F
Flr8
This came up in therapy last week right as we were ending, and I don't know what to make of it. Hoping some of you might have some insights.
I was describing how all of my memories are of viewing myself as if in the third person. I gave an example of riding a bike around my neighborhood when I was a kid. This is not a traumatic incident. I was just riding my bike and have a faint memory of that - but when I recall it, I'm not sitting on the bike myself - I can see myself riding the bike.
My therapist said that it could be that I was dissociated, since it sounded like I was not in my body. But I explained that all of my memories are like that. Does that mean that I just live in this perpetual state of dissociation? That I'm not really living in this life at all?
I have experienced dissociation in therapy when talking about trauma, so I know what that feels like.
I also know that I have a lot of work to do yet to get myself to be "present." If I'm never in the "here and now," then would it make sense that my memories look like this?
I was describing how all of my memories are of viewing myself as if in the third person. I gave an example of riding a bike around my neighborhood when I was a kid. This is not a traumatic incident. I was just riding my bike and have a faint memory of that - but when I recall it, I'm not sitting on the bike myself - I can see myself riding the bike.
My therapist said that it could be that I was dissociated, since it sounded like I was not in my body. But I explained that all of my memories are like that. Does that mean that I just live in this perpetual state of dissociation? That I'm not really living in this life at all?
I have experienced dissociation in therapy when talking about trauma, so I know what that feels like.
I also know that I have a lot of work to do yet to get myself to be "present." If I'm never in the "here and now," then would it make sense that my memories look like this?