Abstract,
Thank you for posting so well on the splitting issues and black-and-white thinking. I totally agree and sympathize with the need to allow the fantasy mother to die and to mourn that. It's truly a hard process to go through whilst also learning about one's PTSD and dissociation disorder. There are times when retreating back into denial and fantasy is tempting, but once we cross the line to reality and want to heal, there's really no going back.
Anger is the normal reaction to being neglected and abused by those in power over your life. My T. said Friday that I could take the perspective of feeling pity for my mother because I now realize she is a narcissist. She said "it must be a shallow life without real intimacy and love in it" for her. I admitted I had thought that, and that I had at times felt some pity for her. Maybe it is "progress" to be able to feel ANYTHING other than just rage at the abusers after the denial is lifted. Maybe feeling a sense of pity is progress it that it's a sign that the rage storm has passed over.
I see a pattern, as you said, Abstract, one has to grieve, the fantasy is dead. We are left with reality. We go through the stages of grief. Denial, anger (deflecting vulnerability to the crashing emotions, experiencing the resulting rage as a deflection of the wounding, feeling guilt for not accepting the hurt and feeling the anger, and compounding the anger by this guilt.) Some notes on anger: let it come. Accept it and admit it is okay, normal to feel it. It will subside once you stop fighting it inside. Don't act on it. Bargaining (trying to control, control, control.) Depression (realizing you can't control the emotion of loss). Acceptance (calm withdrawal from social interaction; resignation; you stop fighting it and makes changes to adjust to life to accept the loss yet try to move forward so it doesn't control your daily life so fully).
In letting go of my fantasy that sustained my denial so long, I have struggled to accept and release the anger/rage. Now, when I feel it, I greet is like an old friend and say that it is a healthy, normal reaction. I say to myself "Good, you feel the anger, you are normal." And I actually congratulate myself on feeling it. Then, I have vacillated between workaholism all week long (Bargaining/control) to crashing into depression on the weekends (with dissociation thrown in). I am just now coming out of the tension between Bargaining/Depression. Finally, I am beginning to reach Acceptance. I resign to live with the wound and loss. The pain of the loss is not going anywhere, so I may as well accept it as the condition of my life and adjust my life to contain this loss and yet try to move forward and be the best person I can and try to find some tiny pieces of happiness in life. Also in this stage is allowing feelings, expressing them, honesty with self and others, vulnerability is allowed more, and I try to stop living vicariously. I stop trying to make others happy and to feed off of that only. I have to accept my own delights in life and to hold them close. I hug and kiss my H. I tell him how lucky I am to have the one I love loving me! Also, I accept my irritations with his imperfections but compare them to the overall blessing that he is in my life.
'
I used to freak out whenever I felt triggered by his "bad" with the splitting, along the lines of: "OMG! He has "bad" in him!? I need to freak out right now because bad people hurt me! I need perfection/fantasy of perfection to keep from facing my trauma!!!! I should cut myself, bang things against my head, cry, and be tormented!"
Healing the good/bad split is, I think, not going to happen if the grieving process is stalled. Nobody can help you grieve faster, but staying open to healthy, loving, supportive relationships with boundaries will ease the process. A therapist and a friend are good bookends for containing the grief as you go through it.
Using business, alcohol, drugs, sex, eating disorders, dissociation, (distraction) etc, may be a crutch and delay the process, dragging it out. But some supports may be needed, such as prescription drugs, sleep, food, exercise, talking, aroma, self-care, learning, crying, journal writing, nature, animals, reading, travel, redecorating your space, going outside more, a new pet, experiencing beauty, love, serving a cause, helping others, and creative expression are healing.