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- Barriers in the mind keep us from learning new information, putting it to good use, and shedding old, outdated behaviors.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.
James—I’ll have to look into the book you mentioned on shame. I think my strict religious upbringing laid a lot of shame on me. It’s often called guilt, but I think shame is more accurate because the so-called “offenses” were not really anything bad or hurtful. They were just stupid, arbitrary rules, but I totally believed it all.
I found an online site about parenting that delivers a helpful daily parenting “thought”. Although it’s designed for parents of children with difficult behaviors, it is great for any parent. It’s helping me with my oldest son, who is 17. http://www.beyondconsequences.com/ is the site; the sign up for daily support/reflections is towards the bottom of the page.
JaneSmith—deprogramming is good way to put it. It’s hard to deprogram strict religious principles. Maybe the tit for tat program mentioned on LF will help.
Alohatraveler—your words “I crave to be held” jumped out at me because I crave that, too. I have felt that craving since I was a teenager. Touch deprivation and neglect are mentioned in The Betrayal Bond. I used to think that extreme situations, such as the Romanian orphanages, were examples of touch deprivation and neglect. Now, I see that this occurs many places, in varying degrees.
I also have a difficult time calling in sick to work unless I simply can’t move. But I don’t begrudge other people for missing work or school when sick. I have internalized a stricter standard for myself (which is not good).
Eyeswideshut—I love your comment about painting the statue of liberty in tears and with smoke and ash around it and how you realized that this public work was really your inner self being expressed. I look for “clues” all the time—how my inner being is symbolized in my outer life. I’ve learned a lot from that.
Oxy,
We seem to have been raised quite a bit alike. To this day, I will find myself thinking about something I did or said, & wondering what my Dad would think. I am 54 for God’s sake. I got my first tatoo when I was 40, & I remember not telling my Dad for about 2 months. (He was in the Navy, & has 5 tats himself). Seeking approval, love, hugs, or “good” attention seems IMO, to also be a common denominator in all of us. I was raised in a strict Catholic upbringing, & remember becoming very disillusioned at an early age by how angry & vengeful God was portrayed to be. I was always afraid of the purgatory/hell part. I was a pretty good kid, I think, not getting into trouble. I also remember right before I was to enter H.S., my Dad sat me down for “a talk”. He meant well, I think, but I felt accused of doing drugs, drinking, Etc. I thought WTF!? I hadn’t even considered any of these things at 14, but I was angry about being accused, so I thought, O.K., I can be as bad as don’t want me to be. So at 14, I turned into their worst nightmare. Nothing serious to ever get in big trouble, or arrested, just enough to “earn” the distrust that had already been heaped upon my shoulders. Yet, if a therapist asks me if I consider my childhood to be normal, I have always responded, “Yes”.
Today my daughter had a response to her email in response to his..he said I had brain washed her and that I was mentally unstable but cleverly hid it, he told her it was me who viewed the porn and even disputed that she herself had caught him..I received several emails telling me how glad he is to be free but that i destroyed him and ruined his Christmas, he has made a final offer of access before he goes to a solicitor himself. He is delusional and the love I had is turning to hatred and disgust. I don’t know how I ever stuck him for as long as I did…I must have been mad…thanks to this site I am better equipped to fight his demands and to stand my ground. The best Xmas present ever was finding this site.
Muldoon: You are experiencing the sabotage of your character as well as your very existence. What he’s doing is normal for an anti-social personalities when threatened that their cover will be blown. They have to destroy the credibility of the threat …. and that my Dear Muldoon is you. (Hey, this part of the saga is the story of my life (LOL)).
Hang in there … as I suggested earlier, have your daughter log on so she can read and obtain the knowledge of their shattered psyche’s for herself.
Peace.
Dear Muldoon,
I’m with Wini on educating your daughter, however, she might not be ready for the FULL LF site, so you might print off some of the articles, or sit with her while she reads them, and then discuss them with her. That way you can give input and have more influence over what she sees rather than just turning her loose with it. I am not sure how old she is, or how mature for her age, etc. I do say EDUCATE her, but I think you know what she is ready for at this point. It also might be bettr coming from an “autority” rather than JUST from you. I bet ya she will get the drift quickly.
