Editor’s note: The following article was submitted by the Lovefraud reader who comments as “Pearl.”
By Pearl
Someone on this blog once mentioned a book by Alice Miller and Andrew Jenkins, and it caught my attention. So now I’m reading The Truth Will Set You Free—Overcoming Emotional Blindness and Finding Your True Adult Self.
Even though I’m only about halfway through the book, I wanted to share parts of it because it is so important to what a lot of us are working on—forgiving ourselves and trying to understand why this (fraud) happened to us. I know this won’t apply or appeal to everyone, but it might help some of you as it has me. Miller’s ideas help me understand why I was susceptible and forgive myself for my blindness—my inability to spot a “bad guy.”
Miller focuses on childhood—on how corporal punishment (spanking/whipping) and humiliation—cause a type of blindness in adulthood that can lead to being manipulated and UNABLE TO SEE THROUGH LIES. She emphasizes that the kind of parenting and education aimed at breaking a child’s will and making that child into an obedient subject by means of overt or covert coercion, manipulation and emotional blackmail leaves long-lasting imprints on the way we think and relate to one another as adults.
Here is the cycle as she sees it:
- Traditional methods of upbringing, which have included corporal punishment, lead a child to DENY suffering and humiliation. (Can anyone related to having a high pain threshold? Where did I get that bruise or cut—I don’t remember getting it? Ever feel humiliated at being spanked, paddled or whipped as a child? Ever experience a parent being insensitive to suffering?)
- This denial, although essential if the child is to SURVIVE, will later cause emotional blindness.
- Emotional blindness produces “barriers in the mind” erected to guard against dangers. This means that early denied traumas become encoded in the brain, and even though they no longer pose a threat, they continue to have a subtle, destructive impact. (The memory of how to respond to such crappy behavior from our parents and authority figures is still there.)
- Barriers in the mind keep us from learning new information, putting it to good use, and shedding old, outdated behaviors.
- Our bodies retain a complete memory of the humiliations we suffered, driving us to inflict unconsciously on the next generation what we endured in childhood, unless we become aware of the cause of our behavior, which is embedded in the history of our own childhoods.
As children, some of us learned to suppress and deny natural feelings. Some of us lived in a world where our feelings were ignored and denied.
All the beaten child remembers is FEAR and the face of the ANGRY parent, not why the beating was taking place. The child may even assume he had been naughty and deserved the punishment. Miller writes that in the absence of a witness who can empathize with us in childhood and genuinely listen to us, we have no other way of protecting ourselves from the pain but to close our minds to it.
In a bid to blot the fear and pain of our abused younger self, we erase what we know can help us, we can fall prey to the seductiveness of sects and cults, and FAIL TO SEE THROUGH ALL KINDS OF LIES.
Having this information helps me understand why I was “ripe for the picking.” It also goes a long way toward helping me forgive myself and move on in the healing process.
So far today, 45 calls, 4 emails and 3 text messages…I am ready to freak! But I won’t, won’t help my case but he is starting to get to me…
I just want to scream at him and remind him this was his choice…now I am honey and baby again…after being an evil sick monster for 4 months…
What gets me is he decides HE wants this to work so now he bugs me…what about the last four years I pounded my head against the proverbial brick wall???
I know telling him won’t get through to him…he is only thinking of himself and his own comfort and SHOULD know by now that my not answering is my answer!!
Dear Myboys, if 45 calls in one day is not “harassment” I don’t know what would be. Call the police!
Dear Buttons, I don’t know all the reasons your older son has oversight of your younger one, or how he has manipulated your younger son. Can you communicate with your son who is being manipulated? I know that it is so difficult to see someone you love used by someone you know is a psychopath, and to be helpless to protect the victim. My heart goes out to you. (((hugs))))
In my state or his?
