WHAT is GUILT? (Part 3)

 

PREVIOUS: What is Guilt (#2)

 

 

POINT 3. “GENERAL” Types


POINT 4
MAIN REASON for ACoA Guilt (cont)

ACoAs feel guilty FOR :
• getting sick, being tired, not wanting to do something ….
• having our own opinions, likes, dislikes, needs & desires
• ‘making’ anyone angry at us, no matter what the reason
• standing up for our rights (we think it’s selfish & being confrontational)
taking time for ourselves, needing down time, taking a vacation, enjoying ourselves
FOR NOT:
• being able to stop someone from drinking, drugging, or doing other self-destructive things
• being perfect
• being smarter, more sociable, more successful, more outgoing…
• knowing something, or taking too long to learn things (so many ‘shoulds’)
• making our parents, friends, lovers, children… healthy & happy

DEFENSES against FEELING Guilt
• Avoidance = “I’m too busy to deal with it”
• Condemning the agency = “The universe is against me”
• Denial = “I didn’t mean anything by it”
• Dissociation = “I never said that”
• Justification =  “I can’t help being bad”
• Minimizing = “I think you’re being too sensitive”
• Projection = “They asked for it”
• Rationalizing = “I did it because you were being a jerk”
• Self-abuse = “I feel better when I hurt myself”
• Self-deprivation = “I don’t deserve anything good”
• Sharing = “Listen to this….(ha, ha) I’m such an idiot”

 RESULTs of BREAKING Toxic Rules:
Internal Backlash, in the form of abusive self-talk, being irritable, getting sick, feeling depressed, heightened anxiety, panic attacks…..
These can be countered by understanding where the backlash comes from, knowing that we’re doing the healthy thing, & comforting the scared WIC

External Backlash – possibly from family, if we’re in contact, since they want us to ‘stick to the plan’ & not abandon them by being different.
Also from friends, bosses, mates, even children – for the same reason – they’re used to the ‘old’ us, & don’t want to make any changes in themselves to accommodate our growth!

OK, so NOW :
▪︎ we’ve identified our specific unhealthy rules
▪︎ & understand that obeying them retards / prevents progress
▪︎ & decided that to Heal & Grow, we have to stop obeying them —-
What then? ⬇️

POINT 5. HEALTH
Yes, at first we can expect the painful emotion of guilt.  But:
This time – the guilt is a SIGNAL we’re doing something good for ourselves.  Since we don’t want to return to obeying sick rules, we can confidently say:
“This feeling of guilt is actually telling me that I’m on the right track – so by NOT obeying a harmful rule I’m doing something healthy for myself”. YEAYH!

✶ If we continue to dis-obey toxic rules, guilt will eventually diminish & in some areas even go away completely. So, it’s imperative that we tolerate this kind of guilt & backlash, in the short-term, & continue thinking & acting in self-esteeming / self-empowering ways, even in the face of opposition.

✶ Because this process is stressful, we need the right kind of supportive people in our life, to encourage our efforts, process confusing thoughts, reinforce our resolve & applaud our progress.
As long as the support is positive & realistic, it can come from anywhere – healthy family members, friends, therapy, books, internet, 12-step meetings, co-dependence rehab, clergy & spiritual disciplines….

NOTE : ACoA recovery-guilt is different from guilt about things we’re actually done that harmed ourselves or others. We need to deal with them separately.

We’ve heard that “confession is good for the soul”, & when done in the right places it provides forgiveness, which alleviates guilt.
The 12-Steps remind us that “We’re only as sick as our secrets”, so after writing out the Step 4 Inventory, Step 5 says: ” Admitted to God, to ourselves, & to another human being the exact nature of our wrongs”.

From “PERCEPTIONS”, the tv series (Season 2, #7)
Lecture on Confession & the Brain:

“…… Got a secret? Right now there’s a war going on in your brain – your cingulate cortex wants to tell the truth, but the orbital prefrontal cortex is calculating how bad it’ll be…
If the prefrontal wins, your stress level goes up. If the cingulate wins, stress drops.
So if it’s biologically healthier to confess our secrets, what is it about human nature that make us fight so hard keep them hidden?  Although we may be desperate to bury them, the more we try, the more they surface. We are neurologically compelled to confess……”

As for ACoA Recovery-guilt, repeating new, healthy actions that counters our harmful beliefs will create new pathways in the brain – making it easier & more natural to be comfortable & successful in all aspects of our lives.

