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Elder
Member Since Dec 2009
Location: Southeastern US
Posts: 5,221
14 3,569 hugs
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#1
Boundary Problems:
I am compliant, especially at work. I have a hard time saying no when asked to do something, even if I know I cannot do it. I am also avoidant to some extent. I tend to shy away from other people helping me. I am also a manipulative controller. Sometimes I give love to get love and get angry when it is not returned. Phases of Boundary Development: Bonding phase: I never felt secure attachment with Mom. I believe I was fed and changed, but not cuddled or held often. If Mom was depressed when I was an infant, she was probably doing just enough to get by. I have been told I slept all the time, around 20-22 hours per day. However, I believe I received enough attention from my grandparents to help me be somewhat secure. Separation and individuation phase: I have been told I was a happy toddler without too many tantrums. I talked early and have heard myself on a recording at age 2.5 sounding as if I was 5. I was also learning to read at the same time. I don't know if my advanced verbal and reading skills had anything to do with my issues or how my parents treated me. My other milestones were normal. 1. Hatching I don't know if Mom was saddened or okay with me exploring the world. I know she was afraid something would happen to me because she said I was a gregarious child who trusted everyone. Mom was very shy. 2. Practicing I don't know how much I was encouraged to explore. Considering Mom's tendency to be overprotective and depressed, I don't know if she took much delight in my attempts to explore. My grandparents probably encouraged it, though. Rapproachment phase: I was told I was "fearless" until the day I started school, so I was not anxious at this age. I did not interact with other children until school age also, so everything was "mine". I owned it all. Apparently at this age, when told to clean my playroom by Mom, I replied, "No, that's your job." I did not know the word no from other people. Whatever I wanted materially, if I asked, I received. That's why I had two closets full of clothes, two rooms of my very own full of toys. Boundary Injuries: Withdrawal: Throughout childhood and adolescence, I would experience withdrawal from Mom and teachers when I misbehaved. At school, we were TOLD God didn't love us and turned away from us when we misbehaved. I was told by Mom and Dad that it hurt them when I misbehaved, so I thought I was responsible for their moods. Because Mom was depressed, I thought it was my fault and tried to do anything to make her feel better, until I became resentful and hid in my room. Since isolation and abandonment occurred so often in my life, I fear it to this day. Hostility against boundaries: The #1 reason given when I was told no my Mom or Dad was, "Because I said so." Mom was a "fusser". She liked to yell when things went bad. I was never given choices. All I heard at school was about the angry, vengeful God. Overcontrol: I was basically not allowed to do much of anything when I was young. I was never allowed to have friends over. I still don't know why. I could play with a couple of neighborhood kids...at THEIR house. I was probably allowed to attend 3 birthday parties in elementary school. The first time I was allowed to sleep over at a friend's house, I was almost 17. I did stay overnight with friends out of town with the volleyball team, but that was highly chaperoned by the school, so my parents didn't worry so much. I spent WAY more time alone than with other people my age, almost exclusively at school. Inconsistent limits: There were other times my parents were lax. I would do something, get grounded for a week, then it would be lifted after three days. I almost never completed a full punishment sequence. Mom was extremely inconsistent in my adolescence because she entered menopause when I was 11. She went crazy. Add crippling anxiety to the depression and a worsening of OCD and NOTHING was ever consistent. Something that might be okay one day would sent her into a screaming crying fit where she'd leave the house for hours the next. I never quite knew what to expect, so I tried to become an expert at reading her moods. Trauma: The most traumatic thing that happened to me was entering parochial school at age five. This was the first time I had to interact with other children and I quickly learned I was bad, different, and not the princess. I was bad because our Bible verses and catechisms taught us that we were sinners. I was different because I already knew how to read...at the sixth grade level. I was singled out by the teacher and despite my advanced skills, was criticized because I used my finger to guide me. I also still sucked my thumb and the teacher tried to embarrass it out of me. There were 30 of us in my kindergarten class with one teacher and no assistant, so I certainly wasn't the princess. __________________ Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life you have imagined. - Henry David Thoreau |
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SpiritRunner
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notz, SpiritRunner
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Elder Harridan x-hankster
Member Since Jun 2011
Location: Milan/Michigan
Posts: 40,644
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#2
Hey Chopin, wow I have a box of emails like this to my T from the first year I was seeing him, only without the titles, MUCH more random, unfortunately! I would leave his office and go to the library and write. Is this the kind of thing to which your T responds, she doesn't do therapy by email? I never saw it as asking for therapy by email; I saw it as something I needed to do; if T read it, fine; if T didn't read it, that was fine too. Mine were pretty hard to read, as I do not edit. But I think it's important to DO. Maybe we need to bring all that stuff into "working memory", refresh those circuits, so the material is more readily available for session.