Dear Myboys, I guess I read your posts wrong, I thought you had a restraining order…I suggest since you don’t that you call your divorce attorney tomorrow morning and tell him what is going on, and he should contact your X’s attorney and tell him to lay down the “law” TO HIS CLIENT. If that does not work, then your attorney can file for a restraining order. ALL contact between you and your x should be through attorneys. NO EXCEPTIONS. I’m not sure what age your kids are and if there is any custody issues but even then no direct contact….I know it is difficult. But keep in mind he is trying to lure you into his web like a spider to his web. NO MATTER WHAT, DO NOT RESPOND DIRECTLY. This all shall also pass, but right now it is difficult I know. ((((hugs)))))
I know that a TRO is part of the temp orders and he did not show up at the trial so I won by default. It specifically says in the papers he is not allowed to do this…I notified my attorney this morning but it has really escalated since then so I will tomorrow again.
We are waiting on financials from him to hammer out the settlement and I think that is why he is delaying…how is he going to explain all his money is being spent on drugs while he sends me not a dime for our son (13). My attorney indicated he would file an intentional delay order and hopefully based on this, we can get a contempt of court too…
I think they are not taking it serious as he is in another state…and the authorities seem to be so overworked…
Can’t say how glad I am he is out of state… Just two towns away today, an enraged husband showed up at his stbx’s home with a shotgun with the intent to kill her and set the house on fire. He ended up dying and she and her boyfriend managed to get away…scary stuff!!!
Myboys:
Call the police!!!
I thought you had a Temporary restraining order against DV on him?
Stalking or harrasment?
You need to make a police report NOW…in your local…..and report this.
HE doesn’t want you back…..He wants control of you, so he can control the divorce….simple!!!
This is ridiculous…..CALL THE POLICE AND REPORT IT!!!! NOW!
Don’t wait……
His behaviors are NOT OKAY!!!
Tomorrow…..go to the court (yourself) and file for a stalking harassment order….
I’m not sure if you are thinking the restraining order you have in place is against DV or it might be the financial restraining order which is standard in the divorce…..
You need to kow what you have in place….look at that paperwork.
A TRO is temporary, until a hearing is set….when you have the hearing….the judge asks you how long you wish to have the Restraining order extended for….Usually 1 year.
YOU are provided paperwork on this from the courts to keep on you and your person in case of a violation.
It should read….NO CONTACT whatsoever with applicant (you)
Dear My boys,
I am glad that your son is at least 13, so hopefully he will not be able to poison your son the way he might if the boy was only a few years old.
I agree with Erin, ande I would contact the attorney as well as police, maybe with the episode of the woman only a couple of towns away they will take you seriously. Tell them you are afraid! Hang in there!!!!! ((((hugs)))) and my prayers!
Dear My boys,
Change your phone number and have the new one unlisted.
if its a cell phone, change the service and get another number.
MAKE HIM STOP that way.
AND GET THE TRO!!!!!!!!!
I’m reading this article, again, and I’m contemplating my own triggers with regard to my childhood experiences. Although I experienced spankings, I don’t feel that my emotions or feelings were ever dismissed or ignored. I did feel abandoned while my mother was drinking, but I’ve long since forgiven her and my father for the dynamics of an alcoholic home.
Although the references are based upon physical abuse, I am becoming increasingly anxious about the triggers of emotional abuse with regard to my youngest son. In 2 days, he will become a part of our family and I feel that I’m SERIOUSLY projecting, over-anticipating, and agonizing over possible triggers for myself, as well as for him. I know what triggers are, but he has no concept, whatsoever.
The spath son is held in such high regard by my youngest. “He really helped me out,” is this ongoing phrase that the youngest keeps using in reference to his brother. Yet, this person who has ostensibly “helped (him) out” has squandered the joint settlement from their father’s death, abandoned him at crucial times, made countless “promises” and failed to deliver or even acknowledge the promise, etc.
I would very much appreciate ALL insight into this cult-like loyalty, and how to either address it or step around it. This topic will be coming up in dfuture discussions, I’m sure. And, if I continue hearing what a great guy the DIAGNOSED spath son is, I’m really afraid that I’m going to slip a cog, at some point, and speak truthfully about the abuse that he doled out.