Somethingremorse - when you want that external validation, what do you do now to get it (or get rid of the desire for it)?
I stop and think about the outcome of that behavior. I wrote about that sort of thing in a post yesterday. How I find myself with a quip or comment or KISA something in the chamber pretty frequently. But now, after lots of AD's and therapy and journaling and practice, I can stop and think before I do anything. I can ask "will saying something to this waitress/parent/client/whoever actually give me something? And is it the empty sort of validation that will make me chase for more?"
Being the center of attention or getting that external validation doesn't actually give me anything. It comes from a time when I felt like didn't fit in, and so I did anything I could to fit in. It is junk food. The looks or smiles or laughs at a joke don't really do anything for me. Sure, they are nice at the time. But they are nowhere near intimacy with someone I love, or an honest friendship. Being admired by co-workers or people in my volunteer organizations isn't as satisfying as knowing internally that I did a good job or that I made a real difference.
Going after that external validation doesn't help. It makes it worse. It reinforces that feeling of disconnection. It confirms my fears that I am not part of anything. That process is like a drug -- the more of it I do, the more I need just to keep going.
I understand that I can have either the cheap external validation, or I can get something deeper and more fulfilling. Going after one means that I set aside the other. That might not be true for other people, but I have proven that is the way that I am wired.
I know this about myself now. I write it out in this forum to remind myself. I am 100% convinced that when I do those attention-seeking things that it harms my happiness. When I can see things that way, it is a lot easier to avoid them.
How do I stop seeking external validation? the first step is to understand how fleeting and ultimately meaningless it is, especially compared to what I have to give up to get it. The second step is to practice the stuff that actually matters.
SFN, the work of your lifetime, outside of your BH or family or job or whatever, is to understand what that external validation is covering up. There is a need in you, and you are trying to fill it in an easy, superficial way. Keep looking at yourself, and you'll get it.