I wonder if the original childhood belief that I was bad and deserved the abuse is what is really being triggered here in the case of illness and emotional reasoning (for me) ?. The childhood logic would follow that if I feel bad (poorly) then I must be at fault. Of course, as a friend pointed out to me today, this is crap and totally untrue.
I wonder if the original childhood belief that I was bad and deserved the abuse is what is really being triggered here in the case of illness and emotional reasoning (for me) ?. The childhood logic would follow that if I feel bad (poorly) then I must be at fault. Of course, as a friend pointed out to me today, this is crap and totally untrue.[/quote]
Correct me if I'm wrong, but when I read this part, I thought on "this is crap and totally untrue." That's true in the mind of an adult, but what about the child who feels those feelings?
In my own personal journey to process my childhood, I realized that . . .you know how when you're a kid and the world seems so big whereas when you're an adult, that same childhood place can seem so small? Well, I started thinking that maybe emotions are the same way for a child. Humongous! And because our feelings were so often ridiculed or because we couldn't express them or we might die, they stayed humongous and keep on being humongous in the present.
So, I started acknowledging the little girl inside of me (and I was so against the whole inner child thing at first lol I thought it was completely hokey and dumb, no offense to anyone) and over time, I learned that for me, it played such an important role in me integrating.
When I had those childhood feelings, instead of intellectualizing (I most often did because I was like "OMG! I'm a grown woman. This is ridiculous!!!), I acknowledged them as little me and had several conversations with her about it. I told her she was safe and whatever else I wanted to.
Again, I felt completely ridiculous, but it ended up being paramount to integrating the "I feel bad therefore I am bad".