Kaiva, from one writer to another who also deals with depression: I honestly think you're being too hard on yourself.
I don't know you very well, but from what little I've been able to discuss with you, you do seem to be an open minded person. You're a human who makes mistakes. I agree with Ursa: the fact that you do recognize you could improve as a player and as a person shows that you're not a Toxic Elitist. Truthfully you never came off as toxic to me (and I've been around my fair share of toxic people).
As for my own experiences in the game? Absolutely. In fact my mistake was one of many factors that did lead me to unsubbing for over a year.
Some friends of mine at the time wanted to start an FC purely to get a house faster/more easily. I was against it because I had a feeling they'd flake (they were hard core MMO hoppers at the time, and we JUST left WoW because they grew bored despite all the money they dropped on it). What happened? The two of them grabbed two people from an FC they didn't fare well in, party was made, FC was born.
Unfortunately my gut was correct: not only did they not help much with ranking the FC or earning the money for the house, but eventually they just stopped logging in. Whenever I would ask them why they would claim they'd log back in when they had the time/motivation/whatever. So we proceed and boom, we have a house (I was still an officer so I could at least do that). Well eventually they announce to me they're not playing anymore and they wouldn't even log in long enough to switch leadership to me. Me and the two guys who went along with this were essentially stuck and now out of a lot of gil.
When leadership did finally fall to me through the in-game timers I...just wasn't a good FC leader. I enjoyed getting to know the two people who stuck it out with me, but I didn't have the drive to grow the FC. I had no say in the name, the theme, or even in its formation, yet here I was the leader of it all and stuck with the responsibility of letting our other mates know that the original leaders bailed.
The guys at the time were incredibly sweet, but I knew then and now that I didn't do the job I could have done. I was too wishy washy. I could have put my foot down and refused to be part of forming the FC. I could have listened to my gut and warned the people my "friends" sucked in at the time of what might be coming. At the end of the day if I had been more assertive there would have been the possibility of stopping the scenario from happening. And even then I could have just sucked it up and turned the situation into a positive one by stepping up to be a good leader.
But I didn't.
And that's all there was to it. Because I didn't stick to my guns and didn't stand up for myself, multiple people got screwed. And that's not okay.
So where you feel you may be too outspoken and too critical of others while not being fit to do so, I had the exact opposite problem. And I'm still combating that even now. It's not good to be a "toxic elitist" but it's also certainly not good to just be silent and let people do exactly as they please if what they're doing negatively affects you. I don't think there's anything wrong with wanting the best from the people around you or yourself. It's how we ask and strive for those things that separates those who are toxic and those who aren't.
So I say: live and learn. You're probably doing better than you think.


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