Kintsugi
Sponsor
I anticipate this being a really long post, so I apologize in advance. I've been marinating on how to compose this plea for opinions since I found the forum, and it's a huge part of why I found this place.
I've been dealing with support issues for a long time. Although I had always anticipated some kind of hesitation or perhaps some complications in gaining my family's support because my main abuser is my brother, I never expected to be so shut out of anything that looks like support or encouragement. My family is a dry well in that respect. They didn't 'side' with my brother, but the family's inaction in terms of dealing with my disclosure and my brother's complete lack of accountability have been big obstacles, and sometimes it feels like they did side with him. The kind of support for healing I've received in the past five years generally comes in the form of, "Why aren't you getting better?" or, "Aren't we past this?" or, "Why can't you let sleeping dogs lie?" kind of questions, or really blatant, "You're tearing the family apart," "Your parents are hurting," and the famous, "Can't you see what you're doing to your mother?"
My fiance has told me countless times that my parents aren't parents because of how they handled this situation. He even brought up legal disowning this week, I think in an attempt to motivate my severance from them. He has even said sweet things like that his family is my family, that I won't be alone, and his family has sadly been more supportive than my parents, but all of that good stuff is reliant on us having a successful relationship, and the last thing I want to do is to feel stuck with somebody because of all of the things that person affords me. I've been stuck in relationships before, both because of external forces and because of my own fears about being alone and vulnerable. I'm engaged to him and I plan on spending the rest of forever with him, but I don't want to feel trapped into that situation because of other factors of our relationship, like my closeness to his family and the asylum that comes with that family.
On the other hand...
I really want HIM to be my main support, not the rest of his family. I want HIM to help me, to encourage me, to be there for me when I need him. I truly believe that he wants this, too, but he doesn't show it in a way that I can understand. I've been completely losing it recently as I prepare to pull out the big healing guns this summer and conquer some of my family control issues, which is a huge deal for me. The last time I prepared to do this sort of thing, I locked myself in a room for a month and barely ate or slept, just fantasized about suicide and dissociated on my bed for hours. I'm trying hard to keep it together here, but it's proving a tough journey, and sometimes I break down and really need help. I fell into total hysteria a couple of nights ago and came into our room begging him for help, telling him that I couldn't feel anything and I needed him. He didn't want to touch me because I was crying. All I want to do in these situations is curl up into a ball on the floor, but he considers this pathetic and won't interact with me except to voice his repulsion at my behavior, so I tried to stay standing up straight and not cry, but I'm having such difficulty. He wound up just telling me that I never get better even when I say I want to and that whenever I do get better it's only a matter of time before I relapse, so he doesn't believe me and doesn't trust that I will ever improve. This, you maybe can imagine, really reduces my morale.
We're on a bit better footing now, but I'm continually trying to seek the support I need from him in covert ways or in small bursts that don't seem as needy, like asking him to sit next to me or to play with my hair before I go to sleep, or holding his hand when I'm scared and would rather hide in my bed rather than face whatever it is the day is calling me to face. I'm noticing increasingly that I crave to be asked how I want to be supported. I went through all the pain of quickly summarizing the huge familial pitfalls in my seek for healing and the denial that has been hammered into me by my family as a way to show him that I'm lacking and have always been lacking a true support base, that all I've ever gotten for working hard is a question of why I'm not working harder or better or faster. He responded to this by lecturing me on how I need to deal with my problems in therapy, how I can't just be on a forum (I told him a week before that I had an appointment with both a counselor and a psychiatrist today to get me back on track, which was perhaps a week after I found this forum), and then he escalated to yelling at me about how I fail to take the right steps to recovery.
Maybe sometimes I need tough love, but I have never been shy about asking for this sort of help. I regularly ask people to listen to my situation and bring me back down to Earth, but this isn't the time that I feel I need that kind of motivation. I really just want someone to pat me on the back, but I don't know how to tell him that. He's been through his own mental health struggles, and I think he's frustrated that I'm not where he's at and that I'm not getting there the same way (though...this would involve copious drugs/promiscuous sex? So I'm not sure what he's complaining about). He gets really angry when I ask him to give me any kind of affectionate comfort, and he'll do it, but it's really obviously cold and fake, and this makes me feel worse about myself. We also have a rule that I'm not supposed to talk about our relationship problems with other people (a rule I am breaking by writing this), not even my private friends who have never met him, and that has been really hard for me, because I want to refract my issues with him off of an outside mind to get a new perspective, and I feel isolated and unable to share with people who are usually there for me.
I'm just confused. I keep thinking, "I'm not in a supportive relationship," or, "I need someone else to help support me," but then I feel guilty, because I think he is trying in his own way, it's just opposite of what I need. I don't know how long I can hold onto my composure before I totally go downhill. I'm scared to tell him that I've started thinking about suicide and self-mutilation again: I told him the burn on my hand was from a toaster rather than my own cigarettes. I don't want to lie to him. I just don't want him to yell at me. I feel like I have no family but him. There are so many supporters on this site trying to find a way to better their relationships with sufferers, but I think my fiance would just walk out of the room if I tried to explain one of my symptoms to him. I tried to explain the whole inner child idea to him when I asked him for help. The look of mortified disgust on his face was unbearable. He said, "I'm not marrying a four-year-old girl. I'm marrying you." But I know the little girl in me will be living with us for a while, too. : (
Thanks for reading if you got down here. I don't know where to turn these thoughts.
