Jeez, I could sit back all day and read your posts guys. You are all so much better at words. I am going to try to articulate my thoughts without being all scattered.
Curious... How long has it taken folk to figure out their AP and EP parts?
I always thought of my 'parts' as a form of regression. I couldn't figure out the uber capable one though. She totally left me when I had my breakdown and I felt like in order to get healthy I had to get her back! Then I read about this model. I realized that although she seemed to be able to cope in this world (very well I might add), that she was not whole. She was bound to crack under the pressure somewhere along the line.
I had been told over and over again that I was regressing but that didn't quite fit for me. She was running (and ruining) my life right here, right now, and I was angry at her because she was trying to kill me and was seriously compromising my life. How the hell do I love her when she is driving me out and trying to die? It was impossible to do. Inner child is not how I see this any longer. I see her, other EP's, and my ANP as a part of a whole. That whole is my core.
A while back in this thread I spoke about
Vilayanur S. Ramachandran's mirror box (Doidge), and now new technology using augmented reality for the same purpose; to rewire the brain in such a way that phantom pain, which is many times felt with amputees, is relieved. Doidge and others use the box for amputees whose brain gets stuck in the phantom ghost pain of the missing limb. The question that begs to be answered is, why does the brain still think the limb exists? How can there be pain when there are no nerves?
Here is how it works. If the right arm is missing, they place the left arm into a mirror box and perform tasks with it. The mirror box tricks the senses into believing that the right arm is now functional as it now sees what it perceives to be a right arm again. Based on sensory input, the brain rewrites itself with new input that the arm still exists. It isn't reality, but the senses don't know that. They are tricking the brain into believing that the limb is no longer stuck in the 'last vestiges' of the traumatic and many times painful event that the limb was lost to.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirror_box
So how does this fit with the whole regression or ANP/EP thing for me? Like this.
One of my parts walks toed-in when she appears. Head down, toe-in. As soon as I see my foot turn in I know she is presenting. Back to my statement of physical first. I don't attach so much to her emotionally (can't see the switch so much) but physically she presents very obviously. So I acknowledge her. What is it that makes her present? Insecurity. Not being wanted. See how trying to force her back in could exacerbate her presenting? Negative self talk will also make her more persistent. So I ask her...if I wanted to straighten my foot, what needs to change? Response (took me a bit to figure this out), 'I need to feel wanted...'.
"So what if I want you but I also want my foot to be a bit straighter? What if I alleviate your sense of not feeling wanted? Can we try that? I get that you don't feel wanted by others but I want you. I get you. And I make a promise to challenge or acknowledge what is in my environment that is (emotionally) having you present."
If I can't fix it, I leave (in an attempt to leave the trigger behind) , all the while focusing on straightening my foot. If I can't straighten my foot I know there is sill a problem. On the opposite side, I know I am better when I can hold my head up straight again. Brilliant really, my head literally drops so that I can see how she presents (if I choose to see it).
So, in the short answer to the quoted question
@greenleaf, it takes as long as it takes to see physical representation, acknowledge and then attach emotionally to rectify the situation. My foot is literally teaching me to see and attach to emotions that I cannot readily identify because I have been brainwashed into ignoring the emotions. (
@Eleanor this is for you I think) I believe, although we all state that we are having a hard time identifying the core self, that it is, in reality, the core that has the EP present. The core knows what is right and what is wrong.
It is up to us to learn the language of the core and retrain ourselves.
Sorry, this is going to be long, mostly because I am figuring this out on the fly.
When I was put into hospital, I feel like there were several EP's at the bottom of that. I have a disconnect with my 'pain' self. It was time, it seemed for it to present. Pancreatitis is apparently one of the most painful things ever. It got my undivided attention for weeks. I learned about my pain EP and how she presents. She moans, she clutches, she doubles over, she can't move, can't function, she sleeps. And
if she is ignored she calls in the 'I must die' part to really get my attention. One triggers the other, which makes it all very convoluted. And, if I go back in time to when I was in California, I knew something was wrong and that my SO did not actually want me there. It started with that. I wouldn't acknowledge it, so pain EP enters, and then 'need to die' enters. Reverse engineering.
When my friend took me home from the hospital, he literally wouldn't let me leave the couch. He blocked the door to the room so that when my 'die EP' took over I couldn't wander outside. He had played that game before and knew he had to make it physically impossible for me to leave until the EP stopped presenting. He knows that part of me needs constant reassurance that I am wanted. Thank god.
Sorry for rant..... but you see, it all started because I didn't acknowledge the 'not feeling wanted' EP. I didn't acknowledge her because she no longer presents using the 'foot' as I had gotten her to trust I would hear her emotionally. I screwed up by not listening and trusting myself when I recognized something was wrong in California. So the big guns came out (pain and die EP's). No idea if this makes sense to anyone but me. If not, so sorry....lots to think about today.