Zero - there's no such thing as normal.
That said, you are your own worst enemy. You're overcritical of yourself. You hold yourself back. You can do a lot more than you think you can do.
The girl example is a perfect example. Do we ever get it right with girls? Let's be realistic. There's a reason there's that joke that says "if a man says something and a woman doesn't hear him, is he still wrong?"
We all make mistakes and we all fail. I personally have failed at WAY more things than you even tried. But we go on.
Pick up Dr. Wayne Dyer's book "Your Erroneous Zones." Read it. It's a start. You need to stop worrying, stop feeling guilty, and stop beating yourself up for every little thing you do wrong and start enjoying life.
And one last thing - intelligence can be a curse. I can tell you horror stories of smart people I know who have paralyzed themselves by thinking too much.
Originally Posted by: zombieslayer
I'm sure this will be fodder for someone. I started listening to "Attacking Anxiety & Depression" session and it was helping a bit. They say people with anxiety worry themselves almost literally to death.
I know I need to stop beating myself up over things, especially such petty things ... I just don't know how to.
My dad said the same thing about intelligence being a curse. He used to tell me I was 'too damn smart for your own good boy'. I always figured he was joking around and didn't really understand what he meant.
I'm not sure if this relates, but it just came to mind. When I was younger I always excelled at sports, athletically speaking. I remember dad asking me 'son, do you know why you can throw the ball farther than the other kids and why you can run faster?'. I didn't know, an honestly didn't give a damn. He told me it was because I try harder than everyone else, that I feel I have something to prove.
Looking back, he's right. I wasn't the biggest kid on the block and I knew if I wanted to play with the 'big kids' that I had to take an extra hit, run extra fast and throw extra harder than everyone else.
Where I think that may relate is when it comes to intelligence, I kind of already know I'm pretty smart and have nothing to prove over others.
And I think that's what dad meant by being too smart for my own good.