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I feel alone not only with the fact that connection is a problem for me, but with the fact that I don't want connection
Hashi said:I'd like to feel less alone with it, but I see so many posts that are almost the opposite that I wonder how alone with it I am.
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I don't really want to be close to others, intimacy has little appeal for me. ... I find it hard to trust because I don't believe anyone else can be relied on in the way I can rely on myself. Anyway, I see being vulnerable as the ultimate stupidity (for myself).
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I probably haven't been clear enough that I see my view of "vulnerable = stupid" as a big problem for me, not a better position compared to anyone else who is able to be more open.
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the fact that I don't want connection.
... I was hoping for anything that would make me feel less alone, and anything about healing given my starting point. An alternative idea and not the usual.
Your mother's behavior sounds like a classical personality disorder issue (histrionic or borderline maybe?) with extreme emotional hyper-impulsivity and insecurity. That along with your history of trauma, would make you very easily fall into codependent traits. Personality disorder people can be like emotional vampires, sucking out your emotional life, and then totally distorting your sense of reality and kill any trust of people or trust in the world. Their out of control unpredictable and hyper-fast inner emotional turmoil is in itself overwhelming and traumatic.Hashi said:except with my mother. What keeps me stuck there is her extreme manipulation combined with my guilt. When I opposed her in a major way before, she went blind from stress and the stress was what I was putting her through. I avoid contact as much as I can, but if I stopped seeing her altogether I'm pretty sure she'd die as a direct result - her health is poor - and I can't deal with it.
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made me think that I'm actually very empathic but have blocked that because of my experiences with my mother, who later became off-the-scale controlling and manipulative. (To flag up - she has no formal diagnosis since she never sought help and I don't want to think about diagnosis, only her behaviour and how it affected me.) Unfortunately I'm still very empathic towards her. It's like curse. I cannot switch it off. Which is why I don't want to take steps to separate myself and probably cause her to literally die from her emotional martyrdom.
It can be frustrating trying to understand and respond appropriately to your needs. I feel your emotions one way, but read your words another way, how to communicate back? Also I sense a lot of emotional triggers near the surface, so it almost feels like walking through a land mine.Hashi said:An alternative idea and not the usual.
being able to talk on the phone isn't a step towards connecting with people. It's a step towards making my life easier, because talking on the phone sometimes will achieve what I want to achieve easier than email or other communications. I think it's a hard concept for most people to get their heads around.
I'm having trouble reconciling two positions that seem to contradict each other. You don't want connection but at the same time you want to feel less alone, would like guidance, encouragement and feed off your therapist's belief in you?
Do you think that people possibly don't know what your character is because you don't share much of your personality with them? Or that people assume things because that's how people make sense of their world or the people around them? Do you think you make assumptions about what connection means to others because you don't want connection?Often people make assumptions about the reason I'm doing something, or about my personality, that are far off the mark. Then they're surprised at something else I do because they see it as uncharacteristic, when it's completely in character (my actual character, rather than their assumptions).
Insecure/Avoidant: These children are friendlier with strangers than with parents; they do not look to caregivers for comfort; they pay more attention to the environment than to people. Gradually they become hostile and distant with peers and teachers alike, socially isolated, less compliant with rules, and more expressive of negative emotions. As they grow older, these children are frequently very independent; sullen and oppositional; not likely to seek help when injured or disappointed; angry and distant; lacking in empathy; omnipotent in their approach to the world and rejecting of nurturing.
I'd like to bring this thread back to my original reason for posting, or otherwise let it fade away. I feel alone not only with the fact that connection is a problem for me, but with the fact that I don't want connection. As I said before, I don't feel ambivalent. I don't see that I want connection but have trouble achieving it.