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Should You Be Angry At Your Mother For Not Protecting You?

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@WillyKat... Come on I could be your first client. You could make LOTS of money trying to figure my mind out. I think we talked about this before. Living in a small town. Everything was hushed up. I learnt later of a lot of abusive fathers. My father employed most the town. It's funny... When I was older one of his employees said he was an excellent boss to them. At least he was nice to someone.

@Meadowsweet and @Hashi...
Those were different times. I actually believe people thought you were allowed to abuse your children. Nobody really cared. You didn't talk about it. Hey I told CPS, our local police and it even went to court. We were all sent back home.

...
 
My T. did not use the socio-cultural explanation that mothers are the caregivers we have been allowed, for generations, to blame. Rather, she said that as a mother who loves her daughters profoundly and would like very much to protect her children from ever feeling anything like THIS, I cannot fathom HOW my mother didn't feel this way. She thought this is why I'm "still angry." But the reason I am still angry is because I am still in hell inside. I have brief moments of denial that are wonderful. Then it all comes back. If the hurt passed, I would not be thinking of the past. It's because together, they did a damn good job of ruining all their kids lives, not by lack of involvement, but by direct abuse of all kinds, that I am angry.

I feel robbed of my life. Here it is 30+ years later and I am not convinced that I am living, not really. I am just surviving. They took my "living" before it got started. That is why I am angry. I cannot get my life back. If I could, then I would not be angry anymore because I would be a free living thing that could adapt to life, and move on, let the past be in the past. I find the depression and anger go together like it did back then.

I feel like parts of me are still there, are not aware it's 30 years later. I'm still in it, still wanting to die. That makes me angry.
 
@Muse... I feel for you and I understand so well. I've been through those hellish days/weeks. I hope I can articulate this well. My words don't always come out right.

I went through hell as a child. No one should have to go through that. I then married young to a verbally and physically man. I went through years of counselling and group therapies. Always had the anxiety and panic attacks. Now I've had my latest trauma with a whole lot of new symptoms. But I have an excellent trauma therapist and psychiatrist. We are working on lessening my symptoms. I KNOW I will never be "normal" ( I hate that word) Who is normal? Don't they call this the Prozac generation? Everybody has problems. A lot of people are hiding behind masks.

I wish I had my therapists back then that I have now. Anyways I'm me. I have PTSD I'm a little odd and quirky but I have people who love me for me. This is what I am. Take it or leave it.

Are you seeing a good trauma therapist? They work wonders.
 
I didn't even know that I wasn't cared about. It was just normal. I was shocked when I went into therapy and the picture was painted clearly for me. It was really hard to process.
 
Thats horrible @shimmerz.

I was cared about. I had loving parents and friends so at least I had that. Its just that they all carried the price that I stay silent, that I don't share how I really feel, that I hide my quirks and do what ever I could to look like I was the same as everyone else.

I don't think any of this was a conscious decision from anyone....it just was the way it was.

I had a huge insight the other day when I told a friend a tiny-tiny segment of what was going on for me. They said that as a child I couldn't process it because I could never talk to anyone. When that comment was made, it literally hit me in the chest as I realised that no-wonder I have struggled for so long, I have never told anyone the full story or how it felt. While I have disclosed bits and pieces over the years I've never really spoken to anyone about it. All my disclosures were one off events, and the people never brought it up again (and looked uncomfortable if I tried)....it was effectively forgotten about and pushed back under the carpet.
 
I'm not in therapy right now. I found a good trauma therapist but can't afford the 2 hour drive and fees each week when I got a pay cut for the year.
I'd like to go back to that T. Thanks for asking. That was very considerate of you, Notsowild. :)

Getting back to the question "should one be angry..." yes, if a survivor is already angry and has stuffed it in order to preserve the abuser-abused relationship. Then, probably yes. As said above, it has to come back up and be processed along with the gradual adoption of a more adult and healthy self concept. Relationships are mirrors, and denial and repression to maintain the dysfunction requires a grief process, as stated above, to move away from that place. But, if one doesn't feel anger and if the bystander-mother was merely not aware at the time, and if there is no anger, Why should anyone say it must be there? It only takes an imagination to see that not everyone is the same. Most people need to get in touch with anger they've carried. Some never were angry and only are not because they are still children or still in denial. But, others may not need to feel anger to know what happened to them and who they truly are.

A mother-bystander is a mirror that reflects a warped image of oneself as a survivor. Anger is only one dimension of reaction to that image.

As someone who survived her mothering and lack thereof, I no longer find that image a true reflection. Anger is part of that dismissal. But after I accepted the anger and saw beyond it, there's still that small bit of me that knows I am not bound to look in the same cracked mirror forever. I see beyond it to a better me that I've held onto in faith, even if that person is a survivor with PTSD and issues. I have to believe in that person who never saw her reflection in that dirty, cracked mirror and was always there, keeping me going. That higher self has to integrate with the angry face in the cracked mirror until they become one. That is taking practice and time. The me that is still in hell has to merge with the me that is okay and peaceful, untouched. I am somewhere in the synthesis of these experiences and images of myself. I could be angry that my mother held a bad mirror up for me, or that she allowed my siblings and I to be hurt by our father and others. I am angry about that, and I think it's normal to go through that. But I don't feel stuck in it like quicksand. I get out and feel other things now. :) I somehow find myself back in anger, but I manage to move though it. I find better things to feel, too. It is synthesizing this that I'm now working on.

If the anger needs to come, it will come. If it doesn't, then don't go looking for it. Why judge someone for feeling or not feeling some emotion toward someone who was a bystander. There are 1,000 shades of involvement, tempered by love, human weakness, and forgiveness.
 
If the anger needs to come, it will come. If it doesn't, then don't go looking for it.
So well said.

From my own experiences (and what I have read) I think that a significant number of childhood abuse survivors will have some level of anger towards the carer who they wished would have protected them. But to create anger or to feel that its needed is likely a mistake. If there truly is anger underneath a layer of denial, then you need to wait until you remove the denial before the anger will surface. Trying to start with creating anger will not help....but one day, if anger naturally comes...allow it to come and then allow it to go again when its ready.

When my ex-T discussed the anger I apparently had with my mother it was too soon for me. I wasn't ready, there were too many layers of denial to go. Many months later along my journey I can see now that one day I expect I will be angry, I am starting to remember that when I was a child I was angry. But, I'm not looking forward to this part of my journey...I don't think I'm ready yet.
 
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