Guest guest Posted February 18, 2004 Report Share Posted February 18, 2004 Q: When are you justified in feeling a certain way? A: Trick question. A better question is " when are you going to feel entitled to have the feeling that you unavoidably already have? " THE FOCUS OF EGO ANALYSIS http://bapfelbaumphd.com/The_Focus_of_Ego_Analysis.html I received this from another list, but it's a bit lengthy so here are some excerpts: [referring to a WWII veteran with flashbacks] But he never discussed the attack until a few years ago when his niece cajoled him into a video interview for her college oral history project. " That just got the monkey off my back, " he said. " I spent all those years trying to forget it. The best thing to do was to talk about it. That really helped. " Of course, there are some survivors of major disasters who talk about it freely and some who, when they do talk about it, get no relief, just as we might expect. But there is this striking prototype: survivors of major disasters, most notably combat veterans, will maintain a legendary silence about the experience, even despite being harassed by flashbacks. (snip) Everyone knows that talking something out in the presence of a sympathetic listener can be relieving. (snip) But, as Freud found, people don't always want their chimneys swept; they may strongly resist it, just as do the survivors of major disasters. We can raise the same question: why do they resist talking, since it can be so relieving? The answer that is easy to arrive at from the ego analytic position, using the newspaper story as an example, centers on the seemingly irrelevant fact that the man's niece was videotaping him for an oral history project. It made her a neutral observer, and also he was doing it for her. She wasn't there to help him and, given this circumstance, undoubtedly felt no obligation to respond reassuringly. Most people would try to be reassuring or to help the victim to come to terms with the traumatic event-to say that what's past is past, that there is no reason to keep torturing yourself, that it does no good to keep going over the trauma, that you need to just let it go. That's how we react to continuing emotional suffering in our friends and relatives. What they hear is that their suffering is no longer justified-that they no longer DESERVE sympathy, even that they are being self-indulgent. Of course, no one would SAY that. People just want the victim " to get on with his life. " But it comes across as " stop wallowing. " Why is that? (snip) suffering typically is met with skepticism. Suffering in silence is considered heroic, which gets taken to extremes in the movies that help shape our ideals. Some thinkers have gone so far as to argue that the very word victim should be struck from our vocabulary (opposed to this age-old system of denial is the recent concept of " blaming the victim. " ) There is another reason why these attempts to be helpful come across to the sufferer as " stop wallowing. " We respond to our own suffering in the same way; we blame the victim when it's us. Victims are already feeling that they should get over it. They may begin feeling that pretty quickly-like right away. When teams of disaster counselors are sent to the scene of a massacre, these people are rarely professionals. They do not need to be, any more than did the man's niece with her video camera. Not much training is required, only the insight that their reassuring, nonjudgmental presence is what finally reconciles the person to the traumatic experience. They know to suppress the reflex to tell victims to quit feeling sorry for themselves or to offer all the disguised versions of this advice. In other words, they are trained to not respond the way everyone does. Difficult though it can be to suppress these reactions, when they do, and when they can stand having the victim tell the story in increasing detail, the traumatic reaction subsides. The presence of a nonjudgmental counselor earnestly and respectfully asking the victim to go over the traumatic event is both unnatural and relieving. Our reflexive disqualification of suffering goes pretty deep, and as you get more fully into it, it becomes apparent that at its core is the feeling of self-responsibility. (snip) Survivor guilt-guilt about surviving when the others didn't-is another self-blaming disqualification of suffering. (snip) [Greg: the next two paragraphs are key] Since survivors of profound and obvious disasters are so numbed to their pain, this should tell us that the usual run of much more ambiguous everyday blows must give us more trouble than we realize. (snip) Since even victims of massive trauma can doubt their right to their pain, this should help us to feel entitled to our doubts about how much we deserve to suffer from ambiguous or hard-to-detect everyday blows. This is to say that we have a lot of difficulty telling whether an experience is traumatic or not. We have mini- disasters, maybe micro-mini-disasters all the time in reaction to external and internal events. But that is not the problem. The problem is that it is hard for us to recognize these crises. (snip) Ego analysts are, in effect, disaster counselors about subtle crises. The reaction, if we are aware of it at all, is typically to feel at fault, to experience some kind of internal scolding or shaming, either seeming to come out of nowhere or, if more specific, being the self-recrimination that you should have been able to do something about it, or that you didn't deserve to be the survivor, or that you should have been more loving, less selfish, immature, crazy, or bad. But, unlike really clear self-recriminations, as in first-stage grief, the effect of our collisions with experience can be hard to describe, other than that the person feels UNENTITLED to the experience or that, as Dan Wile has put it (in How to be a Spokesperson), the effect is LOSS OF VOICE. What does feeling unentitled to the experience and losing one's voice about a subtle crisis look like? First of all, it may look to the naked eye like nothing happened, at least nothing that could be called a crisis. (snip) In other words, the trauma is in not being able to figure out what hit you. (snip) A woman in her therapy group described feeling tyrannized by her boyfriend and having no way to cope with it. The therapist was quoted as advising: " Life is pretty simple. You don't like something? You either accept what is, or