@Kas_Can_Fly, I definitely can relate to an internal sort of "place" where people are more dangerous when confronted; my brother was strongly that way, and that was years and years of my life. While he wasn't totally unpredictable in all cases, I couldn't stop the situations from happening that he would claim "caused" him to "have to be" violent, they were normal everyday ones. I am currently working on a part that can react still that way.
I worked very hard on getting out of the house with my brother, and getting skills to fit in with the people who seemed safer, and lucked out in finding some truly wonderful ones. I'm very grateful to have met quite a few such folks over the years; I have loads of "life" skills now, but partly thanks to the very useful ability to squash emotional connection to those old memories. I don't think that my therapy until very recently really dealt at all with dissociated stuff, or at least no Ts ever used that language.
There is the, um, small problem of now sometimes dealing with old emotional reactions, noticing and figuring out what is what... But Kas, it's so much less terrible, scary, or bleak than how I remember it felt decades ago when I did not have the better "adult" perspective developed, where some folks are pretty trustworthy, and I can make the comparison with my old world. I now have something to work with the old stuff with, a more positive internal perspective. The world can feel so much brighter once you really know some trustworthy people for long enough, I think maybe a deep part of our brain changes, you can relax some and maybe you never even felt that before. Totally worth the work. I hope you are getting some of that relief!
@Leah123 -- I think that for folks who are dealing with deep trust issues with therapists, concepts like "is this a reasonable thing to expect of a human" can be outside of what that trust-related layer comprehends... Not that it's not a valid question, it feels for me like a different part that would try to deal with such question rationally. The trust-don't-trust issue is much deeper -- and
@Hashi, you can't for instance argue someone into really having trust. I feel that it's similar to the fact that you can't argue someone into not re-experiencing a trauma, into not having insomnia.... that is another way of stating the analogy I was trying to make.