I talked with my Mom yesterday. My 14 yr old daughter had contacted her and asked to move in for the summer because of the flare-up recently in my PTSD. So, we talked about things and I asked her about my childhood of which she knows I remember very little.
I've always attributed a lot of my PTSD to childhood sexual abuse outside the home, with moderate levels of emotional and verbal abuse in the home (father and older sister). My mother is the Queen of Minimization, and has always had a tendency to ignore things she just doesn't want to acknowledge. So, I am 39 years old and she finally tells me that shortly before I was born my father started becoming physically abusive towards her and after I was born very threatening towards me. She was forced to work three jobs when I was young, but when she was home she felt like she constantly had to protect me because I was the one he would turn on. This continued until they separated when I was 4.
Even after their divorce my parents maintained a close friendship so my father has always been in my life both good & bad.
At the age of three she took me to a psychologist because of tantrums, beating my head, hiding and repetitive behaviors. The "diagnosis" was that I was highly intelligent and was manipulating for attention. Solution: learn to ignore it and I would grow out of it. At seven I was evaluated again because of my fantasy world and occasional lack of involvement in the real world. Again, it was blamed on my intelligence and I would grow out of it. At 12, it was again just manipulative behavior...ignore. All of these evaluations I have no memory of. My mother tried, but small town psychiatry of the 70's and 80's apparently really sucked.
At 18, when I was hospitalized my parents told me and the social worker that they couldn't think of anything that might have caused my issues. So, my memories I do have have always been clouded with this sense of denial.
So, yesterday's conversation has broken down this wall of denial. Not only that yes, your memories are real, but that it was even worse than you remember. I just feeling so uncertain, so numb.
I've always attributed a lot of my PTSD to childhood sexual abuse outside the home, with moderate levels of emotional and verbal abuse in the home (father and older sister). My mother is the Queen of Minimization, and has always had a tendency to ignore things she just doesn't want to acknowledge. So, I am 39 years old and she finally tells me that shortly before I was born my father started becoming physically abusive towards her and after I was born very threatening towards me. She was forced to work three jobs when I was young, but when she was home she felt like she constantly had to protect me because I was the one he would turn on. This continued until they separated when I was 4.
Even after their divorce my parents maintained a close friendship so my father has always been in my life both good & bad.
At the age of three she took me to a psychologist because of tantrums, beating my head, hiding and repetitive behaviors. The "diagnosis" was that I was highly intelligent and was manipulating for attention. Solution: learn to ignore it and I would grow out of it. At seven I was evaluated again because of my fantasy world and occasional lack of involvement in the real world. Again, it was blamed on my intelligence and I would grow out of it. At 12, it was again just manipulative behavior...ignore. All of these evaluations I have no memory of. My mother tried, but small town psychiatry of the 70's and 80's apparently really sucked.
At 18, when I was hospitalized my parents told me and the social worker that they couldn't think of anything that might have caused my issues. So, my memories I do have have always been clouded with this sense of denial.
So, yesterday's conversation has broken down this wall of denial. Not only that yes, your memories are real, but that it was even worse than you remember. I just feeling so uncertain, so numb.