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Old Oct 26, 2015, 04:40 PM
here today here today is offline
Grand Magnate
 
Member Since: Jun 2012
Location: USA
Posts: 3,517
Quote:
Originally Posted by Atypical_Disaster View Post
. . .What does dissociating from your feelings mean to you? What did that look like and how did said dissociation affect you? How did you work through that and learn to feel your feelings?
I’m not going to try to defend the concept of dissociation – that’s too big a job, I don’t have the credentials for it, etc. So I’m going to write assuming that readers can just accept the idea for the moment, for the sake of argument.

I experienced a “shock” trauma in the hospital when I was 3 years old, in 1950, and had my tonsils taken out. I was rolled into the operating room, my mother had to stay outside, and I got very scared. The staff held me down, kicking and screaming, while a nurse put the yellow ether mask over my face (that’s how they delivered anesthesia then) and I lost consciousness. I have a “flashbulb” memory of those events. Have had, all the years since then.

I also remember waking up, alone, and my throat horribly painful. But what I did not recall, until about 4 years ago, was how horrible and unbearable it was to feel alone, abandoned, not cared about. That memory just emerged out of the “blue”, in a way, as I was telling my therapist about a cousin who I felt was trying to dominate me. Only I didn’t know I was feeling like she was trying to dominate me, just that I didn't like how she was acting – that feeling of someone (female) trying to dominate me was connected with how I felt about the nurse all those years ago, and not part of my normal conscious experience up until then.

I adapted as a child by trying to be a “good girl”. Most of my adult life I found my identity in roles and rules. Had some friends but no really close ones as an adult, except for my late husband. I had kind of an off/on switch with my anger/rage. Could usually “control” it, keep it “off”. But then I didn’t have the feelings associated with being “hurt”, either, as I said, and couldn’t interpret social nuance. Was likely "emotionally unavailable".

My feelings – and my capacity to sustain an authentic ego/container/”skin” -- came “back to life”, so to speak, through the process of “having a relationship” with my therapist. She knew how to do it, I didn’t, but my interpersonal feelings came into play over time. I developed a better sense of “self and other”, both of us being valid, neither of us being perfect, the relationship getting mended after “ruptures”, where she was not OK for me and I was not OK for her.

So why couldn’t that have happened earlier in my 50+ year therapy journey? My therapist thinks it’s mostly because the therapists had not done enough of their own therapy.
Thanks for this!
Atypical_Disaster