barefoot
Diamond Member
My therapist has recently brought up the idea of “betrayal from mother”, which has confused me. I’ve had very mixed feelings come up about it and I’m finding it quite challenging, emotionally.
We talked more about it yesterday. I said the word betrayal sounds too strong and very harsh and that it makes me want to defend my mum because she is not a bad person or a bad mum and she has, as far as I know, always done her best to care for me and I have always felt loved.
My T agreed that betrayal is a strong word and that, in this context, it means something more along the lines of a failing in a certain area/situation...that something was less than ideal.
I then mentioned something about a key trauma from my childhood and said that it feels really unfair to blame my mum for what happened. Because, although if my mum had done some things differently (eg, spoken up, asked questions, trusted her gut, made us leave) what happened wouldn’t have happened, it feels really, really unfair to blame her for what then happened. Because it wasn’t her fault.
My therapist said it isn’t about blaming her. That this isn’t about blaming her.
And that’s sort of blown my mind. Because I don’t understand the difference.
How is it possible to think/feel that someone has failed and been less than ideal (and, as a consequence in that scenario, I was abused) while not in any way blaming them, holding them responsible or feeling that it was their fault?
Feeling really teary today - a mixture of sadness and anger, I think, but I can’t really make sense of it.
Can anyone shed any light? How is this not about blaming?
We talked more about it yesterday. I said the word betrayal sounds too strong and very harsh and that it makes me want to defend my mum because she is not a bad person or a bad mum and she has, as far as I know, always done her best to care for me and I have always felt loved.
My T agreed that betrayal is a strong word and that, in this context, it means something more along the lines of a failing in a certain area/situation...that something was less than ideal.
I then mentioned something about a key trauma from my childhood and said that it feels really unfair to blame my mum for what happened. Because, although if my mum had done some things differently (eg, spoken up, asked questions, trusted her gut, made us leave) what happened wouldn’t have happened, it feels really, really unfair to blame her for what then happened. Because it wasn’t her fault.
My therapist said it isn’t about blaming her. That this isn’t about blaming her.
And that’s sort of blown my mind. Because I don’t understand the difference.
How is it possible to think/feel that someone has failed and been less than ideal (and, as a consequence in that scenario, I was abused) while not in any way blaming them, holding them responsible or feeling that it was their fault?
Feeling really teary today - a mixture of sadness and anger, I think, but I can’t really make sense of it.
Can anyone shed any light? How is this not about blaming?