NEXT: What is SHAME? #1

WHAT is GUILT? (Part 2)

 

PREVIOUS: What is Guilt (#1)

SITE:   How to ditch the guilt of putting yourself first

 

POINT 3. “GENERAL” Types (cont)
In addition to those listed in Part 1 dealing with action / non-actions, there are:
• Adaptive (pro-social) – considered helpful guilt, as it relates to a person’s genuine understanding of wrongdoing & responsibility

• Maladaptive – chronic guilt that leads to mental or emotional distress, & therefore has a negative impact on life.
People with unresolved guilt might feel irritable or always on edge, overly clingy or apologetic. This guilt can show up as physical symptoms: insomnia, digestive issues (stomach pain, nausea….), headaches, mental confusion, muscle tension, tearfulness…..

🌱 Genuine guilt mobilizes. 🔪Self-punishment paralyzes
🌱 Genuine guilt leads to repairing relationships. 🔪Self-punishment makes us withdraw from connecting
🌱 Genuine guilt helps improve damaged relationships with others. 🔪Self-punishment damages relationship with oneself.

POINT 4MAIN REASON for ACoA Guilt
GUILT is an emotion that ACoAs feel often & intently. It’s a familiar companion of negative self-talk & of actions we believe to be bad, but which are not always.
G is an inevitable side-effect of self-hate, since our WIC’s default position is that we’re intrinsically bad, so anything that goes wrong for us (that hurts) is OUR FAULT.

This self-hate assumption is never to be questioned & is very hard to give up, even when we ‘know better’ – because we think it makes us less vulnerable, a little more powerful!
After all, if “it’s my fault – then it’s in my control to stop the pain – up to me to fix the problem, change something about myself or the other person – which will make it all better”!

Perfectionism leads to ACoA guilt. “If I fail at anything, no matter how small, then I’m not perfect & then I’ll never get the love, acceptance & validation from my family, & then by no one else in the whole world.”

MEANING: “I can do something to make things better.” We naturally thought that obeying their rules would work
PROBLEM : Not only were those rules cognitive distortions, they also kept changing, were endlessly contradictory or simply impossible to fulfill. And the adults didn’t follow their own rules! Remember “Do as I say, not as I do” ? ? It was crazy-making!

In childhood – having power over our circumstances was an illusion, since the cause of our pain came from outside of ourselves. Alcoholic, narcissistic family members & others were the source of our suffering, which we had NO control over – no matter how hard we tried to please. There never was a way to win!  We were not a failure.
⬅️ Hogwarts’ Wall of Rules

HOW IT WORKS for ACoAs:
1. Guilt is the emotion – generated by ↩
2. Breaking a law or rule – of ↩
3. Society, government, religion, community, school or family
4. Category of rules we feel guilty for breaking ate Toxic FAMILY Rules
(“If you don’t like it you have to stay! / Only other people’s needs matter / don’t trust anyone, don’t have fun, don’t think for yourself….”)
✶ If the family’s rules had been healthy, we would currently be doing positive, self-esteeming things, most of the time
✶ Because most of the rules were unhealthy, we continue to act on them in ways that hurt ourselves & others, on a regular basis.

Therefore – ACoA guilt is caused by any thought or action which disobeys any direct or indirect rule we internalized as kids.

IMPORTANT to remember:
• most ACoAs don’t realize we’ve absorbed those toxic rules & are automatically obeying them – but we can tell by our habit-patterns. They’re the self-defeating things we automatically do over & over.
• we don’t have to consciously agree with the rules – but the WIC has to believe they applies to itself, no matter how much we may hate it or intellectually know they don’t make sense

True PURPOSE of Guilt :Screen Shot 2016-06-05 at 5.47.18 PM
➼ To make a person (or group) go back to obeying the law or rule they broke.
This is the legitimate reason for human guilt – a natural & positive thing. It’s built into our psyche, like the ability to love. People devoid of guilt are sociopaths / psychopaths.

🔻 We are not trying to get rid of all guilt – we need it to tell us how to behave in safe & appropriately ways, for everyone’s benefit.
🔸The issue for most ACoAs is that we feel guilty about things that are not actually bad – like having needs, emotions !

NEXT: What is Guilt (#3)

WHAT is GUILT? (Part 1)

Man with tamI PLEAD GUILTY !
Since everything is about ME (isn’t it?)- it must be me, I’m always wrong

PREVIOUS: ACoA SiteMap

SITEs:  How to deal with Guilt Trippers
3 Types of Guilt & How to Let Them Go

NOTE: See ACRONYM page for abbrev.

