no that's doesn't cause people to become abusers. That doesn't make it you deserving of the way you have been treated.
This is true for abuse, as a child or adult, it just doesn't feel like it (for myself).
Then the current day to day interferes. For example, I realize (for myself) I only feel 'allowed' to speak or ask or whatever, after everyone else is finished. And that the others have rights or worth, whereas I don't. But the longer I wait the less I trust or feel any right to speak at all, or feel I'm simply being tolerated without others' choice. Then I'm wondering why I'm even bothering, or more specifically feel badly about myself (a burden), and foolish (what's the point.) So it can also be self-defeating I guess because both my self as a person (presence) and my thoughts or words (what I feel, think, or struggles/ worries) seem to be burdensome so I question my presence at all.
Then there is the somatic. My sister for example told me my voice is 'grating'... despite not trying to I notice now I lose my voice talking to her now, it's all I can do to get it to have any volume or words out, like extreme dehydration. Can't control it.
And then there's the self-questioning. If this feels so harmful or confirmation of how useless or bothersome or burdensome I am, how can it be helpful or healing?
So it's the past, the present, even bears on the future (tomorrow). I don't really have an answer but
@Friday @shimmerz @ladee and others have all touched on parts I relate to. Is it a tool for survival? Idk.
Hope this makes sense.
Hugs to you
@Justmehere :hug::hug:
ETA, I suppose having needed to 'read' others and their emotions & body language and reactions in minutiae in relation to self and others was needed for survival and decision making, and also discerning the truth and protection, also for safety. Not what I would call emotional reasoning based on distortions or emotional dysregulation but rather based on experience, necessity and adaptation. And becoming very good at it.