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- #37
J
just me here
What's the name of that game I played as a kid- it's all wood, and you put colored sticks into small wooden wheels the size of a quarter? An erector set? That's what I envision it's like. -Gcat
Here we called them tinker toys. wooden dowels of various lengths, joint peices you inserted the dowels into, some wooden wheels, some pulleys, some plastic parts like little fan blades so you could build a windmill. My granparents had a conglomeration of maybe a dozen sets that all got dumped into a box and us grandkids would pull them out and play with them in the middle of the floor while our parents and aunts and uncles talked and watched. My Uncle showed me how to build a working rack and pinion front axle for a car, another home from the Airforce helped me build a turbo fan airplane engine model, and I remember building a model of the Lunar Module in 1969. Great memories- thanks.
I agree that traumas definitely change our perception of the world around us and our defense mechanisms and survival instincts are constantly being upgraded to meet the new threats we perceive. Thats what life is in a nutshell: trying to be prepared for and aware of threats we perceive, and trying to find our way to the place in the maze where the cheese is kept.
The traumas we face all teach us something new to deal with, sometimes we grow, but sometimes we just shrink away from the threat or let it rule our thoughts and thus our lives.
When our "self talk" style is forming in our young minds, when we are crystalizing who we are and who we will be, we are vulnerable to outside forces that can start us in a direction that leads to negative self talk and negative self concept and an abnormally strong inner critic.
Thats what CPTSD is for me, a result of early bad parenting followed by traumatic events that really got my defense mechanisms going. Unfortunately those defense mechanisms were based on being extremely self critical and self blaming for anything that happened to me. That is the foundation that all the symptoms of my disorder are built upon.
My schema is faulty, it was built in a time when I was looking for help from adults and unfortunately the adults I went to were much better at helping me build a tinker toy windmill than a workable view of the world and how I would fit into it.