POINT 1. Guilt (G) is a normal EMOTION, but not a primary one like fear, joy, sadness, love….
Since it helps preserve social bonds, a moderate amount of guilt is adaptive. Too much is crippling, repeatedly telling lies trains the brain to ignore feeling bad about it, & not having any remorse is psychopathic.
ACoA focus on guilt explained in Part 2

POINT 2. Guilt is the emotion mainly related to ACTIONS or NON-actions, but also to ‘unacceptable’ thoughts & wishes

POINT 3. General USES of guilt are for:
a.
 exerting influence – G is used by some people in close relationships to control another’s behavior (MORE….)
— the one with less power can get their way by guilting the one with more
EXP: “If you loved me, you wouldn’t do that / would do that for me”
— The one with more power can shame & punish the one with less
EXP: “I guess you mean I shouldn’t have been a mother” when told of old hurts

b. spreading out emotional stress – negative & positive sides of a ‘bad’ situation – acknowledging you’ve messed up, AND showing you care about that person or event
EXP: “If you (person A) feel guilty over not taking out the garbage, chances are your spouse (person B)–who wanted it taken out–will feel better knowing that. In this way, emotional equity is restored, because bad feelings in A are restored to B, who caused them,” (psychologist Roy F. Baumeister, CWRU of OH) Abstract Article

c. maintaining relationships – G depends on inter-personal context, a two-person experience, which can help make people pay attention to others
EXP: feeling bad about not keeping a promise, not spending enough time with loved ones, not responding to texts….
Given how uncomfortable guilt can feel, it can provide a strong motive to apologize, correct or make up for a wrong, & be more responsibly in future- BUT only if the mis-behavior is legitimate

‘Normal’ TYPES of G – in relation to actions, cause by:
a
. something you did — wrong : that harmed another person, that violated your own ethical or moral code, or something you swore you’d never do again. In these cases, there’s no doubt it happened

b. something you didn’t do, but want to — thinking a lot about an action that’s against your own principles, or is dishonest, unfaithful, or illegal.

This kind of G can be confusing, with conscience poking a finger at you.
Since you didn’t actually commit the act (yet), & no one know what you’re thinking – you’re still on moral high ground. But obsessing about wanting to do something you know is wrong (for yourself or toward others) can make you very uncomfortable

c. something you think you did — A lot of present-day unhappiness comes from our own irrational thoughts about situations we’re in. Some people will be wracked with G if they’re convinced they did something wrong, even if there’s no objective evidence of that.

EXP: The magical belief you can jinx people by just wishing them ill, without acting on it. If something bad actually happens to them later, you’ll secretly think it was because you were that powerful!  At some level you ‘know’ that’s illogical, but it’s hard to give up the belief altogether

d. that you didn’t do enough to help someone — who you know is having a hard time or is sick, but you don’t call to check on them or help in some practical way.
OR – you’re already doing too much for someone, & you take a break or just stop, because you’re burned out (compassion fatigue). Continuing to act out of guilt will only drain you further & end up making you a less effective helper

e. that you’re doing better than someone else. It can be:
— adult children doing much better in life than their alcoholic / narcissistic family, or poorly-adapted immigrant parents, such as going to college, making more money….. even if they say they want their children to succeed

— the only person left in the family after some natural (fire) or social (war) disaster, often will feel survivor guilt, even though the event was totally out of their control. This can have Spiritual implications – they were meant to survive for a reason. 😢

NEXT: What is Guilt (#2)

SITE MAP of the ACoA website

 

“HEAL & GROW for ACoAs”
80+ pages of great info!  

Go to http://www.acoarecovery.com,
& click on SITE MAP to navigate

 

ABOUT ME
Pg. 81-83 • Info, Background & Testimonials

ACoA SYMPTOMS
3  • Laundry list, 12 Steps for ACoAs
4  • Unhealthy Parenting
5, 6   •  Expanded characteristics
7  •  NARCISSISTS – characteristics
8  • Cognitive Distortions, w/ examples

ARTICLE
69, 70 • “Healthy Opposites- Change Behavior to Change Your Life”

BARGAINs WITH FATE
12,13 •  Intro & 5 Bargains  (from Shakespeare’s plays)

BLOG
87 • as of 7/15/10 — 16 entries

BOOKS
84,85 • Recovery Titles

BOUNDARIES (Bs)
39  •  Definition, Purpose
40, 41  •  Unhealthy Bs
42-44  •  Healthy Bs  (emotional, mental, physical)

CO-DEPENDENCE
45, 46 • Definitions; Unhealthy & Healthy

COURSE
55-58 • “Knowledge is Power: What Makes an ACoA” outlines

DECISIONS
72 •  Good  & Bad Approaches
73-74 • Extensive List of Personal Values
75-76  • Types of Decision Makers
77-79  • Decision Making Criteria (1-5)

DEFINITIONS
52-54 • Brief explanations of Confusing Terms

4 FAMILY ROLES
20 • Toxic Roles: Hero, Scapegoat, Lost Child, Mascot

EFFECTIVE RESPONSES
51 • Short & longer THINGS to SAY back to abuse or stupidity !

