ILoveLife
VIP Member
I've been coming to terms with a few things from my past.
My parents were abusive, both of them, when I was growing up, in different ways. My father was Neglect, inc. with sexual abuse and my mother some neglect, physical abuse and emotional abuse. Then I started defending myself, got stuck on a retraumatization spiral for more than a decade, substance abuse issues and all The Wonderfully Cheerful Land of Crit A Trauma Relationships.
Then, I was sucked in a very serious psychotic episode and in the hospital I was told I had to go back living with my mother otherwise I'd be institutionalized. First it went alright, as long as I took all the blame for all that happened. Then I went back to therapy and started realizing I'm really not to blame. This has become an issue, because I'm not submissive anymore and I'm actually the one who manages our conjoint business and "brings home the large chunk of bacon", which also makes me dependent on my mother financially, but also makes me her boss at the same time, which is a really enmeshed and confusing situation.
Truth be told, she does feel guilt right now about a lot of things. Particularly concerning her attitude towards what happened to my father and not being available for me when all the 3 different sexually abusive relationships happened in different periods of my life.
But she's not exactly the best person there is, although she does have good qualities. Different Ts in my life have said she shows BPD signs, although I don't trust over-the-distance dxs, but I've been reading more about it and it does make sense. I mean, even if she isn't diagnosed, there are similarities and the approach to the relationship works when I take that into account, at least better than when I don't.
She's done therapy, which helped somewhat, and she takes meds "for depression", which diminished The Problems by a whole lot. There was actually a period there where she would stop the meds it all went to crap, but after a few very intense conversations that stopped and she has realized she is in fact better on them.
So, things are sort of okay most of the time, she's not exactly the most easy person to live with but she's not the most difficult either and when I'm calm and things are going well for me too, I'm able to deal with the dysregulation and even calm her down.
There are a couple of issues I'm facing at the moment.
One is I'm not really allowed to express emotions. Like if things aren't well for me or I'm not that positive, which are natural states of being, I'm immediately put down and told I have to be strong, I have to be positive, I have to... whatever. This is frustrating and causes a bit of confusion in my head, I feel I have to oblige to those demands otherwise I fail as a person.
Another issue is concerning my future. I think she's afraid of me leaving and abandoning her, so she's sort of attaching herself. I'm putting boundaries, and making it clear I won't be living with her forever, that in a couple of years once I finish my degree and get a regular job I'll be out.
When she starts attaching herself, I start wanting to GET OUT right now, and throw my degree in the bin and move to a far away land and all that. Not helpful, because then I freeze and I can't function because I'm constantly second guessing my presence in this degree. Things like, am I doing this to please her or for myself? So I get stuck.
But the heaviest issue is having to deal with the constant reminder of my childhood. I've not been heavily triggered into flashbacks or anything, had a dysregulation moment yesterday but aside from that I'm just sad and feeling hopeless, but I don't feel depression like it was before (completely imobilizing and thinking of suicide), I'm actually making plans for the future and holding myself accountable for my decisions and fighting for my future, I'm active and doing things around the house and taking walks, etc. I'm, by any standard, okay. It's just heavy and I start to daydream a lot - which I guess it is better than doing drugs, but escape is escape and I'd rather deal.
So, T's approach is for me to be the perfect daughter.
She's trying to make me see that all the good things I have come from my mother, that I should be thankful for her helping me when I was psychotic and that I should forgive my mother. I'm really not sure I agree with all of this, I don't see the therapeutic value in this approach and I much rather be realistic about it all.
First, there were a lot of influences around me growing up and my mother was not very present in my life. I was mostly raised by nannies, so the good stuff probably comes from them.
Second, I am thankful for her realizing I am her daughter and needed help, but in all honesty, she has way too much responsibility in getting me there in the first place for me not to be resentful of it either. Conflicting, to say the least.
Third, forgiveness is ... well, honestly, a tough subject for me. I've been wrecking my brain for months trying to understand why I should forgive. Everyone says peace of mind, but honestly I'm not sure forgiving would bring me peace of mind. Maybe it would, maybe I need distance to be able to forgive, or maybe I'm not a forgiving person and prefer resentment. I haven't really forgiven any abuser and I have no intention to, but to most I hold no resenment either, just indifference. Indifference has brought me peace of mind over certain abuses, and I'm working towards the same on the more unresolved ones.
Well, tomorrow I have T and want to explain and dot the i's, because @Freida has brought to my attention that maybe I've been minimizing the issue in therapy, and that's why T has this approach. So I wrote a piece of paper with past and current struggles and I'm bringing it tomorrow.
I would love to hear input.
Just so you know, I'm not being abused here. She's difficult and sometimes tries but I don't allow it anymore in my life, especially from her.
