yourself, for you are the only thing that can be your undoing.

Just putting it out there.

43 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-10 21:18 ID:tgka0kvx

>It's as simple as getting off your ass....

Really, it's not. If and when you suffer from a mental disorder along with this social impairment, just getting off your ass isn't as easy as it sounds.

44 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-11 00:09 ID:KYSBIk6/

>>43

I'm as crazy as they come(Probably crazier)

It really IS as simple as getting off your ass.

Realizing you are in a shitty sitch is the first step

Getting off your ass is the second.

Then...sky's the limit.

45 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-11 06:11 ID:2QRlpmk4

>>44
What mental illnesses do you have?

46 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-11 10:00 ID:RK8gARZa

>>45

I've been told...PTSD and Paranoid Schizophrenia....

But I don't believe it.

47 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-11 15:46 ID:QVjeDaf1

>>42 Dude it's not that simple, like said before some of us have personality disorders.I suffer from avpd which causes extreme anxiety at the work place. 30 years of this is simply hell.

48 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-11 16:03 ID:EW/J2pXf

>>42
if you were helping people with your worshops and such, and actively socialising, even electronically to the point of spewing facist ideology all over the place, not to mention it lasted not even a year and a half, I don't think that qualifies you as hikki. you jsut sound like an idiot who had a recluse period. It's a different thing to hikki's with real hikki problems.

49 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-11 17:22 ID:1LtQNSJv

>>47>>48

I felt pretty real to me.

Sorry, but I think it really is all in just getting off your ass and facing up to the fact that the world is all one big assfuck and we all gotta take a turn.

I can come up with all kinds of social/mental disorders and even make up a few...but..seriously. It's all in getting off your ass and on your feet. Out of the shade and into the street.

Feel free to resume academia/the workplace/society.

50 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-11 21:36 ID:ptGdDz0w

>>48
My period lasted about 7 months. It is hard to tell where it ended and began. "the Japanese Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare defines hikikomori as individuals who refuse to leave their parents' house, and isolate themselves away from society in their homes for a period exceeding six months"

51 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-12 08:31 ID:EW/J2pXf

the point is; you don't sounds like a hikki, you just sound like someone who had a more normal kind of reclusive period. Largely because, someone who's experiences real hikkikomori-ism would be unlikely to say something like 'you just have to get off your ass' etc. It's the getting outside, and doing it repeatedly, that's the problem. You don't sound like someone who understands the stress and anxiety a hikki feels when trying to do such things. Hikki's need to go outside and resume regular activities; yes, duh. But just being aware of that and wanting to do so, isn't enough to make it reasonably possible. It takes work, sometimes a lot of work, and time, to fix the anxiety and such.

52 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-12 09:02 ID:Wub2zuzZ

>>51

Hi. You're full of it.

You want someone to enable you and feel sorry for you. You don't want to face up to the fact that...yes...it IS that goddamned easy. Get off your ass and feel free to join the workforce/society/academia. You just want to wallow in self pity and helplessness and be some wannabe protected species.

Fuck that noise, Charlie.

I was pretty goddamned hikkikomori or whatever. That's what reclusiveness is...

I didn't go fuck anywhere didn't do a goddamned thing....until finally I said "Fuck it...Life's a bitch and I'm gonna dance" and got off my ass and on my feet and got back into the game.

What you really need is someone to say "Dude, you're fucking up. Yeah life sucks....suck your titties for a while...nurse your wounded pride and cowboy the fuck up and get back out in the world."

No...that would actually solve your problems. You just want an excuse to do fucknothing.

but hey I could be wrong.

53 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-12 10:28 ID:RSUr4vGw

>>51

>But just being aware of that and wanting to do so, isn't enough to make it reasonably possible. It takes work, sometimes a lot of work, and time, to fix the anxiety and such.

"Getting off your ass" is the first step to getting past anxiety.