EMOTIONS
47 • Extensive list of emotions words
48-50 • Unhealthy & Healthy expressions/ uses of ANGER

FRIENDS
80 • Extensive list of characteristics

HEAD GAMES
9, 10 • 4 common games
11 •  4 more games, Expanded

INNER CHILD
14 – 17 • ‘Parent, Adult & Child’: Voices, Purpose, Characteristicssca0219
18, 19  • Developmental Stages, Memo from Child

LINKS
86 • @ Narcissists, etc.

NEW RULES
65, 66 • Healthy rules to take care of the Inner Child

RECOVERY
59, 60 • What it’s NOT & what it IS
61- 63  • Mental Health & Healthy Families
64  •  Benefits of Group Therapy

RELATIONSHIPS
23,24 • Issues & Beliefs
25-27 • Intimacy – Unhealthy & Healthy
28 • Love addiction; Power Plays
32 • LOVE – 5 languages, 5 Types
33 • TRUST – Who can, why not, How To
34 • Gay & Lesbian ACoAs
35 • M vs F ways of Responding
36 • 16 Men – by Myers-Briggs Typing
37 • Givers vs Takers

SAYINGS
67, 68 • Affirmations, Promises, Serenity Prayer

SEX & LOVE ADDICTION
29, 30 • Self-Diagnostic Qs

SEXUAL ABUSE
31, 32 • Survivors’ Symptoms;  Recovery

TOXIC RULES
21, 22 • Long & Short versions of dysfunctional childhood rules

WORK ISSUES
71 • ACoAs at Work; Healthy ways to work

NEXT: What id GUILT?

Loneliness in RECOVERY (Part 4)


PREVIOUS: Recovery Loneliness #3

SITEs : Beating 4 Types of Loneliness
🔐 Healthy Loneliness (for Seniors)

With RECOVERY
If we diligently stick to the growth process, we find that loneliness is no longer a major issue, because the emptiness is being filled with the Healthy Child, The Loving Parent, perhaps a Higher Power, appropriate companions & guides. In recovery we’ll feel connected & able to handle things – more of the time – even when things are rocky.

We don’t suffer L. as often, since we:

1. found our True Self. The goal is to be a whole person, not fragmented into compartments that don’t communicate or are always at odds. We accept even the imperfect & still wounded parts. The PP & WIC voice are much quieter, which once created the inner loneliness

2. willingly accept ALL our emotions, having learned to comfort ourselves when stressed or in pain, & allow ourselves to revel in the pleasant or joyful ones, becoming the Positive Parent we never had

3. have internal permission from the Loving Parent in the form of Healthy Introject to receive respect, attention, validation, love….
For some of us it took a great effort to take in positive regard form others, because it forced us to feel the contrast with the enormity of childhood emotional & psychological deprivation

4. don’t have to hide from others, since:
• knowing who we are, we don’t have to depend on unreliable others
• our wounds are no longer raw & over-sensitive. FoA no longer runs us
• we’re not afraid of our anger, being in charge of our rage
• we’ve developed reasonable boundaries, knowing where we end & others begin, which makes us feel safe

5. are more comfortable being visible & able to take appropriate risks. It allows us to be more pro-active when connecting with individuals & groups, sharing our thoughts & talents – without the self-conscious worry about being judged

enjoy life6. know what we like, want, have a right to, what we’re good / great at….and so:
• actively follow our dreams & freely express our creativity
• can ask for as much help as we need, since we can’t possibly know everything, & don’t have to do everything alone (nor go without)
• go to the right people for those needs or wants. We’ve developed a large enough pool of support & resources to draw from so we don’t feel bereft, even when faced with difficulties

7. can leave unsuitable people & situations much sooner, by picking up on many large & small Red Flags (cues), from them & in ourself, when something isn’t working. We don’t have to stay bored, uncomfortable or annoyed by PPT that are not a good fit, AND can keep looking until we find the ones that do!

8. don’t spend much time worrying what others think of us, want from us or if they’ll reject us, because we’re no longer desperate to stay connected.
NOR do we waste energy obsessing about others who are NOT taking care of themself, & so don’t rescue them by doing for them what they can do for themselves.

We can think of Recovery as progressively healthier Dependencies:
shilft dependence
NATURALLY – we need to remember that no Recovery process is ever complete or smooth. The list above is a general outline of a healthy person, but as ACoAs we all have some regressions, occasional depression & loneliness. These can come from present circumstances or from past trauma. In any case, we’re responsible now for creating a safe environment for our Inner Children.

