WillowMarie
Silver Member
I was wondering if others find themselves using this coping skill.
I was reading the book Homecoming and when I read about this, I was like, oh my gosh, that is soooooo me! The author was saying how people who grew up in unpredictable environments, that they use the coping skill of "staying in their head."
"One way adult children avoid their legitimate suffering is staying in their heads. This involves obsessing about things, analyzing, discussing, reading, and spending lots of energy in trying to figure things out."
"What resulted was confusion and unpredictability." "This unpredictability caused your continual need to figure things out."
"Staying in one's head is also an ego defense. By obsessing on things, one does not have to feel."
I think I am the queen of obsessing, analyzing, reading and spending a lot of energy doing these things. I have a tendency to talk more about why I think I reacted some way, giving all these theories about why I might have been triggered or why I was affected by it, than talking and working through the feelings I experienced. I have spent hours researching articles about childhood trauma. Hours going over my diaries and trying to pick up any clues I may have missed.
I was reading the book Homecoming and when I read about this, I was like, oh my gosh, that is soooooo me! The author was saying how people who grew up in unpredictable environments, that they use the coping skill of "staying in their head."
"One way adult children avoid their legitimate suffering is staying in their heads. This involves obsessing about things, analyzing, discussing, reading, and spending lots of energy in trying to figure things out."
"What resulted was confusion and unpredictability." "This unpredictability caused your continual need to figure things out."
"Staying in one's head is also an ego defense. By obsessing on things, one does not have to feel."
I think I am the queen of obsessing, analyzing, reading and spending a lot of energy doing these things. I have a tendency to talk more about why I think I reacted some way, giving all these theories about why I might have been triggered or why I was affected by it, than talking and working through the feelings I experienced. I have spent hours researching articles about childhood trauma. Hours going over my diaries and trying to pick up any clues I may have missed.