Because of the title of your post, I just read this article and thought about you:
How to end your emotional dependency
Because you do not have compassion toward yourself, I hope other ways you manage that lack of compassion may be found in this article at least this is my understanding of your title.
Hope you find some that are helpful.
Some of the characteristics described here fit, like low self-esteem and feeling like I have be useful to be loved. (Although those traits could be explained through autism as well...) But other characteristics don't resonate at all, like "having an obsessive need to be close to other people" or "depending on others for our happiness." I'm happiest when I'm alone. I love my alone time, and having time away from other people...I like having my husband and kids in the house and nearby, but I prefer to be alone in my own part of that space. So then, the suggested techniques for addressing emotional dependency don't resonate at all. "Practice being there for yourself." I've always done that. It's the reverse I never learned how to do...I never learned how to rely on anyone else for much of anything, especially when it comes to emotions. "Stop giving away your responsibilities to self." I'm on the other end of that spectrum, over-responsible for myself and everyone around me, too. I've read so much stuff on this topic since I was a teen...for 3 decades now. But it's like I'm in upside-down world. The stuff that's supposed to help most people, is counter-productive for me. Many times, it's only when I've started doing the opposite that I've made progress on an issue. Over and over, I'm having to find my own way because what works for so many people is damaging to me, and vice versa.
It is much more authentic to say I do not know how to be this way or that way, I am sorry rather than perform or pretend assuming others are too stupid to know the difference
Yes, that's more authentic, but not productive, in my experience. There are some of my limitations I've allowed to surface in relationships, but many I have not. When I tried to be more authentically autistic (and I did try for a couple of years), people got hurt, offended, confused, weirded out, and so on. I'm not going to do that to people anymore.
There are literally times I do not feel connected to my husband and do not feel having sex and rather than protecting him from what
I assume there are also times in the reverse, where you do feel connected to him? It balances out for you?
I wouldn't say I feel completely disconnected from my husband, as we've been through a lot and stuck by each other. We've been together nearly 25 years, nearly our whole adult lives. So there's loyalty, dedication, some layers of trust, we care for each other's well-being and we look out for each other. But I don't feel like I can be myself around him, either. I don't feel like I can take my emotional struggles to him for support that would connect with my internal experience. I don't feel those things with anyone. It's not for lack of effort, it just doesn't work for me. I can't get my emotions to surface in a way that makes sense to anyone else, and even if I did manage to adequately describe, their responses never connect back to my internal experience. Never. There is no balancing out on this. There are other good things, yes, but
this is never part of my relationship with other people.
Touch has always been tough for me, since growing up the only time people touched me was to cause me pain, force me to do something, or satisfy their own needs. However, once I realized what safe touch felt like, I could relax, enjoy it, and let my own emotions flow.
Yeah, that's been my experience of touch. It's nearly always been about someone else's gratification. I have learned about safe touch, ironically, in my martial arts self-defense classes. It's never sexual in there, and the touch and movement is empowering. So even though it's not about relaxing or enjoying it, it has opened my mind to possibilities of safe touch in a way that gives me control instead of taking control away. It still doesn't help my emotions to flow, though.
He tells me I need to use different signposts for recognizing connection, and we're working on finding those signposts, but it's really difficult
So do you think you do have connection, but just haven't learned to recognize the internal signs of it yet?
By recognising we're equals, just helping each other out.
My husband and I have learned not to make demands of each other, and for most of our relationship, we actually took more of the approach of "just helping each other out." But that doesn't really happen at an emotional level. It's pragmatic...tasks, chores, responsibilities, choices....the "to-do list." Outward behavior. To recognize an emotional-based need of mine, to acknowledge it as relevant to him in some way, to determine what he might do to help address it, and to communicate this need to him...that just doesn't happen.
I might guess that those deepest needs, are way too painful to acknowledge when they will not be fulfilled. And meeting one's own emotional needs, can equate to not having any, to avoid the pain or disappointment when they're not met.
Yes...knowing there's nothing anyone else can do to help with that emotional storm, what's the point in bringing it up in relationship at all?
And frankly, I would agree that social performance (especially how it appears to others) doesn't necessarily signify connection. And tbh, many people care- but not really. So it's not necessarily misreading other's genuine attempts; they care, but not enough to make effort to care enough for actions to follow.
Yes...it seems like people say things like, "You matter" "You deserve to be loved", but then when I try to reach out for that kind of acknowledgement or love, I don't
experience their response internally. So even if they have actually offered a healthy response, it doesn't register internally for me, so it's as if they didn't respond at all.
The needs you are talking about, are far too painful to have empathy for yourself for, I would guess, because that would mean feeling them, and knowing there is still no relief expected to be found. So it can feel like a lose-lose to go there.
I'm willing to feel them if there's a way to feel supported in it and actually resolve them, but that's not what happens. I've tried sooo many times in my 5 years in therapy, and I always come up empty and alone and hurting deeply but having to handle it all myself because nothing anyone else does brings relief. It's not for lack of effort on their part, but what they offer just doesn't click inside for me. So now I'm working on keeping all that crap inside and not even bothering to bring it into relationship...but that's what my T was challenging, and yet, the problem still remains that we've not found anything he can do to help me feel supported in processing it. So bringing it up is torturous for me with no benefit on the other side.
To forgive yourself for feeling devastated, or hollow, or angry +/or everything else you felt (including numb). That would be self-compassion.
I don't think I was angry at myself for feeling those things. I felt like that suffering and grieving honored the child I lost. His/her loss was significant. And I also managed to reach a place of some kind of resolution to where it's not such a gaping wound anymore. But I don't
feel anything in that process that I would identify as "self-compassion." Maybe the
act of acceptance? But is acceptance the same thing as self-compassion? Is self-compassion more action-based or feeling-based? Can you
feel someone else's compassion for you--is that a "feeling" experience?