@Justmehere ... I swear I’m working on a longer draft, although parts of it are in use below ;), but I really wanted to hit this piece.
@Freida ... my apologies up front, organizing my thoughts right now is like herding 3 legged cats, so this ain’t anywhere near as concise as I’d like it to be, and may skip around a bit. If it’s clear as mud? Give a holler. If I try and edit right now, I’ll never post it.
Im guessing my T must be taking a different path with the IFS because she really stays with the idea that I'm understanding my emotions by thinking of them as different aspects of my personality.
It seems to be really effective in certain vet-circles because it plays out the opposite as it does in (a lot of) the general population... instead of distancing, and fragmenting, and disavowing responsibility... it’s introducing, and bringing closer, and conceptualizing.
There was a vet group I was a part of for awhile that called PTSD TheBeast. It was a concept I was able to really relate to -all teeth & claws & temper & I predicitble nature; learning short leashes & new SOPs/new partnerships/new balance whilst relearning discipline- that unlike IFS was/is super useful to me... because it was bringing things closer, rather than breaking them off and shoving them away.
The closest parallel I can draw (the difference -for me- between TheBeast kind of conceptualizing and IFS as practiced ‘round these parts) is the difference between 2 people hitting things when they’re mad, and the vastly different/ durn near opposite results.
- Jill & Joe Average (no background fighting) being told to “go hit a pillow”? Is just training them to hit things when they’re mad. No surprise, when they get mad? They start lashing out, hitting things fairly at random, just like they’ve trained themselves to do.
- A trained fighter blowing off steam on a heavy bag, meanwhile, isn’t training themselves to hit things when they’re mad. It’s training them to focus and direct their rage in a controlled environment of their choosing. It’s more control, and conscious decision making, not less.
Same action, but the difference is where they’re starting from, and therefore what they’re learning or reinforcing. The trained fighter is reasserting control, reconnecting with years of training discipline. The untrained pillow hitter isn’t reconnecting with anything, because there’s nothing to connect with, they’re learning a brand new skill; hit things when mad. <<< That’s not to say that untrained fighters “shouldn’t” have the same sorts of physical needs/outlets. It’s saying the new skill that they learn? Needs to be discipline, not blind flailing. IE back up a step and
get. trained. Learn the discipline, so that’s what you’re reinforcing as you’re blowing off steam. Bottom line is same action = different results based on where they’re starting from.
For me? I already broke, and broke badly. It took me a long ass time to duct tape all my broken pieces back together in quasi-working fashion ... and
re-fragmenting myself? Into even more broken pieces, along new fault lines, in addition to the old ones? Is just a reeeeeeally bad idea. FUBAR bad. Hence IFS is really not useful to me.
I know a helluva lot of people who
didn’t break. More like they origami’d... folding the parts of themselves that they can’t deal with, right now, away. Until they almost become 2 dimensional representations of themselves. These are the people I see IFS work
great for IF...
- A good therapist? Is able to help unfold those pieces. Reintroducing the shape and structure of those pieces to the whole, giving them their proper place, (not folded away, sometimes under layers and layers of folds until they’re invisible and not just out of the way but completely obscured or forgotten). And voila! (Long process made short ;)) A 3 dimsenional self starts emerging.
- A shit therapist? (IMO) hands over the scissors and has their client start cutting along the folds :banghead:creating broken pieces, fragmented selves, artificial separation. (For a few different reasons, ranging from laziness, to wanting a sexy client, to well intentioned idiot; assessing the problem wrongly and creating far more problems).
So, FWIW, how I see it
- Is a person Fragmented or Folded (where are they starting from?)
- What do they need to learn? (What brings them together instead of distancing?)
- How good is their therapist?