you change it. " The therapist thought her forte was encouraging people to take charge of their lives. With every intention of being encouraging, the therapist comes down hard on the point that this woman just SHOULD take charge of her life. She might just as well have said to her, " Look, this is a test of character. Do you have what it takes or not? " Can you imagine the woman responding with, " Well, THAT'S not very sympathetic! " or, " You're just turning it back on ME! " Like the rest of us, this woman probably had trouble figuring out whether she was being traumatized; she can't tell when she is being made to look foolish or when she is being bullied. Then she is stuck. (snip) Not being able to have the experience, she will be stuck trying to find A SOLUTION, a way out of it. The therapist offers her one, making it harder for her to have HER FEELINGS, harder for her to believe she has a right to her pain-stuck trying to solve the problem, but unable to have the experience and unable to know that THAT was her problem. (snip) The woman apparently brightened and nodded appreciatively, which can be a reaction difficult to distinguish from embarrassment or from being in a mild state of shock. She was being told, in this cheerful way, that she was making life complicated and that complaining about her boyfriend was pretty lame. She may well have felt a little foolish, like the butt of a joke, but she would have not been able to acknowledge that feeling, even to herself. After all, she was accustomed to being tyrannized, as by her boyfriend. She may have genuinely wanted to feel grateful for this therapist's pronouncement, out of some vague hope that by accepting her as a wise all-seeing authority and, correspondingly, her own weakness or foolishness, she would somehow be ultimately empowered. This could make it especially hard to not take the therapist as she defines herself. The effect is loss of voice, certainly for any embarrassment. What creates relief for trauma survivors is being helped to believe that they have a right to suffer. If THEY doubt their right to suffer, what about the rest of us? (snip) And perhaps the point about the victim of everyday mini-disasters is that it is not at all clear that they are blameless, and it is not at all clear whether there even was a disaster. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 20, 2004 Report Share Posted February 20, 2004 >And perhaps the point about the victim of everyday mini-disasters is that it is not at all clear that they are blameless, and it is not at all clear whether there even was a disaster. Hi Greg, I have been thinking along the same lines and appreciate all the information avaliable to help remove this stigma from the victim. Today my 85 year old father was rushed to the hospital in another state, my brother, half my age, could not reach me, my cell phone battery was low and so he called my nada, she is not his mother, he asked her to locate me and pass the message on. He also left messages on my cell phone. I recieved the cell messages a few hours late but I was still able to speak to both my father and brother. The strange thing is that my mother called no one, not me, not my daughters, she made no effort to pass the information, that may lead to my fathers death, on to anyone. She is not senial, she knows all phone numbers and incidently she did not call my Dad in the hospital either. She has no ill will toward this man in fact she talks to him often but still she did not consider his feelings or mine. I hate to be so negitive but I bet that she was holding onto the information to make a point of making me look bad. Or guilty. I am over feeling much of anything when it comes to her and that is the slap in the face she can't take. I wish that the mental health community would let us tell our stories instead of expecting that we should overcome. They, the BP's and NP and Bipolar's should be held accountable and if the can't take the heat maybe they will go away. Seriously, I am fed up, the pain they dish out and the people hurt must stop and until we are allowed VOICE they have free reign. I am about to make that point very clear to the mental Health Clinic of a good sized town and see how they react. Vicki Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 20, 2004 Report Share Posted February 20, 2004 << I am about to make that point very clear to the mental Health Clinic of a good sized town and see how they react. >> Vicki, you are doing a brave thing. Be strong and we are here for you if they don't react well. Although I am so frustrated that my shrink doesn't have any idea what it is like to be me, he is really good about validating the reality of Nada's craziness. Every time he has a colleague visit from America he asks what is going on there, too. He tells me that even though I take my fear of America too personally, everyone he has talked to validates the reality of what I am seeing. - Dan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 20, 2004 Report Share Posted February 20, 2004 I hope it goes well, Vicki. I think a major problem is lack of funding. I don't think they have the money to help people sufficiently. But I also think that a lot of those in the mental help profession haven't healed themselves from their own punitive, authoritarian, controlling backgrounds. They can only feel their " un " entitled pain by projecting it onto their " patients " where they can then engage in the invalidating, self-loathing by proxy in a futile attempt to regain previously denied power. A vicious cycle of power denied and power sought. That's my pessimism for the day. Re: When are you justified in feeling a certain way? > << I am about to make that point very clear to the mental Health > Clinic of a good sized town and see how they react. >> > > Vicki, you are doing a brave thing. Be strong and we are here for > you if they don't react well. > > Although I am so frustrated that my shrink doesn't have any idea what > it is like to be me, he is really good about validating the reality > of Nada's craziness. Every time he has a colleague visit from > America he asks what is going on there, too. He tells me that even > though I take my fear of America too personally, everyone he has > talked to validates the reality of what I am seeing. > > - Dan > > > > > Send questions and/or concerns to ModOasis-owner > " Stop Walking on Eggshells, " a primer for non-BPs, can be ordered