- Post starter
- #13
Yes, I agree. Coffee is still coffee, whether it be French Vanilla or ColumbianIt is worth at least an honorable mention of the syndrome
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Yes, I agree. Coffee is still coffee, whether it be French Vanilla or ColumbianIt is worth at least an honorable mention of the syndrome
Yes, especially when you add sexual things in the mix you've got an odd bond. And yeah, Haha i know that look (having received it from my own family at times), it makes you question your own feelings sometimes. :confused:I think I have an understanding of my kidnapper that no-one else can possibly have - and if very emotional and very provoked, I will still defend aspects of his behavior, which makes my therapist look at me like I'm from Mars.
Having been a captive as well, i would like to add a third one that is (shamefully) the one that i eventually had no choice but to do- option three: Do as they say so you survive. There comes a point when you can't fight in anyway anymore.you have two choices. To fight and more than likely get yourself killed or in more danger a lot earlier. The other is to work the aggressors weaknesses and play than harder than they are playing you
Most people have fears of intimacy and are self-protective and at the same time are terrified of being alone. Their solution to their emotional dilemma is to form a fantasy bond. This illusion of connection and closeness allows them to maintain an imagination of love and loving while preserving emotional distance. Destructive fantasy bonds, which exist in a large majority of relationships, greatly reduce the possibility couples achieving intimacy.
The nature of a fantasy bond is the central concept of my theory as explained in my book The Fantasy Bond. It explains people’s compulsion to relive the past with new relationships i.e., to form illusory connections that invariably lead to a reenactment of defensive styles of interacting developed in childhood. This process of reverting to outmoded defense patterns interferes with the establishment of secure and satisfying adult relationships characterized by feelings of humanity, compassion, and equality. Once a fantasy bond is formed, individuals prefer to maintain a defensive posture rather than trusting and investing genuine feelings in others. Once having been hurt, they are reluctant to take a chance again and this defensive pattern has an insidious effect on couple and family relations.
-- Robert Firestone - full article: http://www.psychalive.org/the-fantasy-bond-substitute-for-a-loving-relationship/
I believe this can be one of the biggest barriers to therapy. Minimizing things, twisting events and intentions, needing to build a truth around the thoughts that if we could just do XYZ better, differently, etc, we will survive. We get twisted because they are twisted. And then we take on their twistedness while they carry on normally.I suppose I'm selfishly attracted to this SS theory because it helps me better understand why it took me 51 years to begin to accept the reality of what happened to me.
And why I was caregiver to my birth mother. I think this can be a clash with our morals and values. Which turns into a potential conflict of 'why am I not being authentic to how I feel. Wait a minute....how do I really feel?' I think our therapists buy their summer homes and take the family on exotic vacations on the backs of SS. It takes a lot of time to deconstruct and reconstruct our truth. Not to mention extricating ourselves from the dynamic.And why I have chosen to continue to have a relationship with my mother as her caregiver (and my father while he was alive).
Yes. I'm working on untwisting the twistedness I took on. It is very, very hard. I completely get it intellectually. If I could think my way out of it, I'd be just fine thank you. It's feeling it/knowing it/accepting it/grieving it etc. that is presenting seemingly impenetrable barriers on the path to healing. But every now and again I manage to see through one or stumble over one, and that keeps me going.We get twisted because they are twisted. And then we take on their twistedness while they carry on normally.
Ah, yes. You too, huh? I'm sorry if you told me this and I forgot. I forget a lot these days it seems.And why I was caregiver to my birth mother.
:roflmao::roflmao::roflmao::roflmao: Now THAT's the question of a lifetime. I have no idea how I really feel. There are more than one "I" it feels like most of the time, and they're always in conflict with one another. What's authentic and good and right to one, is upsetting and betraying to another, is worthy of shutdown to another, is a lie to another, is a compromise to another..how do I really feel?'
Yes. I like what you call it/how you call it "our truth." That phrase really resonates with me. "OUR truth" "MY truth." Not necessarily "THE truth." I'll chew on this for a while. I think you've just shifted another paradigm for me. Thank you. Not sure my T is taking vacations on me yet (but the pricey Mr. Famous Psychiatrist certainly is). "It took a long time for your parts to start being heard and they have a lot to say...It will take time..." I think I've heard a version of this a thousand times over. I guess I need to keep hearing it. Or get that impatient, impulsive part to settle down a bit! :wtf:.It takes a lot of time to deconstruct and reconstruct our truth. Not to mention extricating ourselves from the dynamic.
Of the four Fs:
- Fight
- Flight
- Freeze
- Fawn
Stockholm Syndrome is probably a big manifestation of the fawn / suck up / brown nose response. The PTSD part of it is when it becomes embedded and continues inappropriatly with repect to what is actually going on - That really does widen the scope for who has PTSD though; wow!
____________________________________.
This could relate to both domestic violence and sexual assault. I was looking it up for reasons that I...
????I'm kind of surprised OP that you've been on the Stockholm Syndrome thing for years without fully understanding what it entails.