Thank you for reading if you got this far!
My parents were abusive, both of them, when I was growing up, in different ways. My father was Neglect, inc. with sexual abuse and my mother some neglect, physical abuse and emotional abuse. Then I started defending myself, got stuck on a retraumatization spiral for more than a decade, substance abuse issues and all The Wonderfully Cheerful Land of Crit A Trauma Relationships.
Then, I was sucked in a very serious psychotic episode and in the hospital I was told I had to go back living with my mother otherwise I'd be institutionalized. First it went alright, as long as I took all the blame for all that happened. Then I went back to therapy and started realizing I'm really not to blame. This has become an issue, because I'm not submissive anymore and I'm actually the one who manages our conjoint business and "brings home the large chunk of bacon", which also makes me dependent on my mother financially, but also makes me her boss at the same time, which is a really enmeshed and confusing situation.
Truth be told, she does feel guilt right now about a lot of things. Particularly concerning her attitude towards what happened to my father and not being available for me when all the 3 different sexually abusive relationships happened in different periods of my life.
But she's not exactly the best person there is, although she does have good qualities. Different Ts in my life have said she shows BPD signs, although I don't trust over-the-distance dxs, but I've been reading more about it and it does make sense. I mean, even if she isn't diagnosed, there are similarities and the approach to the relationship works when I take that into account, at least better than when I don't.
She's done therapy, which helped somewhat, and she takes meds "for depression", which diminished The Problems by a whole lot. There was actually a period there where she would stop the meds it all went to crap, but after a few very intense conversations that stopped and she has realized she is in fact better on them.
So, things are sort of okay most of the time, she's not exactly the most easy person to live with but she's not the most difficult either and when I'm calm and things are going well for me too, I'm able to deal with the dysregulation and even calm her down.
There are a couple of issues I'm facing at the moment.
One is I'm not really allowed to express emotions. Like if things aren't well for me or I'm not that positive, which are natural states of being, I'm immediately put down and told I have to be strong, I have to be positive, I have to... whatever. This is frustrating and causes a bit of confusion in my head, I feel I have to oblige to those demands otherwise I fail as a person.
Another issue is concerning my future. I think she's afraid of me leaving and abandoning her, so she's sort of attaching herself. I'm putting boundaries, and making it clear I won't be living with her forever, that in a couple of years once I finish my degree and get a regular job I'll be out.
When she starts attaching herself, I start wanting to GET OUT right now, and throw my degree in the bin and move to a far away land and all that. Not helpful, because then I freeze and I can't function because I'm constantly second guessing my presence in this degree. Things like, am I doing this to please her or for myself? So I get stuck.
But the heaviest issue is having to deal with the constant reminder of my childhood. I've not been heavily triggered into flashbacks or anything, had a dysregulation moment yesterday but aside from that I'm just sad and feeling hopeless, but I don't feel depression like it was before (completely imobilizing and thinking of suicide), I'm actually making plans for the future and holding myself accountable for my decisions and fighting for my future, I'm active and doing things around the house and taking walks, etc. I'm, by any standard, okay. It's just heavy and I start to daydream a lot - which I guess it is better than doing drugs, but escape is escape and I'd rather deal.
So, T's approach is for me to be the perfect daughter.
She's trying to make me see that all the good things I have come from my mother, that I should be thankful for her helping me when I was psychotic and that I should forgive my mother. I'm really not sure I agree with all of this, I don't see the therapeutic value in this approach and I much rather be realistic about it all.
First, there were a lot of influences around me growing up and my mother was not very present in my life. I was mostly raised by nannies, so the good stuff probably comes from them.
Second, I am thankful for her realizing I am her daughter and needed help, but in all honesty, she has way too much responsibility in getting me there in the first place for me not to be resentful of it either. Conflicting, to say the least.
Third, forgiveness is ... well, honestly, a tough subject for me. I've been wrecking my brain for months trying to understand why I should forgive. Everyone says peace of mind, but honestly I'm not sure forgiving would bring me peace of mind. Maybe it would, maybe I need distance to be able to forgive, or maybe I'm not a forgiving person and prefer resentment. I haven't really forgiven any abuser and I have no intention to, but to most I hold no resenment either, just indifference. Indifference has brought me peace of mind over certain abuses, and I'm working towards the same on the more unresolved ones.
Well, tomorrow I have T and want to explain and dot the i's, because @Freida has brought to my attention that maybe I've been minimizing the issue in therapy, and that's why T has this approach. So I wrote a piece of paper with past and current struggles and I'm bringing it tomorrow.
I would love to hear input.
Just so you know, I'm not being abused here. She's difficult and sometimes tries but I don't allow it anymore in my life, especially from her.
Thank you for reading if you got this far!