❇️ We are NOT looking to get rid of the WIC, but rather integrating him or her into a good Inner Family who work to help each other – Good Parent, Skillful Adult & Happy Kid.

NEXT: Website site-map // What is guilt?

Loneliness in RECOVERY (Part 3)

not lonely

I NEVER IMAGINED
I’d ever be this comfortable!

PREVIOUS: Loneliness in Recovery (Part 2)

SITE: The GIFT of Loneliness ~ Dr. Chip Dodd (scroll down)


The middle A :
ACCEPTANCE  (#3)
Recovery (Rec) Loneliness is part of the process, so it’s normal & to be expected
(cont.):

6. Accept temporary Rec. Loneliness of…..
…. Shifting our dependence on to ourselves & our Higher Power as the Good-Parent we never had. Humans will always let us down, even the best ones, but “God, as we understand Him’ never will.

NOTE: For those of us who have trouble with this (from lack of faith, anger at the God of our childhood, or not having a concept of a H.P. greater than ourselves…) we can ask for guidance from Governing Principle that will be a comfort to us. connect W.HP

TRUSTING an unseen Spirit Being or Force is hard when we don’t trust anyone or anything. But that can start the shift by learning to trust ourselves, AND by picking healthier more reliable people. Also, because Spirit is intangible, we need to be in touch with the emotions housed in the Healthy Child & Loving Parent ego states, which includes our intuition or 6th sense.

SOME RESULTS
Emotions from leaving inappropriate people can be sadness & brief loneliness, OR relief and healthy self-congratulation – which we’re not used to & not ‘allowed’ – & think it’s arrogant & selfish!

Practical outcomes can be:
• short-term isolation, which we need to process such big changes, but not from fear, guilt, shame or S-H
• that some people we distance from can’t tolerate their own abandonment pain, so will keep bugging us : ”What happened? Where are you? Are you all right”? even after telling them you need alone to thinkspace, or ending with a final good-buy.
If you’re truly done, you don’t have to respond. We are not responsible for THEIR WIC, even tho we can understand & have compassion
• we’ll feel lighter & have more energy for our own life & pursuits
• having the space to add in more & more healthy suitable people/ places & things (PPT) for ourselves

Keep in mind Al-Anon’s 3 As:
1. Awareness 2. Acceptance & 3. Action.
It’s never healthy to jump from #1 to #3, which is what most ACoAs do automatically. We need to spend as much time in #2 as our psyche /WIC needs. Then the eventual Actions will likely be much healthier.

Occasionally we’ll still find ourselves lonely, as when we’re :
• with the wrong people, which triggers old Abandonment pain
• outgrowing old ‘supports’, leaving behind (or limiting contact with) people & locations we’ve had in our life for a very long time, but were never suitable, or just plain bad for us
• moving on to each new level of personal growth, from :
“I don’t belong anywhere”—-> to —-> “I know who I am & I go where it’s warm”

With RECOVERY we don’t feel as deeply L. because:
• the L. that was based on S-H & hopelessness is so much milder
• we know it’s OK to the alone when we want to, & it’s not isolating, nor an indication that we feel unwanted & unlovable, ie. unsafe
• we’re more likely to find a healthier life partner, if we want one, not out of loneliness but to share our principles, goals & dreams
• we’re living mainly in the positive present, & enjoying it

These big ‘changes for the better’ can be hard on us emotionally, as another layer of old pain surfaces, but now we know how to deal with it because the UNIT is in charge, & we’re happy to clean out more of the old damage.

NEXT: Recovery from Loneliness #4

Loneliness in RECOVERY (Part 2)

separation I’M NOT  LONELY AS OFTEN
now that I have myself!

PREVIOUS: Recovery Loneliness (#1)

SITE: Stop being Lonely in Recovery

The middle A : ACCEPTANCE  (PART 3)
Recovery (Rec) Loneliness is part of the process, so it’s normal & to be expected
(cont.):

4. Accept temporary Rec. loneliness of……
….. re-evaluating all our relationships. At first we just become aware of the problem, slowly we consider leaving the most blatantly inappropriate / abusive people, then eventually catch the more subtle ways people are harmful, unavailable or just plain unsuitable for us, no matter how good they look ‘on paper’leaving

….. realizing that actual ‘leaving’ comes in stages too. Some people just drift away, some we have to have a talk with, some will not accept the loss & pursue us.
And then there are the relationships we’ll keep falling back into – even when we know they’re not healthy for us, because the WIC is not ready to let go of them, so we’re conflicted. When the kid is sick & tired of being sick & tired (being on the same page as the UNIT) – we move on, with little or no regret!

