WTF Happened
Bronze Member
@Freida Thanks for talking about shutting down overwhelming emotions in order to survive.
Sometimes I read things like that and I think, "How nice that you don't have to feel the tough emotions like the rest of us." When my ex and I broke up - and perhaps still to this day, I don't know - she was completely emotionless, devoid of any empathy whatsoever. I had to feel the intense pain of this insane thing that was happening, and still hurt to this day, and she didn't have to feel anything. Judging by the lack of remorse or any kind of explanation over a year and a half later, she still doesn't. "How nice, she gets to live her life without ever feeling what happened, and I feel it every day."
When I bring this up to my therapist, she says something along the lines of, "for now." Or, like you said, it works until it doesn't. Can you talk about how this actually becomes a problem down the road? Because, on its face, it sounds like the type of coping mechanism we'd all like to have! I understand that it eventually catches up to you, but in what way does it catch up to you? I know that I'm the lucky one because I don't have to deal with this monster that is PTSD, but sometimes it seems like the person who can numb out is the lucky one.
Sometimes I read things like that and I think, "How nice that you don't have to feel the tough emotions like the rest of us." When my ex and I broke up - and perhaps still to this day, I don't know - she was completely emotionless, devoid of any empathy whatsoever. I had to feel the intense pain of this insane thing that was happening, and still hurt to this day, and she didn't have to feel anything. Judging by the lack of remorse or any kind of explanation over a year and a half later, she still doesn't. "How nice, she gets to live her life without ever feeling what happened, and I feel it every day."
When I bring this up to my therapist, she says something along the lines of, "for now." Or, like you said, it works until it doesn't. Can you talk about how this actually becomes a problem down the road? Because, on its face, it sounds like the type of coping mechanism we'd all like to have! I understand that it eventually catches up to you, but in what way does it catch up to you? I know that I'm the lucky one because I don't have to deal with this monster that is PTSD, but sometimes it seems like the person who can numb out is the lucky one.