MY GOD, I would hate to be my mother. And my mother is not so bad, in the grand scheme of things.
Interesting, my T never said these words to me. She is Very Very careful about intentional language, which might be one of the things that makes her such a good T for me. She is literal. She uses "want" in it's actual literal sense (of "lack") so if I say "I want a sandwich" she will say, "Yes, you don't have one now, but would like to get one?" Silly example, but makes the point.
When we do inner child work, she directs me to feel first (locate the feeling in my body), listen to any words, say the words and feel the feeling, and then go (as me) to her and ask/notice what she needs. Sometimes it is general reassuring stuff; "We are safe now. I am here for you. You matter to me." sort of things. Mostly, it is always affirming stuff. Either mirroring or validating.
I didn't realize it until now but she hardly ever uses the word "parent' except as a verb, and actually tends to use "nurture" instead. "Nurture yourself" (that is nice sounding, with brownie overtones) works for me much better than "be your own parent" (NO THANK YOU.)
I think things really changed for me when I saw (in a workshop) that actually feeling pain, while totally awful, was actually much less awful than resisting not-feeling pain. Not that there is anything in my past that amounts to this level of trauma (just emotional neglect.) What happened was that one of the people in the (3 day) workshop had been molested by her neighbor 30 years ago as a child - and told her mother who didn't believe her. My T (who was leading the workshop) worked her through the feelings and thoughts, and the rest of us just ... witnessed and believed her. The transformation was profound. Her face was transformed, like, she didn't quite look like the same person who showed up that morning. And the next morning, wow. I am so so glad that she was not a "one off" and that it appears to be contagious!
@
macca , thank you for telling your story. It makes me hopeful that the truly horrible three months with my H last fall really was him "acting out" or processing through psycho-drama or something a big hunk of his trauma. Little bits still come up, but not at all like it was. I worry that I am just "happy talking" myself, but something does seem to have resolved for him. He has gotten memories back, remembered names and places that were blanks before. Notably he didn't get weird when I was sick this week, which would have made him edgy before and he was totally fine. Dare I say, "Normal!" ;)