>you don't sounds like a hikki, you just sound like someone who had a more normal kind of reclusive period

To be honest, most people on here who call themselves "hiki" seem to just be relatively normal people who have slipped into a reclusive way of life somehow, but don't want to go back to 'normal' life so have this cool little label that means that they are unique. I'm not saying these people don't suffer anxiety about going outside after such a long period because it's such a major change. But just because a person is scared to go outside it doesn't mean that they should stay inside for the rest of their life.

54 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-12 22:19 ID:tgka0kvx

>so have this cool little label that means that they are unique.

Not really. This place is 90% weeaboos/4channers/otaku, so being able to label themselves as something Japanese related = MEGA KAWAII.

55 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-14 20:00 ID:TXl5Rk/G

hello im another failure and im sorry but it's not true that i feel this is some kind of cool lable. I hate it i cant visit my few freinds and everyday i feel sick to my stomach. But there is a good side i have recovered slightly. When in public i stay Anonymous in the face mask ect. This still gives me the outside a human needs but I feel as if im alone like back at home. But key people by staying Anonymous dont make your self look like a complete outcast.

56 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-15 02:10 ID:Heaven

>just because a person is scared to go outside it doesn't mean that they should stay inside for the rest of their life

Yes it does.

57 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-15 06:00 ID:LxKY9QYr

>>51 here
>>52 and >>53
What? I'm not a hikki, therefore i'm not looking sympathy or for anyone to enable me. It's definitely true that hikki has become a popular label for anyone that becomes reclusive; perhaps i should have clarified that I regard a hikki as someone with a very severe problem, rather than your regular recluse. Well, i'm a very bad communicator. To label all recluses as hikki's doesn't work; and it's definitely not correct to say that all recluses could just immediately go back to living normal lives anytime they really wanted- like all of them are just lazy or cowardly or something.

From what i've read elsewhere, as well as post here on 4-ch, and a relative and a uni friend who are ex hikki's, it's quite clear that for the real severe recluses, the people I think it's fair to call hikki's, it's not always/often something that can be solved simply by saying 'ok! i'm going outside!'. For some, the anxiety can just be too severe to suddenly force themselves to resume normal daily activities. They may wish they could very much. Look at >>55, who apparently hates not being able to visit his friends and feels sick about it. In cases where there is a severe problem like this, recovery is a process of steps, just like with other anxiety/social disorders/phobias.

58 Name: 53 : 2008-04-15 10:02 ID:RSUr4vGw

I'm not saying that all you have to do is get up and leave the house. By "getting off your ass" I mean realising you have anxiety problems and taking steps towards resolving those problems (e.g. therapy, exercise etc). I'm not expecting a recluse to suddenly be able to leave his or her house and wander through a city centre without a care in the world. But you have to start with something, even if it's just going one step outside of your door everyday and then slowly increasing it.

59 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-15 13:58 ID:Heaven

> it's just going one step outside of your door everyday and then slowly increasing it.

Going one step outside of the door is a milestone; it actually takes a lot of courage and effort from the hikki himself. So, calling it "getting off your ass" is quite unfair for the hikki.

60 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-15 18:27 ID:7+KrXi3s

Get off your asses.

61 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-15 19:52 ID:RSUr4vGw

>>59

Everything is going to be a milestone though. One step outside the door is a milestone, a second step is another milestone. To make progress you always have to get through some milestones. I'm not saying its an easy milestone for a recluse to take a step his/her door like it's easy for me to do the same, but a recluse has already admitted defeat if they don't want to try to get closer to that milestone.

62 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-15 22:15 ID:rXnGuKie

I'm pretty reclusive, especially within the last year , but recnetly I spend most my time out of my apartment. I still have huge social anxity but I spend my time walking around down town and sitting in the park and shit. I don't do It with any one else, and I don't even want to. I have extra money saved up and I didn't go to school this semester, but I think I got my shit together to try to be "normal" again. Hell, I'm posting this from a book shop.

63 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-16 05:38 ID:bBNWyKYY

No seriously. Get off your asses. You don't have some social disorder. protip: life sucks for everybody

64 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-16 07:55 ID:Heaven

>>63

>life sucks for everybody

Life doesn't suck for the same reasons. You'd be afraid of being proven wrong by finding that out. And no, it's not a social disorder, relatively speaking. But it is a social difficulty, and an immense one at that.

