seekingstability
Bronze Member
I've been seeing my therapist for two and a half years, the last 3 months we've been going through individual memories of the assaults on me by my Uncle when I was 16 (I'm 32 now). This is the first time I've talked about it. Managing to get through, by the skin of my teeth, but getting through.
This is by far the hardest thing I've ever done in my life. And my life hasn't been easy. Somehow all this time, believing that I am to blame, I engaged, I contributed, I did things to make sure we weren't caught... all these things I've told myself that I did because I'm disgusting, hideous and there is something VERY wrong with me - telling myself these things have in fact gotten me through.
Last night during a particularly intense self hating rant, my therapist asked me how I would think differently about that time if I wasn't to blame. How I would think about myself now. She knows my soft spot. Asking me in the context of the children and teens that I counsel. 'How would you reflect with a young person if they came to you and shared their experience, going on to describe the self hate and internalised rage'... I can do that. I can apply the logic to others easily. And I know it's right. Scientifically - it's factual.
I'm stuck. I don't seem to be able to apply that concept to my experience. I feel like I'm split. Right now there's an intellectual side of me that understands - I was 16, he was in a position of authority, there's nothing I could have done or not done that would cause any blame to be laid on me. Then when I try to think about what happened I head straight into self hate, blame, regret, shame.
It's like I'm split in two. How can I integrate what I KNOW intellectually now, with what I remember and how that makes me FEEL.
I hope I'm making sense. ANY advice/personal experience - would be incredibly helpful.
This is by far the hardest thing I've ever done in my life. And my life hasn't been easy. Somehow all this time, believing that I am to blame, I engaged, I contributed, I did things to make sure we weren't caught... all these things I've told myself that I did because I'm disgusting, hideous and there is something VERY wrong with me - telling myself these things have in fact gotten me through.
Last night during a particularly intense self hating rant, my therapist asked me how I would think differently about that time if I wasn't to blame. How I would think about myself now. She knows my soft spot. Asking me in the context of the children and teens that I counsel. 'How would you reflect with a young person if they came to you and shared their experience, going on to describe the self hate and internalised rage'... I can do that. I can apply the logic to others easily. And I know it's right. Scientifically - it's factual.
I'm stuck. I don't seem to be able to apply that concept to my experience. I feel like I'm split. Right now there's an intellectual side of me that understands - I was 16, he was in a position of authority, there's nothing I could have done or not done that would cause any blame to be laid on me. Then when I try to think about what happened I head straight into self hate, blame, regret, shame.
It's like I'm split in two. How can I integrate what I KNOW intellectually now, with what I remember and how that makes me FEEL.
I hope I'm making sense. ANY advice/personal experience - would be incredibly helpful.