Yes, dear, he will try to make you appear the devil herself. There was a movie once about a fat woman whose husband ditched her and she destroyed his life subtly…I think the title was SHE DEVIL or something along that line. It was funny, but at the same time sad, sort of like the “War of the Roses” where a couple destroyed each other in their divorce. It was a “comedy” (both movies were) of sorts, but SAD REALLY.
They will destroy themselves as well as destroy you, just to make you hurt. We call it “cutting off your nose to spite your face.” How true, how true.
I am also so glad that you are getting stronger and becoming more angry than fearful, and that anger will help sustain you for a while. Ultimately you will have to let go of the anger to come to peace, but now, the anger is okay…just keep in mind that while you are angry don’t let the anger and thirst for vengence make YOU go off the deep end. You must ALSO stay CALM in your anger. Keep the GOAL in mind, to get away from this sicko sod. Hey, I like that, sort of rhymes! (((hugs))))
Muldoon:
Character assassination by the sociopath is standard operating procedure as I’ve come to learn. I’m in the midst of it myself at the moment. It hurts.
I’m beginning to understand how lepers felt in the 14th century — walking along, ringing a bell and calling out “UNCLEAN” so that all could flee.
Based on what people have said on this site, ultimately the majority of the people who believe him come to see the error of their ways. But, boy is it one hell of a painful wait.
Wini is right — they know that we have the power to blow their cover. Keep your anger focused on that. It will help you do whatever you have to do with respect to your S.
Muldoon,
So glad you found LF as well. Read about the recent car incident on the other thread. He sounds at the very least very unpredicatable. I hope you take Oxy and others advice to be pro active in protecting yourself. When the mask slips we become the enemy and all bets are off.
Not to scare you further but be vigilant in avoiding him.
One little thing i do now is keep a plastic bottle of professional toilet bowl cleaner by my back door. It is a squirt bottle. I hope I never have to use it but you get the idea.
Stay in touch so we don’t all get worrying about you.
And please trust that it gets better once they are out of your life. Much better.
Peace and love
Muldoon,
I love how they think that can just rewrite reality. Kids are smart though and your daughter sounds like she is not buying it.
“the power to blow their cover”.. yes, the one that is closest know the truth more than anyone else. The “friends” are puppets and they are being played and baited to think what he wants them to think… if he has any friends. In other words, don’t fall for the old “My friend said you are the worst” or any other variation of that. The truth does reveal it self with time.
Good luck Muldoon. Keep your wits about you and keep referring back to LoveFraud for reality checks. I wish we could just be there as a whole GANG! Now there’s a gang that could do some good… Look out, the LoveFraud gang is in town… or how about… The “BEEN-THROUGH-HELL Angels”
XO Aloha
Dear Aloha,
I ROTFLMAO when I read your “BEEN-THROUGH-HELL Angels” You are so witting my dear! EVeryonce in a while I just fall out of my chair when you come up with one of your “Aloha-isms” you are TOO TOO FUNNY!!
Can you imagine a skillet weilding group of crazed women and a few guys, yelling TOWANDA!!! as we bash them about the head and shoulders, of course you can picture me riding one of my jackasses or driving the wagon cracking a New England twisted ox whip (looks awesome and bad but couldn’t flick the fly off your nose) LOL What a gang of folks we would make, and God help the poor fool that fell into our clutches! LOL
Gosh I have to go to bed, I am getting silly visions of the BEEN-THROUGH-HELL ANGELS!!! (Or “devils” as I think some of are pure devilish in our humor–that includes me!!!) LOL Goo’nite guys! Prayers for peace and calm.
BEEN THROUGH HELL ANGELS
I like that – it’s beautiful. When I am trying to look at myself, and all of us LF folks in a very positive light, I think of us as people who had so much goodness (as indicated by the Women Who Love Sociopaths book), that we were actually able to endure this horrendous relationship, and come out of it reaching out, with great love, to our brothers and sisters (first here on LF where we are with our tribe and we gather strength, and then out to the world).
But that is a nice way to put it – Been Through Hell Angels. Perhaps we are angels (not literally) who were strong enough and brave enough to endure the journey of passing through hell (an unnatural place for angels) and come through the other side with larger wings, bigger hearts, more beauty, and more light and love.
Angels with so much love and light thay can pass through hell and come out the better for it.
Thank you Aloha!