I am currently struggling to come to terms with the extent to which this horrible condition has plagued, and continues to plague, my life.
In a literal sense,I know that as a child I learned to be passive and compliant, at least on the outside, and to accept that there was no way out or option of escape for me. As is always the case, at the time there was a survival and adaptive value in learning that I had no control or capacity to seek it, but obviously, the adaptive value of those beliefs has worn off now that I am free of the daily abuse and am an adult with the capacity to influence my life.
And yet absolutely any time in which I experience or even perceive significant danger or challenge, I lapse quite unconsciously into a state of powerlessness and defeat during which I believe I have no control, no capacity to influence the outcome or to take any steps to change it. At a practical level, I experienced this when physically attacked and raped as an adult 3 years ago, and when subsequently sexually assaulted around 2 years ago. I do understand that when in dire danger, even healthy adults can experience a "freeze" survival response in such situations, but not only was I unable to defend myself at the time, but I was also unable to report either crime later or to speak about either of them for a long long time. I was so convinced that nobody would believe me and that nothing good would come of it, that everything I rationally know about such situations (which is a lot, given that I work in law enforcement) somehow just flew away and left me.
However, I also take learned helplessness to other extremes. A recent example involved threats I have been receiving from a very dangerous abuser. There are a number of protective and preventative strategies that have been suggested to me, all of which spark feelings of defeat, pointless powerlessness and a distressed conviction that there is no point, no hope, and nothing I can do to protect myself. Logically I know this is untrue, but the extent of distress I experience when confronting these issues is more than I can put into words.
Can anyone relate? Has anyone faced the learned helplessness demon squarely and come out on the other side, or at least made steps towards it? Sadly, and inevitably, my extreme fear of harm is being greatly escalated by my knowledge that my capacity to stand up for or defend myself is so limited. The sense of vulnerability that I feel to know this is extreme and almost debilitating at the moment.
Maddog
In a literal sense,I know that as a child I learned to be passive and compliant, at least on the outside, and to accept that there was no way out or option of escape for me. As is always the case, at the time there was a survival and adaptive value in learning that I had no control or capacity to seek it, but obviously, the adaptive value of those beliefs has worn off now that I am free of the daily abuse and am an adult with the capacity to influence my life.
And yet absolutely any time in which I experience or even perceive significant danger or challenge, I lapse quite unconsciously into a state of powerlessness and defeat during which I believe I have no control, no capacity to influence the outcome or to take any steps to change it. At a practical level, I experienced this when physically attacked and raped as an adult 3 years ago, and when subsequently sexually assaulted around 2 years ago. I do understand that when in dire danger, even healthy adults can experience a "freeze" survival response in such situations, but not only was I unable to defend myself at the time, but I was also unable to report either crime later or to speak about either of them for a long long time. I was so convinced that nobody would believe me and that nothing good would come of it, that everything I rationally know about such situations (which is a lot, given that I work in law enforcement) somehow just flew away and left me.
However, I also take learned helplessness to other extremes. A recent example involved threats I have been receiving from a very dangerous abuser. There are a number of protective and preventative strategies that have been suggested to me, all of which spark feelings of defeat, pointless powerlessness and a distressed conviction that there is no point, no hope, and nothing I can do to protect myself. Logically I know this is untrue, but the extent of distress I experience when confronting these issues is more than I can put into words.
Can anyone relate? Has anyone faced the learned helplessness demon squarely and come out on the other side, or at least made steps towards it? Sadly, and inevitably, my extreme fear of harm is being greatly escalated by my knowledge that my capacity to stand up for or defend myself is so limited. The sense of vulnerability that I feel to know this is extreme and almost debilitating at the moment.
Maddog
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