via 1-888-35-SHELL () and for the table of contents, go to: > http://www.BPDCentral.com > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 20, 2004 Report Share Posted February 20, 2004 > They can only feel their " un " entitled pain by projecting it onto their " patients " where they can then engage in the invalidating, self- loathing by proxy in a futile attempt to regain previously denied power. A vicious cycle of power denied and power sought. That's my pessimism for the day. Greg, Again I do agree with you. I am seething a bit at the moment while my father is told he will have a tripple by pass on Monday and my mother still has called no one, her therapst is on my list of calls. How do I get it across to these people that her behaviour is increassingly damaging to her family. I would like to say it is her age but only in that her time is shorter and her goal to seek and dystroy more focused. >While they offer support to me for her ruthless actions what I want is an admission of an illnees and family intervention. That seems unlikely as it violates her rights. Vicki > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 20, 2004 Report Share Posted February 20, 2004 > Q: When are you justified in feeling a certain way? > > A: Trick question. A better question is " when are you going to feel entitled to have the feeling that you unavoidably already have? " > > Thanks for putting this out on the board. I think it ties into what my therapist has been trying to get me to talk about. I tend to 'look at the positive'. This is probably good for someone who is always pessimistic. But I am not. What I have done is minimized my painful feelings by replacing them with 'the positive'. Until I accept those feelings, and recognized their cause, and own that I have a right to feel the way I do, I am not going to heal. Sylvia Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 21, 2004 Report Share Posted February 21, 2004 Vicki, I understand your anger that your mother didn't call you, or anyone. Especially if you believe she is doing this to destroy you or make you look bad. That just hurts big time! What kind of family intervention are you hoping for the mental health clinic to do? I'm not clear on that. Free --- In ModOasis , " eventoftheseason " > > Greg, > Again I do agree with you. I am seething a bit at the moment while > my father is told he will have a tripple by pass on Monday and my > mother still has called no one, her therapst is on my list of calls. > How do I get it across to these people that her behaviour is > increassingly damaging to her family. I would like to say it is her > age but only in that her time is shorter and her goal to seek and > dystroy more focused. >While they offer support to me for her > ruthless actions what I want is an admission of an illnees and family > intervention. That seems unlikely as it violates her rights. > Vicki > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 21, 2004 Report Share Posted February 21, 2004 > Vicki, > > I understand your anger that your mother didn't call you, or anyone. > Especially if you believe she is doing this to destroy you or make > you look bad. That just hurts big time! > > What kind of family intervention are you hoping for the mental health > clinic to do? I'm not clear on that. > > Free > > --- Dear Free, I would like them to call a family meeting/without my mother and tell my daughters and me, together, what my mother's mental condition is and what they feel we should be expecting from her. In easy words, like your mother has an disorder? that cause's her to distort the truth and play people against one another, this disorder is not going to change but you can change as a family by knowing that she may/will cause problems between you if she can keep you from communicating with one another. She has been doing this for years and it would make some sence for the 3 of you to have a few family therpy sessions. They could explain some of the reality of personality disorders, like the need to control. Am I asking the impossible? What I hear is " you can only change your own reaction, not someone else's. " And by the time I am finished argueing that point the time is up. I am already fed up with the whole thing and see it as a money making job that has no authority to expose her mental problems to her family unless we try to have her declared incompetent. Cheers, Vicki Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 21, 2004 Report Share Posted February 21, 2004 Viki What I hear is " you can only change your own reaction, not someone else's. " Cheers, Vicki Vicki, This is not true. By changing how you choose to react someone you throw them off kilter and they will react differently. It still may not be positive, but it will definitely be different. I read this a long time ago and tested it. It works every time. Debbie K. Send questions and/or concerns to ModOasis-owner " Stop Walking on Eggshells, " a primer for non-BPs, can be ordered via 1-888-35-SHELL () and for the table of contents, go to: http://www.BPDCentral.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 22, 2004 Report Share Posted February 22, 2004 I wish I could have had that type of info growing up. > Dear Free, > I would like them to call a family meeting/without my mother and tell > my daughters and me, together, what my mother's mental condition is > and what they feel we should be expecting from her. In easy words, > like your mother has an disorder? that cause's her to distort the > truth and play people against one another, this disorder is not going > to change but you can change as a family by knowing that she may/will > cause problems between you if she can keep you from communicating > with one another. She has been doing this for years and it would > make some sence for the 3 of you to have a few family therpy sessions. > > They could explain some of the reality of personality disorders, like > the need to control. Am I asking the impossible? What I hear > is " you can only change your own reaction, not someone else's. " And > by the time I am finished argueing that point the time is up. > I am already fed up with the whole thing and see it as a money making > job that has no authority to expose her mental problems to her family > unless we try to have her declared incompetent. > Cheers, Vicki Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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