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I Am Scared To Not Be The Problem

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Justmehere

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(I'm not sure where to post this, so I will just post it here. I'm sorry if it should be in a different area. Please feel free to move it if needed.) Thanks for letting me post this weird and kind of embarrassing subject matter.

My therapist is trying to encourage me to have more compassion for myself, including the seemingly endlessly angry side of me. She recently told me, “It’s like you have a dislocated arm, a bleeding head wound, and pneumonia…”

It reminded me of a story my family tells about me as a small child. They say that when I was 2, I had a temper tantrum at the grocery store and pulled myself so hard to get away from my mother that I dislocated my shoulders. My mother says, “yeah, you were an intense child.” She said she held on because she didn’t want me to run off and get hurt.

My mother never physically abused me later on in life, and my memories of my own experience of myself as a child fit with this. I was intense. My mother alternated between being intensely abandoning and neglectful, and downright overwhelmingly enmeshed, and I sustained significant abuse by my father and another family member. By all accounts, I was extremely well behaved at school and at friend’s homes, but at home and with family, I acted out a lot. Home was where the chaos and trauma was. But at school and friend’s homes, it felt easy to stay in control of myself. This was so much the case that in high school, my parents let me live at a friend’s house because I behaved better there.

The grocery store incident is one of many stories like this from when I was kid. I have only told my therapist about two of them. I haven’t told her about this one at the grocery store, but based on the others, she said, “it’s like your family has been telling you that you are a problem since the day you were born.”

She is right, my family hammered into me the message: You are a problem.

She wants me to know “in the very core of your being” that I am not the problem. When she said this, I told her, “but I am.” I didn’t want to argue it, so I tried to figure out if it really even mattered enough to argue it. I asked her, “Why? Why does it even matter? It doesn’t make me feel any better or change anything in my life.”

She looked at me, awfully baffled. She said, “Well, I guess it matters because it’s my job to help pull you out of misery.”

When I try to lean into the idea that “I’m not the problem,” I’m not reassured. I don’t feel better. I feel tremendous anxiety and despair. I don’t understand why. It’s nice and helpful to have the validation my family was abusive and terrible. I believe I am not responsible for his happiness, even though family told me I should make him happy so he wouldn't hit me. It helps to understand my father had untreated/managed PTSD and his own pain behind some of his horrible abuse of me.

But when it comes to what my role was, it terrifies me that I was not the problem. Intellectually, I understand it and somewhat accept it, but yet, on a physical level, it freaks me out in a very core, fundamental, and intense way.

This makes me feel really crazy that I am thinking and feeling this way.

I saw a previous trauma therapist before this one, just before I moved here, who noticed how self-hateful I am. He explained that my thinking was very “trauma bonded” thinking. That I have taken on my abusers messages as my own, and I am pretty fearful to let them go. I’m not sure if my reaction to my therapist is another version of that.

When I thought about the idea that I am not the problem, I become so despairing. I have had problems and I have acted out. I have yelled and screamed at people I have cared about. In my mind, that was abusive. Ok, no, it was not the same as hitting someone, but still. I have started having nightmares about this and in them, I go around telling people “I am a perpetrator. I should be dead.” In one nightmare last night, I dreamed I was in therapy and she was again telling me, “you are not a problem.” I responded (in the dream) by screaming at her, “I hate you. Don’t take this from me.” I walked out and I carried out a plan (a really weird plan, being a dream and all) to commit suicide. It was such a strong and vivid dream, I am shaky from it.

Something really core about me feels very shaken up. I'm wondering if I am crazy - and that brings up new despair. I also wonder if my belief that I am the problem is a defense mechanism against pain of the reality that I couldn't stop the abuse.

I just can't shake it. I am a problem. It feels as real as the sky is blue.

Anyone have any thoughts?

Either way, thanks again for letting me post this weird and embarrassing topic. This matter has been overwhelming and getting the better of me. I am hoping that if I can keep trying to sort this through, I can somehow face my therapist and this issue again.
 
Hi @Justmehere - when my mother had my little sister, who was just 18mths younger than me, a health visitor came to the house and in advising my mother about which child needed her attention most, she uttered the fateful words, pointing at me, "this one is your problem." My mother heard it in the wrong way. She accepted it as validation for all her difficult feelings about me. My mother was fostered out and then adopted and she has undiagnosed attachment disorder. She allowed my father to abuse me and there are several stories that I am aware of in which it was demonstrated that she actively hated me. So thanks, Mrs Health Visitor, that gave my mother permission to label me openly like that since then. So like you, I internalised that belief from a very early age. I went into myself and numbed out very early on, and this just added endlessly to the anxiety. I couldn't put my finger on why I was bad, but I knew I must be.

