Thanks for all the support and encouragement. Especially for the reminders to be patient with myself. It really helped to read that today.
I told my therapist everything that happened. I didn’t want to talk about it, she encouraged me to tell her. She had her own opinion about the mess… but she didn’t spend much time on it. She’s not much of a problem-solving-current life problems therapist. She just wants me to be safe and stable enough to get to the real problem: the trauma.
My therapist comes from the perspective that getting into a mess like this is actually a defense mechanism. She says it’s a way to have something other than past trauma to work on in therapy. I'm also repeating the pattern. She doesn’t think I’m borderline, but you are “very much in the pattern of the abused woman who keeps trying to go back to her abuser or finding new ones, to try and have a different ending instead of working on it in here.”
“It’s going to hurt to stop and face that you can’t have that different ending to what happened to you as a kid.”
Nothing like a trauma therapist to cut through my crap and get to the heart of a matter. Geez, she's good.
I’m so glad for what you @joeylilttle pointed out and the suggestions you and others gave too. It really helped me to hear my therapist out today and not get stuck in avoidance, or shame, or repeating the pattern again today.
She very much thinks I can have a different future, and we talked a lot about how to handle all of this in a better way now, and how to get out of this pattern. She kept trying to get me to be nice and kind to myself too.
Right now, this is stuck in my brain: “It’s going to hurt to stop and face that you can’t have a different ending to what happened to you in the past.” Thinking about that shifts how I see all of this.
The pastor called my mother, who lives far away, and apparently told her that he wants me to call him. He told her I’m not allowed back at the church. Ugh. My mother severely neglected as a kid, and it really hurt to hear it from her, of all people, once again.
A therapist in town called me, and said he wants me to call him and schedule a time to meet with her and him.
I told her no thanks. She tried to talk me into it anyhow. I wanted to explain and defend my decision…I was mad and triggered she didn't take no for an answer.
Instead I let her go on, then I replied, “I will take this into consideration and get back to you.” Then I hung up! Thanks
@joeylittle for the suggestions/reminders on things to say, it was so helpful. It worked so much better to say this than anything else.
I called the pastor and left a message. "I was wrong to scream and swear, and I’m taking steps to deal with the mistakes I made and to not do it again, even when pushed. If he needs to reach me, he can leave a message and I will get back to him later."
It was progress for me to say that, and only that. No excuses, no trying to fix, explain, defend, or get validation.
He didn’t call me after that. Someone else with the church did. To remind me I'm not welcome there.
Someone else called from the church, but I deleted the message without listening.
All I’m thinking about now is how I was a kid who was invaded in the worst ways, and needed to be heard, but I was ignored, to the point of nearly dying. That really hurt. It really hurts now. That pain, and this drive to be validated, feels like the most shameful and vulnerable thing about me.