65 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-16 09:11 ID:Heaven

>>61

> but a recluse has already admitted defeat if they don't want to try to get closer to that milestone.

We are talking about anxiety. Thinking about it is already distressing. And you are expecting the recluse to have a strong urge against it and take action to overcome it. That's quite a huge recovery journey.

"Getting off one's ass" is not that easy, really.

66 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-17 02:47 ID:A2IUlEib

Wait,people have a "normal recluse" period???

67 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-17 05:08 ID:SG7i++yc

a lot of people get faced with too much shit and just sulk away for a few months.

It does not happen to every one, but it is common.

as for "getting off one's ass" thats the main problem that they have to face, not the first step.

68 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-17 11:24 ID:ysvIFcuy

getting off you're ass is easy even for a Hikkomori,
the problem is the social interaction,

for me i hate even going to the shop because i have to talk to the shopkeeper,

sometimes i can be absolutely fine but then other times i can be absolutely drained and be searching for the exit (more often than not)

the thing is Hikkomori have found a way not to feel anxiety and that is stay away from people and writing on forums such as this.

69 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-17 13:07 ID:Heaven

>>68
At least use the right word if you're so desperate to call yourself that way.

70 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-18 01:06 ID:OyT35qb1

All you need is HARDCORE willpower...
I'm fucking useless at many things... I view most people (including myself) with utter contempt - but if theress something you want to achieve no matter what, you'll be willing to suffer hell in order to achieve it. People are worthless (this point of view is bullshit (although so is that point of view(indeed, all points of view are equally worthless if you think too much about it)))...

Categorizing yourself as having a "social disorder" is only a pathetic excuse.
I got the shit kicked out of me at highschool most of the time and generally had the mindset that everything I do and think is "wrong" and other people are "right". In my own mind I was a worthless piece of shit - that was the polite thing to do, right? Therefore I deserved everything I got.

Even after highschool for two years at collage I had this mindset - I didn't go out, I never had any friends, I hated myself (Not in a fucking emo way, I just thought I was worthless, didn't make any fuss about it).

I'm a different person now - I have friends, I generally content. Mainly because I have something I want to achieve no matter what - I don't care about other people, I just put all my effort into achieving my dream. If I happen to befreind people along the way, then that's OK. (of course, I still retain my pessimistic, cynical view of people, but thats no big deal ;))

I think i've been in the kind of situation you've been in (or at least a similar kind)) It's tough to deal with - and IMPOSSIBLE to explain to other people - so don't even try.
Abandon the vauge hope, that someone out there will understand your situation, your feelings, or in some way help you out... Thats Bullshit.

Ultimately, you'll have to fight your way through your situation ON YOUR OWN. NO "SUPPORT" GROUPS. No friends, no family. Just you. I'm familiar with this situation (i'm not trying to be arrogant, or assume that I know who you are! Just trying to help out!). You have to grit your teeth and change your own conception of yourself no matter how hard it might be. Fuck that! Change what you think other people's conception of yourself is! I used to think other people thought of me as a physically weak anti-social geek - so I took up thai-boxing and excerices with great enthusiasm (simply because it didn't fit into the preconception I felt other people gave me). Although I don't do as much excercise as I used to - I still manage to suprise people! Break the preconception that other people have of you as well as your own preconception of your self - do something you'd never imagine or picture "someone like you" doing!

It's all about willpower. If you have a dream or obsession that you're willing to achieve no matter what the cost, then you WILL grit your teeth and tough it out, no matter what kind of hell you have to go through.

