Ecdysis
Diamond Member
I'm starting to realise one thing that I found very upsetting as a child (especially growing up in a traumatic environment) was observing the negative emotional games people play...
As a child, I found this especially distressing to observe in adults... I found children and animals to be much more natural and congruent in their emotional expression...
From a very early age, I could "see" what people were feeling and I remember being startled by the discrepancies of what people feel VS think VS say VS act... (most of all adults)...
So, for example, as a young child, I could see that someone felt hurt, but pretended that it didn't matter to them....
Or, that someone would feel overwhelmed and upset, but would lash out in anger at a bystander, (falsely) blaming them for their frustration...
I could tell that people (adults) were often not even aware of what they felt, or would deny it to themselves and others, that their behaviour was often the opposite of their feelings, that they wouldn't admit their feelings, that they couldn't seem to "read" the emotions of others correctly, that they'd lie and deflect about their feelings, etc.
As a child, I remember thinking how "obvious" people's emotions seemed to me, but that they'd make this huge (painful) complicated mess of their emotions that made it impossible to deal with them in a healthy way.
It made me really mistrust (and dislike) most adults.
Even adults who would put on this act of being "really normal and stable and dependable" like many of my teachers, felt fake to me... I could tell that's not how they really felt, that they were just putting on an act...
Thankfully, there was that tiny percentage of people (adults) that did feel emotionally congruous and actually balanced and emotionally well-regulated, but omg was that a rare thing!
All of this was a very, very deep early impression for me that's shaped the rest of my life ever since.
As a child, I found this especially distressing to observe in adults... I found children and animals to be much more natural and congruent in their emotional expression...
From a very early age, I could "see" what people were feeling and I remember being startled by the discrepancies of what people feel VS think VS say VS act... (most of all adults)...
So, for example, as a young child, I could see that someone felt hurt, but pretended that it didn't matter to them....
Or, that someone would feel overwhelmed and upset, but would lash out in anger at a bystander, (falsely) blaming them for their frustration...
I could tell that people (adults) were often not even aware of what they felt, or would deny it to themselves and others, that their behaviour was often the opposite of their feelings, that they wouldn't admit their feelings, that they couldn't seem to "read" the emotions of others correctly, that they'd lie and deflect about their feelings, etc.
As a child, I remember thinking how "obvious" people's emotions seemed to me, but that they'd make this huge (painful) complicated mess of their emotions that made it impossible to deal with them in a healthy way.
It made me really mistrust (and dislike) most adults.
Even adults who would put on this act of being "really normal and stable and dependable" like many of my teachers, felt fake to me... I could tell that's not how they really felt, that they were just putting on an act...
Thankfully, there was that tiny percentage of people (adults) that did feel emotionally congruous and actually balanced and emotionally well-regulated, but omg was that a rare thing!
All of this was a very, very deep early impression for me that's shaped the rest of my life ever since.