Several things work for me, because I KNOW I've got issues to a degree with wanting validation.
I don't like feeling like a spoiled, immature kid. At all. Personally I've always liked the Buddhist Monk mentality of just "being" and "wanting to not want". Of course this is far easier said than done, but I do truly feel like every time I get an urge for something that's not necessary-- anything from an item in a store, to wanting to construct something so bad that it becomes near-obsessive (at least to me)-- I begin to feel like a screaming little kid (like the aforementioned Veruca Salt reference), and that thought appalls me. I HATE the idea of myself screaming and crying for something. Asking/striving for things (even asking myself) to the point that it bothers me makes me think and feel this way. If I ever ask for anything from others, it's subtle, soft-spoken, and not often repeated. (Perhaps this is introspective.) I don't like to repeat myself, because it makes me feel like I must sound like a child looking for... validation and attention.
I once prided myself (perhaps overly) on being self-sufficient, doing anything I needed by myself, for myself, completely autonomously whenever possible... and if I couldn't, I had the ability to easily say "well it's not worth it right now, there's more important things to expend energy on". This mindset helps a lot with need for attention and instant gratification. It's like an extrapolation of the saying "grant me the strength to change that which I can, the serenity to accept that which I can't, and the wisdom to know the difference". I've always liked that passage, but it's not always easy. Obviously.
On the other extreme, I have more recently (in the past 5 or 6 years) adopted a sometimes-mantra. I am sure I'm not the first person to dream it up, but I didn't read this anywhere, I just dreamed it up. It's not meant to be morbid, it's just a truth, and sometimes I think/say it when things are rough... or even when things are good.
"I'm still going to die, and one lifetime after me won't even know I existed."
I don't really fear the end at all, personally; I haven't feared it for a long time, because quite frankly I just spent years pondering over the fact that I'M GOING TO someday, and I asked myself "how bad is something when everybody does it?" That thought actually makes me feel better like you wouldn't believe. I actually take solace in the thought, not for the promise of an afterlife or a reward or anything like that. (I'm kind of religious, having been raised simultaneously Baptist and Catholic, but honestly, I've come to have faith and hope in a lack of existence after I die, but I digress; that's not the point here.) Couple the idea of accepting death as an inevitability with the concept that all you have is NOW, and there may possibly not be anything after this time you have now that matters, and thinking that suddenly gives you a boost; a direness, a strength to do things you couldn't before, and right now.
Moreover, as a person who's had loads of attention in the past for stuff that doesn't matter, I gained a lot of awareness of how fickle it all is, how meaningless. Who do you want attention and instant gratification from? It's an important question to ask. Does the quote from the nameless "narrarator" from Fight Club apply?
So you want to get over the need for attention? Understand that it doesn't matter. We're all going to die, and it's not a BAD thing, or a GOOD thing. It's just a thing. Don't focus on that. Focus on YOU, and validate YOU. You are all you have throughout your life, even when you lose yourself, as we all have, as we all do. God knows I'm working on this very thing; I am no guru with all the answers. I know nothing, I'm floundering too. I am just trying to help as I would want to be helped, and I hope this helps you.
To elaborate on Aubrie's quote from above:
I force myself to slow down, take a deep breath, and ask why. Why am I wanting this? Why do I want to do that? Is it because I feel *insert negative emotion*? Is it something that my family will benefit from? Most times, I find myself walking away. Because I recognize that I don't really *need* to do whatever or have whatever has my attention at that moment in time.
Ask yourself:
"Who do I want attention from? Do they matter?"
"Why do I want attention from them? Why do they matter?"
"What good is their word or opinion of me versus my significant other's... or even more, MY OWN?"
"Is this just 'ego-kibble', or does this validation and attention have more to it?"
Validate Yourself. Make yourself VALID. NOW. While you are alive. :)
For what it's worth, anyway; Your mileage may vary.
[This message edited by RMarred at 12:46 PM, August 27th (Wednesday)]