There is no "support group" that will help you. There are no "self help" books or sites that will offer you guidance. There is no secret admirer that will bail you out at the last minute. There is only YOU. You, and a whole world of other (EQUALLY) worthless human beings. Pathetic, vain, arrogant, self-loving, self-hating, secretly starved for attention humans.
If you're really serious about finding a way out of your hell - you HAVE to realise that the - only one that will help you is YOU.
If you manage to find a definite way out, you will be a tougher, stronger person. If you make it that far you'll be far stronger that the self-obsessed majority.
If you're really in the self-imposed nightmare that I was in for almost all of my youth, I honestly hope you can find a way out.
Remember - you don't need to be positive you don't need to be "happy", you don't need to worry about finding friends or someone that will accept or love you.. you just need to be able to call upon HARDCORE WILLPOWER. No matter how hard or lonely life gets, you'll tough it out, doing your own thing.

If you can't do this, then no amout of support groups or self-help articicles will ever help you.

71 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-18 04:19 ID:cx5xiban

>>63

Life is easy when you're ignorant.

72 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-18 05:02 ID:imI7pNjM

>>70
OK, now 99% of the Personal Issues boards, attention: please print this post in huge letters and stick it to your wall.

73 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-18 12:46 ID:Heaven

No support groups.
No friends.
No family.
Yourself only.
Final Destination.

74 Name: kidb : 2008-04-18 14:52 ID:j+z/zY7z

>>49
this guy is a huge fucking moron

75 Name: kidb : 2008-04-18 15:03 ID:j+z/zY7z

>>52

man i bet this guy is impossible to be around in real life

no wonder he became a "recluse", it's not because he is in ANY way a hikikomori case, it's because, well, who the fuck would want to be around someone like that?

i like how you admit straight away that you 'spew' right wing politics for a year, cause the way you carry yourself and the tenor of your speech is comically stereotypical

76 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-18 18:01 ID:H3YT+WO5

Well, I'm not a hardcore hikki, in fact, I'm not even sure I can quite define myself as one. I have a job at Subway, usually closing shifts, I like my co-workers generally, and I'm making some money. I have three classes at a Community College right now, but my GPA is sitting at a less than pretty 3.0, what can I say, I'm lazy. I have maybe one friend, who is kind of useless, he never wants to go anywhere, I haven't really talked to him this month. To be honest with you, I think my life is rather lonely and boring, I feel totally remote, I can't talk to my mom without getting irritated, my dad is never around, I mostly dislike my sister, and my school's social scene is jam packed with people that have no desire to do anything at all at the end of class. I feel stuck right now, I come home around noon-1:30p, pick up my sister at 2:30p, and go to work at 4:00p. I come home anywhere from 8 to 10pm, depending on my shift, and I sit in front of the computer until about 11pm. Then I go to bed.

What I have written is my entire life. There is nothing else. Frankly, I feel like killing myself every month or so.

77 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-19 22:09 ID:/q3EwiBo

>>29
Hi, this is >>25 back once more. Yeah, I am spending countless hours in the tutoring center at my CC, working on my math. Its actually going well, I really have the principles of equation solving down pretty solidly.

But, its the numbers that get me. You know, things like moving decimal points when working with percentages. I guess that I'm better at abstract pattern problems, like the ones on IQ tests, and things that can be better visualized.

All that I can say to the shut-ins out there is to just get out into the world. It has not been easy, sometimes I just feel burned out. Just keep this in mind: there is no escaping your fate or destiny, if you lack the initiative to meet it on your own terms while you still can, fate may come down upon you much harder later, on it's terms.

78 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-20 00:09 ID:Heaven

>>77

I have to do a lot of studying too to get my math skills from childhood back, but it's going really well since I have quite the superior abstract/visual reasoning skills. You'll get it down perfectly if you keep at it.

79 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-21 01:19 ID:o+pyz1Ze

I share >>75's opinion.

80 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-22 19:50 ID:GzD9jCxG

>>76
Oh yeah, did I also mention that I have fatigue problems? Yeah, I don't exercise much because I'm always tired, so I look like shit to be honest.

81 Name: 5664 : 2008-04-22 21:01 ID:Ai2QQ5OM

>>80

Drink more water. Then just eat healthier foods. Simple. I am a testament to this.

82 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-23 12:12 ID:5lV6agBp

>>80
Also, try to get at least 8 full hours of sleep each night, preferably on regular hours (you need to have a rythm so your body knows well when he must be awake or not). 8 to 10 hours is ideal.

