Hi Junebug. :)
I hope you start feeling a little more settled. You are brave to discuss it all.
I think your feelings about it all are very normal for a young girl with little emotional support, feeling more grown up and responsible in her life than she should have felt and dealing with such a difficult situation. And I think none of that guilt or shame is warranted.
You may think nunhood sounds appealing but sackcloth, self deprivation and self flagellation are not something that is adaptive in the general world!:notworthy: Instead of it helping in relationships it does the opposite in many ways! I think equal sharing and caring and support and being supported is the very best way for these things to be when possible.
I do believe in your wonderful empathic skills Junebug. And I am similar too. In the past I was practically just empathy and very little else! But for me I have had to accept that when I am perceiving things through the mist of intense emotions sometimes it ends up being projection of my own fears and feelings.
And as skilled empaths as we may be, we actually don't have the ability to mindread. I find sometimes I need to listen to myself regardless but sometimes if I am just using it to torment myself it helps to remember that I don't have that power. Otherwise I can cause myself so much unnecessary pain. So it might actually be OK to give yourself a break and accept that you don't know for sure what happened.
And when it comes to your friend and other supports it would be pretty amazing if you didn't project some of all the self hatred and judgment and lack of worth. When we are struggling that much with these things it tends to seep out.
I would imagine you were much more likely to be seeing possible concern, distress, sadness , puzzlement, confusion rather than disgust from your friend. And its OK and normal for people to feel those things if we tell them about difficult experiences. We don't need to protect others from their feelings at all times. We don't even have a right to do that.
If the flinching was part of what you are concerned about then I think flinching would be a perfectly normal response in the context with him a priest and you a woman. And the only way it would cause offence is if he had a history of sexual abuse and it was a trigger! And even then it would not be your fault as there is nothing fundamentally wrong or bad about doing something like that especially since it was done as a sign of innocent friendship. Flinching is probably more often a sign that someone is a little self conscious or has different personal boundaries.
Do you think it is not so much that you feel a burden but that have a phobic reaction to anyone feeling so called negative feelings in response to you? Such as sadness or anger.
I somehow wonder how many of your PTSD symptoms with your personality would impact others badly. I really don't think you need to feel like that. I suspect the main one would be thinking that you don't deserve anything and not sharing and letting the other person take responsibility for their own feelings and selves. I can't imagine you raging or anything else like that. I really don't see how number one is relevant actually. And therefore 2 is really not valid then. You always have a right to choose things for yourself of course but it would be sad to do.
And 3 sounds like you have great insight here. Real relationships are give and take.
And it is also sooo impressive to see how you have grown and are talking these days! When for so long you never did.
I hope you start feeling a little more settled. You are brave to discuss it all.
It is such a normal natural human response to wish for peace for someone suffering and for peace for those who suffer watching them. Its Ok to have felt that way.I also felt guilty for 'wishing'
I hope you can start letting go of all this. To have compassion for your 14 year old self. And to keep it in perspective as really there is no way of being sure what happened and your father was a critically ill man. And really often a 14 year olds concerns would often likely have been dismissed at that time.I felt guilty (and responsible) for not speaking up (as I was told this was unwarranted);
I think your feelings about it all are very normal for a young girl with little emotional support, feeling more grown up and responsible in her life than she should have felt and dealing with such a difficult situation. And I think none of that guilt or shame is warranted.
This sounds very perceptive of you. I think one of the main things that ruins our lives after difficult stuff is how it distorts the truth about ourselves and the world. Like looking through mud coloured glasses when we actually have potentially perfect eyesight.whether I feel the same now as an adult.
Ha who says all nuns don't wear makeup! ;)Haha, that part of being a nun would appeal to me-
You may think nunhood sounds appealing but sackcloth, self deprivation and self flagellation are not something that is adaptive in the general world!:notworthy: Instead of it helping in relationships it does the opposite in many ways! I think equal sharing and caring and support and being supported is the very best way for these things to be when possible.
I do believe in your wonderful empathic skills Junebug. And I am similar too. In the past I was practically just empathy and very little else! But for me I have had to accept that when I am perceiving things through the mist of intense emotions sometimes it ends up being projection of my own fears and feelings.
And as skilled empaths as we may be, we actually don't have the ability to mindread. I find sometimes I need to listen to myself regardless but sometimes if I am just using it to torment myself it helps to remember that I don't have that power. Otherwise I can cause myself so much unnecessary pain. So it might actually be OK to give yourself a break and accept that you don't know for sure what happened.
And when it comes to your friend and other supports it would be pretty amazing if you didn't project some of all the self hatred and judgment and lack of worth. When we are struggling that much with these things it tends to seep out.
I would imagine you were much more likely to be seeing possible concern, distress, sadness , puzzlement, confusion rather than disgust from your friend. And its OK and normal for people to feel those things if we tell them about difficult experiences. We don't need to protect others from their feelings at all times. We don't even have a right to do that.
If the flinching was part of what you are concerned about then I think flinching would be a perfectly normal response in the context with him a priest and you a woman. And the only way it would cause offence is if he had a history of sexual abuse and it was a trigger! And even then it would not be your fault as there is nothing fundamentally wrong or bad about doing something like that especially since it was done as a sign of innocent friendship. Flinching is probably more often a sign that someone is a little self conscious or has different personal boundaries.
Do you think it is not so much that you feel a burden but that have a phobic reaction to anyone feeling so called negative feelings in response to you? Such as sadness or anger.
1) can I tolerate recognizing the suffering my ptsd or behaviour (influenced by my history) causes others, and 2) can I give myself permission to isolate myself, or remove myself from relationships? And 3) in doing so, am I in fact reducing or causing others suffering? And from what I understand of what Lucasta said from the start, understanding the realities or my needs is one thing, but 'isolation' proper, or all-or-nothing thinking, is "purely destructive", and ptsd-fueled. All are very difficult questions for me to discriminate, especially #3. They are very rarely clear.
I somehow wonder how many of your PTSD symptoms with your personality would impact others badly. I really don't think you need to feel like that. I suspect the main one would be thinking that you don't deserve anything and not sharing and letting the other person take responsibility for their own feelings and selves. I can't imagine you raging or anything else like that. I really don't see how number one is relevant actually. And therefore 2 is really not valid then. You always have a right to choose things for yourself of course but it would be sad to do.
And 3 sounds like you have great insight here. Real relationships are give and take.
And it is also sooo impressive to see how you have grown and are talking these days! When for so long you never did.