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Ryn, I'm in the same place as you. It is torture. My therapist tells me that I may never know full details and that I shouldn't force them out of me. To do so could be shattering and very traumatising. She says if is enough to see how my body is reacting to know that something must have happened, otherwise I just wouldn't be in this state. When I remember what I do actually consciously remember of my childhood, and when I think about the way my parents and family treat me now, I have also had to come to the conclusion that what I thought was normal, was really, really toxic, and remains so.
I am reading 'Toxic Parents. Overcoming their hurtful legacy and reclaiming your life' by Susan Forward, and I have had to put it down. Every single page seems to be about what I have experienced and so much of it I thought was normal. Another book I've just got is having a similar effect on me: 'The Emotionally Absent Mother. A guide to self-healing and getting the love you missed' by Jasmin Lee Cori. There is a lot in there about narcissistic mothers and attachment disorder. I think the whole culture within abusive families around the abuse and its subsequent emergence is super toxic. And it has all had an effect on us and the way we accept or rather deny to ourselves what has happened to us. All of that, too, is part of the abuse.
It was really helpful to read your account, @
shell. If that is not a salutory lesson, I don't know what is. I don't think I've got anyone I can ask since both my parents were involved in my abuse. One of my sisters (younger) corroborated several things for me and it shocked us both to the core when we compared notes. However, unbeknowns to me, she has had a whole series of fishing conversations, supposedly innocently trying to confirm peripheral facts, with my parents. She won't tell me what she found out (she claims she doesn't want to get caught between everyone), but I realise now that I've come out about my diagnosis and later rape, my parents are not stupid enough not to be able to put two and two together, and so I'll never be able to have such fishing conversations myself, even if I wanted to do so.
I hope @
Ryn, you do get to find out some corroborating facts, just to put your mind at peace (at least in the sense that you can stop feeling like you're going mad). I've decided I am just going to have to trust what my body tells me. I've got enough to know that abuse happened and by whom, though I suspect there is much more. For me it was a deciding factor in breaking away from the family (at least temporarily), but as I progress I am wondering if there will ever be a way back. What I have got, however, is freedom to make my own life be as I want it, even if it is terribly slow going because of the PTSD. I no longer have the clouds of confusion coming from the family's wish to deny, hide, minimise, and scapegoat. It has only been a few weeks, and though it is very lonely in one respect, even that early on in the process, it is a relief. I realise how much they were contributing almost daily to my head spinning with where the truth lay (about just about everything, not even to mention the early abuse).