Your mother seems like she would not want to be seen as discriminating against her daughter, so that might keep her from doing things like calling you "handicapped" at work.
I hope this is true. But if not, I'm wondering what kinds of boundaries I might be able to use to protect myself.
If you are not feeling safe in family therapy, why not ask for one-on-one therapy for a while so that you can address all that you have shared here, with your therapist, so you know that she will have an opportunity to hear all of your concerns?
I've met with her one-on-one three times now (we've met as a family three or four times). When I meet with her individually, I have to pay for it myself. That's expensive, especially considering I'm also paying for my own individual therapy with my regular T. I also email her from time to time, but I'm not sure how effective that is.
If you don't want to use her, ask for someone who is familiar with counseling those with Aspergers.
I've searched high and low in my area for someone who knows both aspergers and trauma...and who I'm comfortable with. There's one guy I interviewed who said he could do both, but he was just weird somehow. It felt icky, so I didn't go back to him. I haven't found any other options, even when I was willing to drive an hour each way. There are a couple of autism Ts, but they're more focused on more traditional autism issues, like kids trying to get their first girlfriend/boyfriend, or a young adult trying to get and keep their first real job. I'm in my 40s, married for over 20 years, and have 4 kids. I've learned some decent social skills to mask my issues in superficial situations. What I need is more of a cross between autism and trauma help, and that isn't something that's easy to come by. My individual T is learning about autism, and he's a trauma specialist of sorts. But I can't also use him for family therapy.
you speak in absolutes about your mom and sister
That's weird because I try to avoid using absolutes. "Seems to" instead of "is", "often" instead of "always"...I'm aware of those thought distortions and try to avoid them.
Would it be possible that you also have a bit more difficulty in piecing together how to judge relationships? I don't mean to discount your family dynamics and I mean no offense. I just know that having Asperger's has it challenges and it takes extra efforts of those with it and the family members to adjust to it and live around it. It is also challenging to work and fit comfortably into society and the workplace.
It's certainly possible. I spend hours and hours researching these topics so that I can challenge my perceptions and try to understand what's really going on...how much of this is my own reactivity, and how much is objectively dysfunctional on their part? I run things past my T, to the point of even recording conversations with my mom, typing out the transcript, and playing it back to my T so he can hear context, tone of voice, all of it except for seeing body language/facial expressions.
I realize that I can be stubborn when I believe I've worked out the "reality" of what happened when others don't see it that way. But my T also says I need to learn to trust myself more, that if I perceive my mom has made a jab at me, given the fact that I try to objectively evaluate exactly what was said and the context and all of it and also evaluate my own bias in the situation...he says I need to learn to trust my perception of what happened more and not rely on others to tell me if I'm justified in what I perceive. Or maybe he got tired of me checking in with him on everything, I don't know.
How else can I subject my perceptions to objective scrutiny? And at what point does it not matter whether this can be confirmed objectively? If this is the way I experience other people's communications, then doesn't that in itself have some validity? Why is it the NT (neurotypical) perception that matters, and not mine? Why do their feelings about a communication matter more than mine do, when theirs are based on reading into what I've said, but mine are based on the objective, dictionary definitions of the words used?
At what point do I get to trust my own perceptions and experience of what was said? They don't seem to be subjecting their perceptions to any sort of scrutiny. Why do my perceptions have to go through 8 degrees of cross-examination and approval before I'm allowed to believe what I experienced?
I'm also not trying to be offensive. And I recognize that asperger's creates some distortion in NT-aspie communications. I'm sure there's also distortion in my perception of objective reality, as there is for anyone. But why is my filter the only one that is considered to be problematic?
I think some singular therapy might be really good for you. You could use some support, on your own, in all this.
I've been seeing an individual T for well over three years now, and I saw a lay counselor for some time before that. I've also tried additional layers of therapy, sometimes with multiple layers of expense. Really, when it comes right down to it, I resent the money I have to put towards meeting with the famT one-on-one. I'd rather put that money towards marriage counseling. My DH and I have some things we need to work through, but the issues with my mom and sister have drained so much of my time, money, and emotional bandwidth, that we've not been able to address those things in my marriage.
My mom and sister both said they would also meet individually with the famT, but then both backed out because they decided they didn't really have anything they needed to work on for themselves...the problems were all with me, and so have to be addressed as a group. At the beginning of family therapy, my mom said, "Really, 80% of these problems we're having are my fault because I was too lenient with the girls when they first started working for me, and I created a sense of entitlement in them." It was a clever form of blameshifting, where she put the responsibility for the current issues square on our shoulders (although not for my sister, because it's a family rule to never say anything bad directly about her or she'll pitch a fit and run crying out of the room, which means my mom was really talking about me...and, given other context details that I can't repeat here, she made it very clear that she sees me as the problem, to the point of saying she really wishes she could just cut me out of the business).
Anyway, point is, I have an individual T. And I've met with the famT a few times, trying to give her as much information as I can, and work out a functioning relationship between us. But I'm not sure it's working.
It was really my experience, I think, that if I managed to do something "right" the rules would immediately change so it was no longer right.
Moving the goalposts...yes, this definitely happens for me. They say what they're wanting, I try to do it that way, but somehow it's never enough. Sometimes I'll give them what I thought they were asking for, and I actually get in trouble for it. I've gotten to the point of trying to discern between which things they're asking for because they actually want them, and which things they're saying they want but really they just want to complain. But then I mis-group those things, and miss something they thought was really important, or put a lot of time into something they didn't care about. It's incredibly frustrating. And when I ask for clarification, they're bothered that I don't already know what they want.
do you get the same feeling dealing with people other than your mom and sister?
This is hard. No, I don't feel like I have a target on my back with
everyone else. But I can definitely point to other situations where I did feel that way.
At the same time, I can point to
many other situations where people seemed to pull away from me if I let my guard down a little and tried to be more of my real self with them...they didn't pull away in an attacking sort of way, but just disappeared. So I understand that my real self must be very difficult to be in relationship with. Which feeds the shame and the social isolation to keep from subjecting people to knowing me. I've told my T many, many times that I try to protect people from me. He insists that many of those situations had more to do with
their issues than with me, and maybe he's right. But then what should I believe? If it only happened occasionally, then sure, everybody faces relationships that fall apart for reasons unrelated to who they are, and yet they're left with several other friends to make up the difference. But over and over and over? Either I'm doing something wrong that messes up what might have been a decent friendship, or I'm screwed up and people are better off not being around me, despite all the many years trying to adjust myself to fit their expectations, and then trying to adjust myself to have better boundaries and healthier relationships, and still losing friends despite not having any conflicts that I could identify...they just lose interest and stop responding to my occasional texts or messages or invitations (and no, I don't bombard them with messages). I've pretty much given up on having a social life of any kind. I sit at home or do things by myself so people don't have to be around me.
So maybe the problem really is me? Even if they do have codependency/anxious attachment issues, and even if my communications exhibit much healthier boundaries but lack warmth, maybe none of that matters if I'm too uncomfortable and awkward to be in relationship with.