Recently, in working through stuff and finally coming to the realisation that, yes, my father had sexually abused me, my mother had too on one occasion, and they had both continued always to reinforce those beliefs, I hit the emotions behind that belief. If I wasn't actually a problem and bad or deserving of this treatment, then it seemed to make the betrayal a thousand times worse. Why did they feel they could abuse me and not their other children? I think it is a massive identity crisis. I just can't really deep down believe that they were and still are so abusive, bullying and awful and that I accepted that as my normality. I think it is the pain of realising I was so dispensable and that they still get a kick or validation out of it. I am in my fifties and only last year, I got a vile e-mail from them outlining in terms I just did not recognise where they thought I was going wrong in life and always had. They do not value anything I am, and I am actually successful in a variety of fields professionally, as well as a valued friend to quite a few people. No-one else could recognise the 'me' in that e-mail either. But they thought it was (socially) acceptable to write all this to their still (unaccountably) loving daughter. These moments of realisation, like the one you describe, are our wake-up calls to how wrong and perverted our views of ourselves have become and how wrong and perverted was our treatment at the hands of our abusers. I think it means we can't trust ourselves and our judgment, yet again. And that is so bewildering.

Hugs to you. Let's be unproblematic together, little step by little step.
 
how self-hateful I am.
I've experienced the realization of this intensely the last few weeks. It is from a deep part of me, buried in early childhood.
I can relate to how real the "being the problem" feels for you. I feel that I completely believe something along the lines
of "I've done it all to myself." I can't feel at all that anyone else had anything to do with it. Everyone else was fine and I just took it the wrong way.

I feel that challenging this part of me challenges the whole basis of how I perceive myself, others and what happens around me.
I feel that I'm working up to taking this on in treatment now but it still scares the heck out of me. Something I took on so young and have (and still) believed for so long............

Thanks for sharing your struggle.
 
@Junebug - yes, I very much consciously believe that love, marriage, children, money, security are the normal stuff of everyday life, and yet I make myself the exception to the rule. I am outside of that, because I am not entitled to them. It doesn't stop me longing for all that. I feel like my life has been about yearning for things I am not allowed, and if I temporarily achieve them, they must be taken away from me. Weirdly, despite so much being suppressed, that one belief has always been very present. When I first met my therapist, she said I should 'up my entitlement' - quite how escapes me so far...
 
I feel like my life has been about yearning for things I am not allowed, and if I temporarily achieve them, they must be taken away from me. Weirdly, despite so much being suppressed, that one belief has always been very present. When I first met my therapist, she said I should 'up my entitlement' - quite how escapes me so far...

I can very much relate to this. When things are going well in relationships, I tend to suddenly get scared and intensely expect, almost need, them to be taken away or end. I long for them, so deeply, but for me, they thought that they could stay around brings up all kinds of stuff for me, so I ultimately reject it and go back to the belief, it's just not for me.
 
Yes, same here. Except that I am past that point, I don't have that longing, and am old enough to no longer have the possibilities for some of those things. But really, (for me) it would be like longing for shoes when I'm not entitled to legs.

@seedling 's post #4 is exactly 'me'.
 
I think you hit the nail on the head re something at your core feels shaken up.

Trauma shatters - it shatters our life, our inner core, our natural sense and feel of a stable self, it interrupts the continuity of our experience of being.

With parents like ours, we piece our shattered selves back together with wrong info and go forward with a sick and false identity.

Later in life when reality starts breaking in that - hey wait a second...I'm not inherently evil and offensive? I didn't deserve it?I didn't cause it? That would shake me to the core. And it did.

Sometimes change can feel so awful but be a manifestation of something good and right. We sometimes have to put the pieces back together - of all that shattered - and it really hurts. It blows your mind and can feel like the beginning of the end, but it's a new start.

That's what I am thinking today anyhow.
 
@Junebug - well, we might be too old for childbirth, but the rest of it should still be possible, however ancient we are! I now hope I might 'inherit' children or maybe even grandchildren somehow. I do have nephews and nieces, but since I just cut off from the family, I am trying not to think I may have lost them, too. I hope they never find out what happened to me and I can somehow keep a relationship going with them. Anyway, we can't deal with it all at once. And we need time to heal.
 
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