I've been dealing with support issues for a long time. Although I had always anticipated some kind of hesitation or perhaps some complications in gaining my family's support because my main abuser is my brother, I never expected to be so shut out of anything that looks like support or encouragement. My family is a dry well in that respect. They didn't 'side' with my brother, but the family's inaction in terms of dealing with my disclosure and my brother's complete lack of accountability have been big obstacles, and sometimes it feels like they did side with him. The kind of support for healing I've received in the past five years generally comes in the form of, "Why aren't you getting better?" or, "Aren't we past this?" or, "Why can't you let sleeping dogs lie?" kind of questions, or really blatant, "You're tearing the family apart," "Your parents are hurting," and the famous, "Can't you see what you're doing to your mother?"
My fiance has told me countless times that my parents aren't parents because of how they handled this situation. He even brought up legal disowning this week, I think in an attempt to motivate my severance from them. He has even said sweet things like that his family is my family, that I won't be alone, and his family has sadly been more supportive than my parents, but all of that good stuff is reliant on us having a successful relationship, and the last thing I want to do is to feel stuck with somebody because of all of the things that person affords me. I've been stuck in relationships before, both because of external forces and because of my own fears about being alone and vulnerable. I'm engaged to him and I plan on spending the rest of forever with him, but I don't want to feel trapped into that situation because of other factors of our relationship, like my closeness to his family and the asylum that comes with that family.
On the other hand...
I really want HIM to be my main support, not the rest of his family. I want HIM to help me, to encourage me, to be there for me when I need him. I truly believe that he wants this, too, but he doesn't show it in a way that I can understand. I've been completely losing it recently as I prepare to pull out the big healing guns this summer and conquer some of my family control issues, which is a huge deal for me. The last time I prepared to do this sort of thing, I locked myself in a room for a month and barely ate or slept, just fantasized about suicide and dissociated on my bed for hours. I'm trying hard to keep it together here, but it's proving a tough journey, and sometimes I break down and really need help. I fell into total hysteria a couple of nights ago and came into our room begging him for help, telling him that I couldn't feel anything and I needed him. He didn't want to touch me because I was crying. All I want to do in these situations is curl up into a ball on the floor, but he considers this pathetic and won't interact with me except to voice his repulsion at my behavior, so I tried to stay standing up straight and not cry, but I'm having such difficulty. He wound up just telling me that I never get better even when I say I want to and that whenever I do get better it's only a matter of time before I relapse, so he doesn't believe me and doesn't trust that I will ever improve. This, you maybe can imagine, really reduces my morale.
We're on a bit better footing now, but I'm continually trying to seek the support I need from him in covert ways or in small bursts that don't seem as needy, like asking him to sit next to me or to play with my hair before I go to sleep, or holding his hand when I'm scared and would rather hide in my bed rather than face whatever it is the day is calling me to face. I'm noticing increasingly that I crave to be asked how I want to be supported. I went through all the pain of quickly summarizing the huge familial pitfalls in my seek for healing and the denial that has been hammered into me by my family as a way to show him that I'm lacking and have always been lacking a true support base, that all I've ever gotten for working hard is a question of why I'm not working harder or better or faster. He responded to this by lecturing me on how I need to deal with my problems in therapy, how I can't just be on a forum (I told him a week before that I had an appointment with both a counselor and a psychiatrist today to get me back on track, which was perhaps a week after I found this forum), and then he escalated to yelling at me about how I fail to take the right steps to recovery.
Maybe sometimes I need tough love, but I have never been shy about asking for this sort of help. I regularly ask people to listen to my situation and bring me back down to Earth, but this isn't the time that I feel I need that kind of motivation. I really just want someone to pat me on the back, but I don't know how to tell him that. He's been through his own mental health struggles, and I think he's frustrated that I'm not where he's at and that I'm not getting there the same way (though...this would involve copious drugs/promiscuous sex? So I'm not sure what he's complaining about). He gets really angry when I ask him to give me any kind of affectionate comfort, and he'll do it, but it's really obviously cold and fake, and this makes me feel worse about myself. We also have a rule that I'm not supposed to talk about our relationship problems with other people (a rule I am breaking by writing this), not even my private friends who have never met him, and that has been really hard for me, because I want to refract my issues with him off of an outside mind to get a new perspective, and I feel isolated and unable to share with people who are usually there for me.
I'm just confused. I keep thinking, "I'm not in a supportive relationship," or, "I need someone else to help support me," but then I feel guilty, because I think he is trying in his own way, it's just opposite of what I need. I don't know how long I can hold onto my composure before I totally go downhill. I'm scared to tell him that I've started thinking about suicide and self-mutilation again: I told him the burn on my hand was from a toaster rather than my own cigarettes. I don't want to lie to him. I just don't want him to yell at me. I feel like I have no family but him. There are so many supporters on this site trying to find a way to better their relationships with sufferers, but I think my fiance would just walk out of the room if I tried to explain one of my symptoms to him. I tried to explain the whole inner child idea to him when I asked him for help. The look of mortified disgust on his face was unbearable. He said, "I'm not marrying a four-year-old girl. I'm marrying you." But I know the little girl in me will be living with us for a while, too. : (
Thanks for reading if you got down here. I don't know where to turn these thoughts.