83 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-24 05:58 ID:PsM0t21/

How hard IS it to get off your lazy asses and ...you know...live?

84 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-24 19:51 ID:Heaven

>>83
Why even come to post that garbage?

85 Name: Anonymous : 2008-04-25 01:26 ID:YU5fXVae

>>84
Stand back, >>83 is a troll!

86 Name: Anonymous : 2008-05-03 20:30 ID:pEh7l1e2

>>77
OP here, math is still a struggle for me but one of the good things about re-taking pre-algebra in your later years seems to be that your capacities for mental math/practical math rise. For instance, when I order food with friends I can calculate the tip and taxes and the guy who is in Calculus now doesn't have a clue on how to do that.

87 Name: Anonymous : 2008-05-04 13:30 ID:Heaven

tip: 0, taxes: included in price of meal already.

Isn't it awesome living in a place which puts the work of calculating the tax where it belongs?

88 Name: Anonymous : 2008-05-13 01:14 ID:rE7BRk4B

>>87
In the United States tip isn't included...

89 Name: S-chan : 2008-05-22 00:14 ID:g7JKFUxQ

>>42
wonderful advice to those who are in need of help.

90 Name: Anonymous : 2008-05-29 01:32 ID:jNCbDhsx

OP here, let's get back on topic to stories of continuing recovery!

91 Name: Anonymous : 2008-05-29 15:50 ID:TspuLO3L

Ex-two-year shut-in, female 19 years old, 5 months in recovery.

Life is difficult, it often feels like a strain, under pressure I sometimes wish I could return to my old life but I take a step back and am amazed at how far I have come. Not long ago I was fearful of never being independent, only left the house once every month or two, and only interacted with my immediate family, but now I have started tertiary education and moved away from home and I mostly take care of my own financial situation. Things are not ideal, I still hole myself up in my room quite a bit, I stress out quite a bit over school work and get anxious about eating in the dining hall, but I have a few friends, haven't missed a class, have been getting between B+ and A+ grades for my assignments/tests and things are gradually improving for me.

My recovery began with a simple decision that enough was enough and I applied to a school and was successful and that was it. I now force myself to do something positive on most days, this could be as simple as speaking up in class, going to a shop I am not familiar with, making sure I am eating relatively well, or just getting enough sleep. Posting this here too is a positive step, I have often shied away from posting in this thread, even though I wanted to, closing the browser before finishing, I'm not sure why..

Since I arrived at the school I have realised that my course of study isn't something I am very interested in, but I see it more as a step to permanent change, the experience is valuable in more ways than just educationally. It is important for me who has lost two years social, emotional and intellectual growth, I often feel a lot younger than my peers. Though, interestingly enough I don't regret being a shut-in, I think I learnt a lot about myself with all that introspection.

Well, anyway, the course is only a year and a half long, after this year I am unsure as to what I want to do, eventually I want to travel, but until then I don't know.

Well, I hope this doesn't sound too lame.

92 Name: PK : 2008-05-29 16:11 ID:aGNj04Qz

>>91

I'm glad to see that things are looking better for you. As for what you want to do, you're still young and have a lot of time to decide. Taking community college courses is a good way to help make that decision. There are a number of careers that require traveling. A coworker of mine is a freelance photographer who travels to many places as part of his career. A few of my university classmates also have jobs that require travel.

I hope that you continue to move forward and not make that U-turn back to the life of isolation your once knew.

93 Name: Anonymous : 2008-06-05 07:11 ID:dyO4MCXl

>>91
OP here, I'm glad you had to courage to finally post.

94 Name: Anonymous : 2008-06-10 02:14 ID:dyO4MCXl

shamelessly bumping because I feel this thread is important

95 Name: Anonymous : 2008-06-11 13:03 ID:1cdZas86

I'm curious, have any ex-hikkis/shut-ins come to think of their time in seclusion as a positive experience rather than just regretting it, despite the suffering at the time?

