Hashi
Having read the thread, I'm still of the same opinion:
There is no common language and definition when referring to 'inner children', despite Pietro's best attempts at explaining the difference.
I think what I'm responding to is not how people experience it, or what works for them in therapy or how they relate to their inner thingies, it is the approach, evident in various places on this thread that 'if I can't relate to it, it doesn't exist.' I can examine myself for a diagnosis of schizophrenia, and then when I don't fit the bill, conclude that there is no such thing as schizophrenia. For the individual to see him/herself as a universal norm is a human foible.
We all have inner children and other inner thingies. I'm very fond of my inner poodle. My inner Zulu warrior is another matter. But this differs radically from structural dissociation. The reference I posted earlier in this thread explains it clearly. I goes something like this:
In PTSD, there is a split in the personality to form the main, existing personality, (Apparently Normal Personality or ANP) and a 'part' (Emotional Personality or EP) to hold the traumatic memory separate. The main personality continues and deals with daily life. This split is usually very effective until the person starts experiencing flashbacks or other PTSD symptoms, which means the dam wall is breaking, at which point they usually enter therapy and deal with it successfully by integrating the trauma memories into a coherent, manageable narrative; a reunion of sorts. Or, they go ballistic and start self-medicating in attempts to stop the interference of the EP, or attempt suicide OR - any number of things, really. And this is exactly what you were referring to when you said:
I experienced a trauma when I was 20, and I separated into two identities at that point, one which had no memory of the trauma and was very driven to achieve things, and one which occasionally emerged and reacted to people and events in a very damaged way, as having been through that trauma. No-one talks about my inner 20 year old or suggests I nurture her by doing things that 20 year olds enjoy. Instead, I'm encouraged to see myself at 20 as part of my past and the effects of that trauma as part of my present - which I think is a healthy and helpful approach.
I don't understand why childhood trauma isn't treated the same way.
And that is where things went south: Childhood trauma is not treated the same way for the simple reason that the EP splits into 2 or more parts. This is secondary dissociation. And this is the MAIN difference between PTSD and complex trauma.
In severe cases, the ANP splits further, to form DID. This is secondary dissociation. But, everybody on this thread agreed that DID is not under discussion, so we'll leave DID out of this.
But without this clear distinction, the discussion on this thread became a mixing and matching of inner thingies and EPs. And as a result, there was also a confusion between accepted theory (please note that I don't call it 'fact') and opinion.
The reason I entered this discussion was seeing Therapybankrupt first defending her position, (and her reality), then questioning both her reality and her therapist
Ok all the inner child work I have done is manipulation?
then citing her therapist's credentials, before finally capitulating
, which I quite frankly consider damaging. And all of this due to lack of distinction between inner children and EPs.
No, Hashi, I'm not telling what to think or how to think about it. But I am asking you not to negate the existence of things because it does not fit in with your experience:
The more I read this thread, the more I think it's purely a concept, a model, rather than a phenomenon. It's only a way of looking at things. Other people may not agree, of course, but that's what I'm increasingly feeling.
The point is simply that on this thread people articulate their experiences, and those experiences are subjective, as experiences go.
Current theory holds that it is a phenomenon, and not purely a model, whether you buy it or not. And some people live with that phenomenon.
The previous paragraph perhaps comes across as harsh, while I don't intend that, I am just aiming at making a point. And I'm trying to contribute to an understanding of what 'inner children' might or might not be.