In terms of severity I think a lot of this ranked up pretty high for me. There are just certain things that Humans need in order to be happy and healthy. Your parents are the first source that you look toward to find them. When I was learning parenting methods in my 20s I was surprised to learn that attention is a
basic Human need. Everybody needs attention. When a kid cries and you ignore them, that damages them. It disrupts the cycle of trust between a caregiver and their child, and is actually the basis of a lot of psychological concern. It's just as important as sleep, eating, drinking, and shelter. People
need attention in order to
survive. How could we not?
As babies we are entirely dependent on another source for every need we have. When we cry toward them or ask them for a need to be met, when that is ignored, we learn that our needs don't matter, our survival isn't important, our emotions aren't important, our happiness isn't important. It comes out really stupidly, though, because when you grow up you know your parents probably fed you, probably dressed you, probably took you to the hospital, and you think,
Oh gee I am just being whiny, they met my basic needs. Except that they didn't. Neglect is seriously powerful, and seriously harmful. It isn't some kind of delusion that you're f*cked up about it.
All of what you mention above there were prevalent in my childhood and I think it formed the basis of a lot of my issues. I didn't have someone to turn to for comfort, I didn't get a hug when I wanted it, I had to act out in ways that damaged myself in order to get any kind of touch at all. This, all of what you wrote, was a
major component of that. Not being fed, not being warm, not having medical care, I mean they're major components of how you literally survive as you grow older. If these aren't things you get when you want them, when you need them, or when they might be important, it is f*cked up. You got some medical care. When it was obvious it was a desperate need. You got fed. Practically on a schedule and without any meals that you actually enjoyed. You know? That f*cks you up.
Babies who are fed and who have their basic needs met but who don't form proper emotional connections with their caregivers, don't get picked up, don't get touched - they literally waste away from that lack. They are literally lacking touch and connection. Touch is essential for our brains to connect to our surroundings. Why do you think babies have the grasping reflex? They need to explore with touch. When parents deny that to their kids, scold their kids for wanting attention or being needy or being whiny, can you start to see where this would f*ck a child up? I took the liberty of Googling some of this to make sure I had it on point, and sure enough, there it is:
Dead Link Removed
[DLMURL]http://www.unu.edu/unupress/food2/UID06E/uid06e0r.htm[/DLMURL]
[DLMURL]http://fsos.che.umn.edu/mtarp/Icarpapers/gunnar.htm[/DLMURL]
[DLMURL]http://www.med.harvard.edu/publications/On_The_Brain/Volume7/Number1/commentary.html[/DLMURL]
http://www.loc.gov/loc/brain/emotion/Carlson.html
[DLMURL]http://www.micronutrient.org/idpas/pdf/1304ChildhoodNeglect.pdf[/DLMURL]
http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=271836
Sorry if all this comes off a little impersonal. Those links I think are fairly accurate representations of what can happen when people are not given attention, when they're neglected. I think not only is it difficult to quantify this type of trauma, but I think it is difficult to talk about as well when it has happened. It is difficult to understand how something like Not Getting Hugged translates into complete psychological meltdown. But I have read your diary and I remember your talking about an instance of being eighteen and wanting some form of connection with your mother, and just kept thinking, well, isn't that normal? Wouldn't that be normal if you grew up your whole life without it? I still go through those intense periods and I basically shut myself away in my closet until they go away.
It has nothing to do with being an adult, or being emotionally developed, or anything else. It's just an attempt to get some of your needs met. Because, in children, attention turns into attachment. And, attachment is the basis for trust, love, communication and care with regards to your parents or whoever looks after you. So when that attachment is distorted, the need for attention becomes extreme. And in very severe cases you can get cases of kids who are so blatantly demonstrative for affection they will walk up to random strangers and start hugging and kissing them. Their attachment, their need for attention, is severe.
Anyway I don't know if this will help, at this point I'm just rambling. I hope you find the answers you need.