Eleanor
Diamond Member
It does, and I know how hard that is, as a Mom to let them do it themselves. I am ok on little stuff, and I am learning to bite my tongue on big things. I try hard not to tell them what to do, but to offer different options and perspectives. For my H... It is trickier. It started out being a mutual effort to deal with his dissociation/PTSD episodes. And he did some EMDR and he doesn't "go all the way out" when he has episodes now - he says he doesn't have them anymore... or he says that when he is in. When he is out he will acknowledge that he "tips into crazy." But he is not dissociating the way he was (out of time, fuzzy on current details etc.) He is in the now - just stuck in a really really ugly interpretive place (the persecutor/vicitm positions for the most part.) So our dance puts me in the rescuer/victim spot - and I really appreciated the part of the forrest article where she said "the persecutor position is the most common exit point" in the sense that you have to be willing to be SEEN as the persecutor when you stop "running the bases" of the triangle.
What I need to do for me is just not engage with him when he is bad and I am not up to "not playing the game." I have to be brave and assured enough of myself and my ability to take care of myself (and potentially piss him off enough to leave me) that I can disengage and walk away and leave him to his own devices. He is a grown up after all. I have to be able to let him say/think whatever horrible thing he imagines without defending myself. Ironically, the more wrong and out there he is, the easier this is. The saner he stays the harder it is. At the same time, I took notes from the last time and reviewed a lot of the stuff he accused me of with my T - who has a pretty good bullshit detector and is totally willing to call me out on stuff - and she didn't think there was much to a lot of it.
What worries me about me is that my mother is the world's leading champion of ignoring things and "disappearing" them. And I worry that I learned to do that - so that there is something that is blatantly obvious to everyone else, but that I just can't see at all. :banghead:But maybe there isn't such a thing. :wtf: I just want the answer!!!!!
(silence. crickets chirping.)
It helps to have the pattern in mind - so when it starts I can take a minute, regroup and not play along.
What I need to do for me is just not engage with him when he is bad and I am not up to "not playing the game." I have to be brave and assured enough of myself and my ability to take care of myself (and potentially piss him off enough to leave me) that I can disengage and walk away and leave him to his own devices. He is a grown up after all. I have to be able to let him say/think whatever horrible thing he imagines without defending myself. Ironically, the more wrong and out there he is, the easier this is. The saner he stays the harder it is. At the same time, I took notes from the last time and reviewed a lot of the stuff he accused me of with my T - who has a pretty good bullshit detector and is totally willing to call me out on stuff - and she didn't think there was much to a lot of it.
What worries me about me is that my mother is the world's leading champion of ignoring things and "disappearing" them. And I worry that I learned to do that - so that there is something that is blatantly obvious to everyone else, but that I just can't see at all. :banghead:But maybe there isn't such a thing. :wtf: I just want the answer!!!!!
(silence. crickets chirping.)
It helps to have the pattern in mind - so when it starts I can take a minute, regroup and not play along.