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Failure to protect

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Anyone resonate?

Throwing shit at the wall here and none of it’s sticking.

It was my fault / if I’d have been there it wouldn’t have happened *fact* / I could have not left *fact*

Did I see it coming? Maybe. I thought I’d done enough. Ignored the twinge to go back.

Generally, I couldn’t give a crap about people. Your on your own pal. Unless you are one of *my* people. And I’m taking this failing pretty hard.
 
I think for me it's because if I don't stand for something (or some ones) I stand for nothing. And when I've done nothing when I should I'm complicit. Won't be finding me posting it in the I Forgive Myself For.. thread, that's for sure.
 
I internalized an identity as both a protector and a perpetrator simultaneously very early on. I coped by drawing upon myself as something of a beneficent monster. It's not a coincidence that I named that part James; James is a character in Silent Hill who develops an ego construct called Pyramid Head, the primary villain who is seen punishing other monsters such as Nurses when they get out of line.

For a majority of the series Pyramid Head is portrayed as the antagonist, where it is then revealed that Pyramid Head is actually you, and a representation of your guilt at euthanizing your terminally ill spouse. I was the monster that hunted the monsters. Someone who used their internal resilience and lack of emotionality to do the work that no one else could, very effectively.

Anyway, this is all very fantastical and not at all a representation of what my reality was like. I used maladaptive daydreaming and created characters split off into different facets in order to compose specific ways of being that allowed me to contend with my circumstances. In my mind, I was rigid and organized and in-control. I had agency, purpose, power. But in reality I was simply at the mercy of people more physically powerful than me.

I had no agency, no control, and no power. If I hadn't demonstrated callousness early on, I would have just been a sex slave. Unfortunately, I was too young to understand that I should have been masking those traits. Everything that I did, was with the intention of ensuring that we survived. If I had to rape, torture, beat, maim someone then I would do it without any regard for their psychological well-being. Endure, or die. Those were the only options.

And my existence was predicated on twisting it all around and around until it became something that I was able to maneuver in. But the reality is, I was always stuck in place. The place that they wanted me to be in. Even though my identity as a monster causes me significant distress in the form of remorse (and periodically guilt, though this is shakier) and various forms of OCD, it is still easier to deal with it being my responsibility than it is to admit that the universe is random and I had zero control.
 
Somewhere between a gut punch & getting my spine ripped out through my chest… when I fail to protect those I’m responsible for.
Yep. On account of who the person I failed is, it’s spine ripping. I was responsible for her by default of being the most sober.

I think for me it's because if I don't stand for something (or some ones) I stand for nothing. And when I've done nothing when I should I'm complicit. Won't be finding me posting it in the I Forgive Myself For.. thread, that's for sure.
Yep, get that. Me either, I’ll carry this one to the grave.

I internalized an identity as both a protector and a perpetrator simultaneously very early on.
Thanks weemie. As always with your posts you give me lots to think about. Maybe I have both at play, because I’m very willing to attack, to protect - if that makes sense? But in this case it’s the lack of either, I did neither of those things.
 
was responsible for her by default of being the most sober.
On the basis of this, it sounds like the person who had something happen was an adult.

I really wonder if, shifting how you see who was to blame for whatever happened might help.

Failure to protect is a very wide ranging thing. I'm questioning whether this was something you failed to protect from. It sounds like you have given yourself the role of protector by default of being the most sober. But, adults are responsible for their well being. I don't know what happened, but if there was an accident (like driving), then it's just that: an accident. If it was an abuser taking advantage of someone in an intoxicated state, then it's an abuser deciding to do something.
I wonder if you can free yourself from the role of protector. I.e responsible for someone else. Because if you were responsible for their welfare then, you are responsible for their welfare at every other point too. And you're not.
 
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