5. Accept temporary Rec. loneliness of……
….. an increasing Awareness (the first A):
• of anyone one who is not ‘all there‘, We may live them & they may not be a bad person BUT they’re shut down, distracted, narcissistic, not available – fir us. We are truly alone with such people & we don’t like that anymore! (YEAH!)
• that we get confused when someone tries to ‘help’ us, yet we still feel angry, alone, lonely, misunderstood.
Screen Shot 2015-07-12 at 7.57.56 PM— Sometimes this is because the WIC is still not allowed to be helped by anyone, BUT more often
– we’re legitimately picking up that the solicitousness to help is tainted, because they’re controlling, narcissistic, people-pleasing or a rescuer.
We come to realize that it’s being offered for their benefit not ours. That leaves us alone – again!

• that in early Recovery we tend to idealize NEW support people or groups who are genuinely helpful, kind & gentle. This is the WIC experiencing them as the Good Parent, rather than just healthier peers. As long as we idealize anyone – we will be let down & disappointed when they don’t / can’t live up to our fantasies.

✶✶ However, for those of us with parents still alive – a very important & powerful Recovery experience is when we finally ‘get it’ that being with our unhealed family IS being mentally & emotionally alone – no matter how well behaved they may be with us in the present.
It’s not just our imagination or some flaw in us. It’s that they haven’t done the ‘work’ & are still shut down, still ‘active’, still self-centered…. so our connection is superficial. We want more, but they’re simply not available.dumping everone

a. Too fast – re letting go
When we first truly see of how unhealthy / harmful many of our long-term relationships are, some of us will want to get rid of everyone right away, & may start dumping our whole phone book.

If the phone list is very recent, that may be appropriate. But it doesn’t make sense to compulsively throw the baby out with the bath water.  Ending all old relationships at once – if at all – will be too jarring, leaving us bereft of any connections before we can replace them with more loving ones.

b. Too slowly : At the other extreme are those of us who procrastinate, taking too long to separate, especially those long-term relationships that were once important to us. We’re afraid of —
— being disloyal (even tho they are not worthy of it)
— hurting their feelings (even tho they rarely considered ours)
— losing some fun, good things about them
— the loss of our illusions about how badly they treat us, even tho we’ve always really known there was something wrong, but couldn’t admit it. It’s scary to realize how off our thinking has been.

NEXT: Recovery Loneliness – Part 3

Loneliness in RECOVERY (Part 1)

lonely with cat I CAN STAND THE DISCOMFORT
of loneliness because it’s not forever

PREVIOUS: Adult Loneliness  (#3

SITE: Will I go crazy?”  re. loneliness

TWO STEPS FORWARD….
While all Recovery progress is positive, it’s never in a straight line & doesn’t always feel good – as much as we’d all like it to.  Instead, we move forward at a slow pace, often falling back into old ways & sometimes feeling discouraged, like we’re never going to ‘get it’.

John Bradshaw’s statement that a therapist’s job is to take a client “from their misery into their pain” (from Self-Hate into Abandonment pain) also applies to us individually on our journey thru Recovery.  We need to feel old wounds – a little at a time, & that includes Loneliness.
Is takes courage & perseverance. Recovery (Rec.) creates ‘opportunities’ for feeling lonely, which is a sign of growth as we leave old ways behind!

The middle A : ACCEPTANCE  (PART 2)
The following sources of Rec. Loneliness are part of the process, so they’re normal & to be expected:

1. Accept temporary Rec. loneliness of……
….. separating from childhood damage (our ‘story’). Any form of ‘letting go’ leaves a temporary feeling of depression & emptiness – as it taps into our childhood sorrow & rage, intense fear & emptiness.
It means:S & I
separation & Individuation (S & I) from the PP voice & our resulting S-H, the Toxic Rules & Toxic Roles. These interlopers clogging our Inner Space have to be replaced with the UNIT (Loving Parent + Healthy Adult).

• gradually letting go of a variety of addictions. When we stop numbing the “hole in the soul”, the emptiness (lack of True Self) lets us feel how alone we’ve been

• outgrowing the compulsion to be symbiotically attached to someone, anyone, which then lets us feel how lonely it is to be with people who are wrong for us. It’s accepting that we all have to live in our own skin (‘existential aloneness’), which is healthy & normal. We do need others & especially out H.P., but not in a desperate, needy-child way.

