For me magical thinking is
any suggestions on how to refine this one would be greatly appreciated
I think it is good to define these things for ourselves. I'm so glad that we [sufferers due to trauma] can take a theory from psychology or wherever and use it to better understand what has happened to the way we think/feel/act. Thank you Ms Spock for explaining what it means to you :tup:.
Engaging in this as a child saved my life. Engaging in this as an adult means I have not had a life
When I was first reading the Official Sounding [:laugh:] definition, I was unsure how it related to my thinking as an adult, in the here and now. However, I don't think I was interpreting the information you had posted properly.
**I can see the ways I did this as a child before, during and after the abuse incidents. It is very saddening, but has added another level of understanding for me, as well as a sense of forgiving little me. I don't expect that other children could have prevented their abuse, so why would I have thought I could have prevented my own? Why hate who I am now, and who I was as a child, when I was developing, and it was not my job to ensure my own safety, especially at such a young age? [Cognitive distortions?]
Sometimes it is easy to take on the blame, shame and guilt of being abused, when it is in fact the abuser that should own those feelings. Also the thoughts, because it is unfair to have matured into adulthood having been cognitively stunted due to the actions of others.
Now I have read the Piaget and others definition again, I can see how sometimes I will go back to being stuck in a certain developmental stage, due to when the abuse was occurring. I understand all too well that engaging in magical thinking as an adult simply wastes so much time. It is not living presently, but finding a way to numb feelings through fantasies of what life could be.
Children who evidence magical thinking often feel that they are responsible for an event or events occurring, or are capable of reversing an event simply by thinking about it and wishing for a change.
[28] Make-believe and fantasy are an integral part of life at this age and are often used to explain the unexplainable.
[29][30]
^ This. This. This.
:hug: thank you for the honest thread
@Ms Spock and adding magical thinking to the list, it has been an eye opener for me.
@stenni I think it is like trying to peel back lots of layers of an onion, and you will eventually get to the core of the problem. With possible tears along the way.
So how do you get out of Emotional Reasoning?
I'm no expert of course, but trying to ground the issue with some logic perhaps? My T often said in therapy I was intellectualising a lot, and said she was relieved one day when I connected with my emotions :eek: I told her of course I feel things, I'm just good at hiding or blocking the feelings out. But I'm not a robot.
So is there a way you can think about this emotional reasoning in another way? Like I maybe managed to do when talking about the abuse [see above**]? This might not make much sense stenni, but I wish you well in your healing. It can be so painful and confusing on the journey.
I have not yet read Ms Spock replying to you stenni, so I hope I am not repeating her.
[Just a thought: Maybe removing confusion and working on cognitive distortions is a way to make life less painful or easier to cope with, either when having to face the past or for living in the present moment]