My birth father is a sociopath. My birth mother was a schizophrenic. I was with them, on and off until I was two. My existence was far from honoured. They wanted me dead.
If I expressed a need I would be tortured.
If I didn't express a need I would be left alone but went without a primary need (to the state I would starve myself for instance)
I could not seek help (obviously)
I understand the theory of a double bind as it related to my young life:
1. do this, you are punished (cry because I am hungry)
2. do that (the other option), you are punished or suffer somehow (don't cry, so don't get fed) (particularly insidious when this choice is made by victim, which of course, causes shame because it was my choice)
3. no escape (this can be because neither parent is a source of safety, learned helplessness that causes us to not even bother trying to get help etc) (this, of course leads to shame too because we 'didn't try hard enough to get help)
Right now I am kinda caught in this type of situation. I am pretty sick and should go to hospital. I have been abused over and over in hospital so I choose not to go.
so here is how it plays out (and I am doing it to myself)
1. deal with physical consequences of illness knowing I could be causing more damage by not having it attended to
2. go to hospital and face abuse by staff (historically this has been consistent, it isn't catastrophising)
3. this isn't going to go away unless I make a choice of either 1. or 2.
Double bind.
Not looking for advice on the above scenario. It just feels hopeless. I am interested as to how difficult it has been since I learned of this double bind theory, to actually see how it has played out in my life, you know, finding examples of it. It is difficult for me to pull into my cognition somehow. I wonder sometimes if I am the cause of my own chaos at times because I am placing myself into double bind situations (like this physical issue I am having right now). Is this my fault because I could go to hospital but it seems like going is walking in front of a high speed train? Not going seems like a better choice but that may just be a passive death wish? *heavy sigh* I can't figure this out.
It seems like a fair share of my life has been 'choosing between the lesser of two evils'. I feel like if I can cognitively bring this pattern to the forefront it may help me out of the chaos tunnel. Does anyone have thoughts on whether this affects their lives and how?
https://childhoodtraumarecoverydotc...ents-put-kids-in-a-psychological-double-bind/
If I expressed a need I would be tortured.
If I didn't express a need I would be left alone but went without a primary need (to the state I would starve myself for instance)
I could not seek help (obviously)
I understand the theory of a double bind as it related to my young life:
1. do this, you are punished (cry because I am hungry)
2. do that (the other option), you are punished or suffer somehow (don't cry, so don't get fed) (particularly insidious when this choice is made by victim, which of course, causes shame because it was my choice)
3. no escape (this can be because neither parent is a source of safety, learned helplessness that causes us to not even bother trying to get help etc) (this, of course leads to shame too because we 'didn't try hard enough to get help)
Right now I am kinda caught in this type of situation. I am pretty sick and should go to hospital. I have been abused over and over in hospital so I choose not to go.
so here is how it plays out (and I am doing it to myself)
1. deal with physical consequences of illness knowing I could be causing more damage by not having it attended to
2. go to hospital and face abuse by staff (historically this has been consistent, it isn't catastrophising)
3. this isn't going to go away unless I make a choice of either 1. or 2.
Double bind.
Not looking for advice on the above scenario. It just feels hopeless. I am interested as to how difficult it has been since I learned of this double bind theory, to actually see how it has played out in my life, you know, finding examples of it. It is difficult for me to pull into my cognition somehow. I wonder sometimes if I am the cause of my own chaos at times because I am placing myself into double bind situations (like this physical issue I am having right now). Is this my fault because I could go to hospital but it seems like going is walking in front of a high speed train? Not going seems like a better choice but that may just be a passive death wish? *heavy sigh* I can't figure this out.
It seems like a fair share of my life has been 'choosing between the lesser of two evils'. I feel like if I can cognitively bring this pattern to the forefront it may help me out of the chaos tunnel. Does anyone have thoughts on whether this affects their lives and how?
https://childhoodtraumarecoverydotc...ents-put-kids-in-a-psychological-double-bind/
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