2. Accept temporary Rec. Loneliness of…..
….. getting to know our IC (especially the Healthy one) – & building the UNIT. We gradually become aware that we do notinner child have a monster inside, but a deeply, desperately HURT CHILD (WIC).

The WIC may always want to be taken care of by someone else, so there’s a loneliness in letting go of other people as potential parents.
Guides, mentors,  teachers, friends…. are appropriate & needed, BUT not in a caretaker role. That’s for us to do, to become compassionate & dependable (trustworthy).
• Any form of dialogue with our younger self will gradually fill the emptiness. Book-ending with the WIC helps shift its focus from past to present-day reality.

3. Accept temporary Rec. loneliness of..
….. doing fewer & fewer self-defeating things. This can be very scary for a while, so we need patience & faith in the process because:
• it’s disorienting to function in a new pattern, until we get used to it
disobeying the Toxic Rules can bring with it varying degrees of internal backlash, & sometimes very real disapproval or punishment from disobey rulesothers – mainly the narcissists

• it leaves us wondering who we are. We won’t completely prevent the PP voice from whispering in our ear, but at first, as we stop obeying it, we can feel confused & alone. We think: “Who am I without ‘them’?” if we’re not that Role or Persona we developed in childhood.
The WIC is afraid we’ll have no identity without the old familiar ‘self’, which is mainly made up of defenses.
In reality we were born with a personality all our own & need to strip away the False Identity to find that out.

NEXT: Recovery Loneliness (Part 2)

ACoAs – Adult Loneliness (Part 3)

lonely girl
PREVIOUS: Adult Loneliness (Part 2)

SITE: “The Web of Loneliness

 

1. ACoA Loneliness (previous 2 posts)

2. DEFENSES against L.
Most ACoAs are not conscious of being intensely Lonely, or when we do feel it, usually assume it’s about missing someone. We’re not aware that many of our ‘character defects’, actions & no-actions are related to defending against this deep & pervasive emotion.

Studies by Chicago U. social psychologist John Cacioppo on the biological effects of Loneliness show that :
▶ Much like the threat of physical pain, L. informs us of our ‘social body’, letting us know when connections start to fray, as the brain goes on alert to look for social threats.
Being lonely can generate a wide range of coping mechanisms, from emotional over-reactions to negative behaviors. Since many lonely people see those extremes as undesirable, they withdraw even more, falling deeper into isolation. L. doesn’t just make people feel unhappy, it actually makes them feel unsafe — mentally & physically.

MISCONCEPTIONS
• “I’m the only one who feels this way”. Unfortunately all the other very lonely people in the world think the same – but they (& you) are probably either covering it up or hiding out, so we never meet each other, OR if we do – don’t know how the other is really feeling depression . hiding

• “There’s something wrong with me if I’m lonely – a sign of weakness, immaturity, a defect in my personality”. Of course this is S-H. If we’re chronically L. then we have unhealed damage, but we’re NOT defective!

a. COVERING UP (passive)
bad relationships – getting stuck & won’t leave –  even when unhappy or scared, assuming we can’t bear to be on our own, that bad better than nothing
depression – feeling sorry for ourselves, re. loss of support & loved ones, but don’t so anything, or not enough, to relieve it

fantasy – living in our head, day-dreaming about people, place & things (PPT) we wish we had
illnesses (real) – artery hardening, inflammation, memory & learning problems, immune diseases…. OR being a =
• hypochondriac (not physically real)
, unconsciously wanting attention & ‘nurturing’ from doctors or caretakers

isolatihalo womanon – fear we’ll be hurt more, never learned to talk or act comfortably, from S-H, guilt & shame, assuming rejection is inevitable
obsessing – who we wish we were with, what we’ll do some day, what we did wrong, what we should have said, what they think of us ….
religiosity / ‘spirituality’ – “so heavenly minded you’re no earthy good”, or being overly zealous about beliefs & morals

paranoia (actually: convinced we’re everyone’s negative focus). The fact that it’s bad attention is painful, but better than none at all!
procrastination – not taking positive actions from perfectionism & confusion, to not be abandoned & feel L. (WIC beaten up by PP)
sleeping – associated with depression, as escape (more than 8 hrs, not from over-work, illness or a change in meds)

b. ACTING OUT (active)
addictions – this is obvious, & now includes spending too much time on social media inanways crankystead of face-to-face
always angry – gives us an illusion of control, even though not real, so it feels better to be angry (that no one loves me) than the vulnerability of loneliness

controlling – “If I can make everything & everyone be the way I want, I’ll be OK & then not L. & scared”
fighting – any contact feels better than none
grandiosity – assuming we can DO more than is possible, pumped up to cover feeling unworthy, making ourselves seem more important, powerful, in charge…. than we really feel – or are
over-doing – running, running (even if it’s ‘all good’ stuff), so we never always runninghave a minute to FEEL
suicide attempts – trying to silence the BAD voice, & can’t bear old accumulated pain, not knowing how to heal it
talking too much – to fill the emptiness, OR when we finally get someone to talk to after stretches of isolation, then a backlog of thoughts & feelings rush out
touchy – easily hurt by any ‘slight’, experienced as a personal rejection, taking things personally & then lashing out, making it harder to connect – even though we want to loneliness chart

