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- Barriers in the mind keep us from learning new information, putting it to good use, and shedding old, outdated behaviors.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.
“Did this person say he was abused or is that just your opinion?
Psychopaths lie to get your sympathy, I highly doubt he was abused he is just a psychopath.”
I once saw the x-spath disassociate when I was having an argument with a taxi driver. I looked over at him and he was in the corner of back seat, pushing himself as far back as he could go. It stuck in my mind and at the time, I did not have an understanding of disassociation.
Child abuse is a factor in why certain individuals become sociopaths — a very important factor. So, while he did not tell me that he was abuse, his dissociative behavior during an argument is strongly indicative of childhood abuse.
I did see a female counselor this week. That is helpful that she is female but not a lot of warmth coming from her. I do think I will keep looking for a therapist with a little more warmth. I really don’t want to feel like I am telling my story to someone who just wants to get through the 45-minute sessions. I am journaling my life right now as well and a lot of tough feelings are coming up related to my past and losses and struggles that I have endured. Key word though is “endured”. I know that to be a positive thing but I am weary of the “pat” response, “you are a strong woman”. I am beginning to wonder if being a strong woman is the reason I get to suffer throughout my life?
Revelation,
being a strong woman isn’t why you suffer, it’s why you live to fight another day.
I’m figuring out that suffering is how we grow. You could avoid suffering by numbing your brain, the way spaths do. And you would stay infantile like spaths do.
Not saying we should suffer all the time, life should be joyous too. I suppose the two go together. Spaths can feel neither.
This pep talk is as much for me as it is for you. I’m trying to learn to embrace all of life. It just gets hard when it ends up lopsided because we ran into a spath who demanded we do all of his suffering for him.
Revelation,
When my entire world came tumbling down, my friends and family turned their back on me. I argued with my family why they weren’t there for me when I needed them THE MOST, especially when I’d always been there for them. My brother replied: “Well, it didn’t cross my mind. You’ve always supported your self, never asked for help, always fixes things and solve problems. You are the strong one in our family and we never thought you needed any support”. My simple reply: ” I go to the toilet and shit like the rest of you!” Pretty angry and perhaps not the most humble reply. My point to my brother was, that people perceive strong people like superhumans and sometimes even put more responsibilities on their shoulders. They tend to forget that strong people also have emotions, are vulnerable and need comfort and validation of their existence. I’m not sure if this was any help for you, but perhaps can explain how common people in my world view strong people.
Sunflower & Revelation, I completely identify with the “you’re strong enough to handle it” response and I kind of sorted it out this way: I HAD “endure” my experiences…..or, die from them. That’s the only thing that caused me to appear “strong.”
Additionally, NOT being “strong” allowed for my vulnerabilities to be exposed and exploited. The first abusive exspath was incredibly adept at exploiting my vulnerabilities. Because I was “caring,” he pushed that quality to the extreme and caused it to become a weakness. He once commented on my graduation photo saying, “You look SO sincere in this picture.” What the hell does THAT mean? I “look sincere?”
So, my presentation of being a “strong woman” was a misconcieved attempt at self-protection.
That’s how I’m sorting it out about myself, I guess. I AM “strong” in that I will survive these experiences and emerge an absolutely different, wiser, emotionally healthier individual. At least, I hope that’s how it’s going to work out! LOL!!! 😀
Brightest blessings
Revelation, with regard to your counselor being “warm,” give her 3 more sessions before you look for another therapist, and I’ll explain why. You’ve met her once, and people CANNOT “connect” right away, especially in a client/therapist relationship. See if she begins asking you some hard questions – and, what I mean by that would be questions that cause you to think. The first response is to balk, deny, and express outrage, but further reflection can often turn a lightbulb on that had never been illuminated, before. HARD questions. And, offering management techniques and explanations. Ask questions, yourself, about WHY you may react in a certain situation and see if she gets down and dirty with the answers.
And, TOWANDA for getting involved in some counseling!!! Give it a few sessions, and then see where it goes.
Brightest blessings of encouragement
Skylar, your “pep talk” is resonating with me, as well. Thank you for putting that out there.
Brightest blessings
Skylar,
Yihaaaaaah,
“being a strong woman isn’t why you suffer, it’s why you live to fight another day.”
Oh yeh. Yeh, yeh yeh.
strongawoman!!!!!
This thread has helped me a lot tonight. My abuser would become absent during and after the assaults, his face and voice were expressionless and blank. So I know the blank stare and how deeply unnerving it was when it first happened I knew there was something badly wrong I didn’t know what. He is totally unremarkable on the surface. Totally average in every way. His father put his half brother’s pet cat in the washing machine to punish him over something slight and killed the cat that way. My abuser lost his virginity to a prostitute that his father had sex with then sent to his room he was 14 at the time. Again his voice was blank when he told me this.
TeaLight, the spath is a very, very dangerously disordered individual. HIS is the type that ends up murdering someone, at some point.
And, his father…….ew. Just……ew.
Tonight, even though you’re having a tough time, right now, THINK ABOUT IT: think about what kind of people you would have been aligned with had you remained with that sick-assed rat-bastard!!! YOU ARE SAFE, tonight!
Brightest blessings and big hugs