I got to thinking after reading this quote..

>“The two and a half years was very important for me. It’s was the most important time in my life I think. The experience of Hikikomori was a very positive experience for me.

When I did school-refusal, teachers, relatives, parents, neighbours didn’t understand me. So I felt an enormous pressure to go to school - So I could not go. And during that time I had to ask myself who I am. I had to ask myself why I should go to school and why I don’t go to school. So the time was very important for me.
… So now I think like that, but when I was doing Hikikomori or school refusal, it was a very very hard experience for me.”

96 Name: Anonymous : 2008-08-17 04:33 ID:lToePHSf

>>95
My experience was a positive one. Things in life seem easier now almost.

97 Name: Anonymous : 2008-08-17 16:06 ID:Heaven

>>95
I definitely regret letting this problem develop into what it is now. If I could write a letter to myself and send it back in time I would definitely nip this problem in the butt.

>>91
This is me. Except I'm a little younger and approaching my third year of being a leech.

Dear blog.

Despite how young I am I feel as if it's too late to change. I know what I'm doing is self destructive and will not benefit me; which leads me to argue with myself because both my parents are tired of me.

Every night before I go to sleep I say that the next day I'll go out for a walk and pass my old school. But it's never happened because I was too afraid of being spotted by the neighbours. I've tried doing it at night but I'm too afraid of the dark. One of these days I'll do it.

98 Name: Lucas-kun : 2008-08-17 17:51 ID:un/ZuIqB

I was a hikikomori for about two years, until about three weeks ago. Age 15-17. Went outside of my room to take a shit/piss, get something to eat, didn't go to school, sat on the internet as much as I could. I think I learned a lot, being alone with a vast amount of readily-available knowledge, the means to communicate with like-minded individuals, and at the same time having complete ignorance of what is happening outside the door.

I temporarily went cold-turkey on the internet, got a full-time job, basically thrust myself into society. I'd have to say, I am saddened by the participants of society I am now surrounded with. I'm not as good as I'd like to be at communicating and there's no way I can tell somebody all of the things I have to say, so I have the internet to communicate with people.

I'm not happy with the requirement for money that previous generations have set up for people like me. I put all of my value in the immaterial; companionship, understanding, trust, anything having to do with love. I am forced to be part of a society that is materialistic, dishonest, shallow... it hurts to think about it.

I guess what I need to do now is make a few IRL relationships, with people who can relate with what I am going through, or at least understand it.

99 Name: Anonymous : 2008-08-17 18:50 ID:uKNpVZsq

>>98
Few steps for your problem:
1-buy a bongo or djembe or any kind of similar hand-drumming device.
2-train just a little bit to get some rythm in that heart of yours
3-bang the day away in parks and such, and the night away at beaches and such (or parks or fields or whatever)
4-wait for other bangers to come, attracted by the banging
5-bang around with them (see what I did there?)

Also works well with a guitar if you're able to play some folk/reggae.

And you know, I'm only half kidding.

100 Name: Anonymous : 2008-08-24 10:04 ID:QSk/wUQ9

I am a recovering Hikki.

My mental state got a lot better. I have a plan regarding the future now.

It is terrible to think of all the wasted time but on the other hand I found my "soul". So I am myself now, before that I didn't have a personality...

There are several problems:

  • Overwhelming stimuli of outside world. Colors, smells, wind, chatter all around me, crowds, these things are still hard to stand and make my thinking very sluggish like it couldn't take it all in at once.
  • Dental health is terrible. I barely have enough money for dentist, he has a LOT to do!
  • When people ask who I am, what I do, etc, I can't say I did nothing but then I stay silent awkwardly long...

Still, it's worth going outside.

I met a friend, a girl, from middle school, we used to hold hands and stuff, now she has a 3 year old daughter and she knew I "like children" but also that she can trust me and she let me play with her child.

WOW... very cute, she explored my morning shadow from up close for half an hour, she was drolling by the end. That really bumped by ego.

I think I want to work with children.

Maybe be attraction to them was not even sexual but just the human instinct.

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