NEXT: Loneliness in Recovery (Part 1)

 

ACoAs – Adult Loneliness (Part 2)

 

 PREVIOUS : Adult Loneliness #1

<— “Alone in a crowd” by DMT

 

1. ACoA Loneliness (L.) (cont.)
a. Protecting Ourselves
b. Protecting Others

c. Not Eligible
DEF of Eligible: Qualified, Entitled, Desirable or Worthy to be chosen / wanted. Having access to benefits. ‘Qualified’ implies earning the criteria for something, whereas ‘eligible’ implies you already have it (inborn &/or learned).

• Because of all the neglect & rejection from our family, we grow up not allowed to have our rights, feeling NOT eligible …..
….. to belong – anywhere – so we become paranoid, projecting rejection onto anyone who is not totally, continually attentive, yet not trusting that anyone will really like us  – even when they’re kind
don't be happy….. for anything good, positive, easy, so we’re always longing
….. to know our needs (much less to receive them), so we anxiously wait for others to intuit & provide them, who can’t possibly guess
NOT eligible …..
….. to be visibleso we can’t take normal, appropriate risks, having to hide how we really feel, hide our strength & power
….. to follow our dreamsso we settle for crumbs, doing things we hate or don’t care about, get stuck in ruts, tolerate mediocrity & boredom
….. to relax, feel safe & have fun (parties, vacations, or just ‘vegging’)
.… to enjoy any successes we do have – always afraid someone’s going to find out ‘the truth’ : that we’re really frauds!

✶ IRONY: Our accomplishments are not luck or accident, because we couldn’t have done all those things if we weren’t capable. ACoAs need to OWN our abilities & successes! Only S-H & the PP tell us that we’re frauds!

The Loneliness: This is harder to identify because it comes from having to hide large chunks of ourselves – so we can’t really connect with the world on an even footing, from our True Self.

d. Addictions
We know addictions are used to prevent re-experiencing traumatic events & re-feeling painful emotions too overwhelming to bear, never having learned how to understand & process them in healthy ways.
And it’s not just abusing drugs & alcohol, but overdoing any type of activity (process addiction) – the misuse of food, money, exercise.  Also TV & internet trancing, & of course love, romance & fantasy.
ACoAs are also addicted to the brain chemical Adrenalin – that ‘high’ feeling from exciting or scary mental & physical drama that is so familiar from the chaos of our childhood.

The Loneliness: Whether we act out an addiction around others or in isolation, there’s a deep pain we’ve suppressed, invisible to ourselves & sometimes to others.
All addictions carry with them a sense of shame – we know we’re not being authentic, that we’re doing ‘something wrong’ even if that feeling is unconscious. Hiding parts of ourselves from the world out of S-H is not the same as having Boundaries – which is choosing when / where / how / who to reveal ourselves to.

e. Poor Relationship Choices
• Being with people who are incompetent, irresponsible, under-achieving – ‘forcing’ us to take on too much responsibility – the burden of taking care of everyone else – but not our own needs

• Being with Narcissists who only ‘see’ themselves – never us (“Put a sweater on, I’m cold”) –  who can only talk about themselves, are controlling & insensitive, even mean.
with narcissistSo we stay silent, never quite knowing what to say because we’re always stunned into muteness by their outrageous comments! We’re invisible to them  – yet futilely keep trying to connect!

The Loneliness: When we’re with unhealed people, we’re actually alone because of their inability to be emotionally present. And those of us ACoAs who can’t seem to leave family, lovers, friends, jobs – even though they don’t suit – are symbiotically attached. Symbiosis is both an attempt to alleviate Loneliness and a substitute for having healthy boundaries & genuine Trust.

• This type of negative attachment was originally forced on us by family, & we’re afraid to break the enmeshment. Contrary to how it ‘feels’, being symbiotic is very lonely : picture walking around hugging someone very tightly – all the time (one of you is always walking backwards!) & then ask yourself – “Can I actually see this person & can they see me?”
NO, because you’re both looking over each others’ shoulder!

NEXT: Adult Loneliness, Part 3