Well, I'm looking for some kind of direction on how to reconcile.
I'll be honest - I've never heard of someone doing it without a lot of self deception. Most stories sound like yours. I've gotten a lot of empathy from the "survivor community" on this point. My mother has apologized - but not in a real way. She would tell you that no matter how many times she apologizes it will never be good enough for me. The problem is that her apology is along the lines of "I'm sorry about what happened to you there" and "I'm sorry I made such a big mistake" and not something more like "I'm sorry that I hurt you". The decision to send a kid away is a selfish one. I could destroy her if I cross examined her in court.
"What problem was it, exactly, that I had?"
"Who diagnosed me with this problem? Did other people in my life see it the way you did?"
"How did you think the program would solve this problem, and what evidence did you have to support this view?"
"Who encouraged you, or agreed with your decision to put me in the program and had also spent at least 5 minutes in the same room as me in the previous 2 years?"
Now that I'm back with her I'm faced with the constant memory of this experience and the typical (now resurgent) symptoms of PTSD - which make any kind of relationship difficult, coupled with the fact that she both refuses to acknowledge that I was traumatized by the experience (diagnosed), or that she had any real responsibility for it.
As she told me (over the phone, in the same house) tonight, I'm "mentally ill", was "always this way".
I'll be honest - I've never heard of someone doing it without a lot of self deception. Most stories sound like yours. I've gotten a lot of empathy from the "survivor community" on this point. My mother has apologized - but not in a real way. She would tell you that no matter how many times she apologizes it will never be good enough for me. The problem is that her apology is along the lines of "I'm sorry about what happened to you there" and "I'm sorry I made such a big mistake" and not something more like "I'm sorry that I hurt you". The decision to send a kid away is a selfish one. I could destroy her if I cross examined her in court.
"What problem was it, exactly, that I had?"
"Who diagnosed me with this problem? Did other people in my life see it the way you did?"
"How did you think the program would solve this problem, and what evidence did you have to support this view?"
"Who encouraged you, or agreed with your decision to put me in the program and had also spent at least 5 minutes in the same room as me in the previous 2 years?"
Now that I'm back with her I'm faced with the constant memory of this experience and the typical (now resurgent) symptoms of PTSD - which make any kind of relationship difficult, coupled with the fact that she both refuses to acknowledge that I was traumatized by the experience (diagnosed), or that she had any real responsibility for it.
As she told me (over the phone, in the same house) tonight, I'm "mentally ill", was "always this way".
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