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Elder
Member Since Dec 2009
Location: Southeastern US
Posts: 5,221
14 3,569 hugs
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#3
Hank, here's an example of an email she responded to:
I told H about session yesterday. I told him exactly this regarding your statement that I'm worth more than the risks: "I know what these risks are, so it meant a lot to me that she said that." He replied, "Hmph, your reading into it too much; people take risks all the time and don't think about the consequences. It's not that big a deal. But I will say, you're not assuming the worst. I guess that's progress." I said, "She seems to put a great deal of thought and prayer into her clients. I appreciate that." He went, "Hmph" again and that was the end of the conversation. He took something that meant a lot to me and tried to minimize it. Your statement made me feel like I was worth something to someone; you've tried to convince me of my inherent worth for quite some time. You make an enormous impact on my life for the better. But in the back of my mind, a little voice doubts, saying "Is he right? Is it really not that big a deal?" Is he right? Her response: Don't let others steal your joy! *It might not be a big deal to someone else-they might not struggle with self worth. So it would not mean much to them. The truth is that I do think about the consequences of my choices especially when it comes to my clients and to my profession. Your worth is set by God not by others or their opinions. Have a great weekend It's fairly representative of the email correspondence we've had. __________________ Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life you have imagined. - Henry David Thoreau |
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Elder
Member Since Dec 2009
Location: Southeastern US
Posts: 5,221
14 3,569 hugs
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#4
Hankster I realize was wasn't really clear. No what I posted is nothing like the emails I sent T.
The first time she told me she didn't counsel via email was when I sent one that didn't really make sense because I OD'd on meds. I didn't realize I sent it until the next day. Basically, a "drunk email". When she totally cut me off was when I sent this email; embarrassing, but I did it: Another loss...but at least I'm used to this. It's what shut me down in the first place. *Just something else I'll have to grieve. Grief on top of grief that I still haven't grieved... don't know how to grieve. I finally opened up to you, told you how much I love you, what an angel you are to me. I crafted and gave you something that represented that. *You say you love me. You say you want me to heal. You say you'll help me learn how to get better. All that is great. I believe all that. *Then you'll leave just like almost everyone else. *It hurts. *I want to shut down and give up. *I always want what I can't have. *Why do I usually grow to love people who won't or can't be around me? Story of my life. It is so frightening for me to think I'm going to be utterly transparent, bare my soul to you like I never have to anyone else just to lose you in the end. It hurts so much. I don't know if I want to open up to you anymore; I don't want you to see who I am, it is simply embarrassing now. Brave? Sure. Smart? Not so much. I kept asking if you'd leave and you said you wouldn't. *I should have known. *I'm angry. I want to lash out at you. You might think my empathy is BS, but I feel deep and at this point I don't care if you believe me or not. I have to pay someone to love me. How shameful. Jeff and I talked about how we are going to have to start sacrificing for me to stay in therapy. Our FSA card is almost depleted. Yeah, I know, just trust God. Do you realize how hard that is for me? Do you realize I still have no idea what I really believe? I'm going through the motions. Actually that's what I'm doing in life. At least I can take my clients home or out in the community and have a "normal" therapeutic relationship with them. She said this email was manipulative and "borderline". She cut me off for 3 weeks, then I emailed her and asked for another chance to email. She told me it was okay. I just emailed on occasion until last weekend, when I sent 3 emails on Saturday and one on Monday. __________________ Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life you have imagined. - Henry David Thoreau |
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Elder Harridan x-hankster
Member Since Jun 2011
Location: Milan/Michigan
Posts: 40,644
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#5
it's all good!
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Magnate
Member Since Apr 2011
Location: Northern California
Posts: 2,885
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#6
Wow! This hurts. So you can't go all out and express your emotions? My T is hoping that all of my emotions show up. She says it's like gold for a therapist to be able to see all parts of us and it helps them better able to treat us. If we get punished for letting ourselves be seen the way we feel, boy, we'll keep stuff inside, won't we?
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PreacherHeckler
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Elder
Member Since Dec 2009
Location: Southeastern US
Posts: 5,221
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#7
Quote:
She has said that she is trying to teach me what a "normal" relationship is like, with boundaries, mutual respect, etc. Maybe I need to ask what she's trying to accomplish because at this point, I'm confused! __________________ Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life you have imagined. - Henry David Thoreau |
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Member
Member Since Jan 2012
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#8
Chopin, your post makes me think of two things from my childhood that I should probably tell my T about.
1) When I entered preschool, for the first two weeks I hung onto my grandma's leg and sat on her foot and screamed and cried, so she wouldn't leave me there. They had to pry me off every day. Pretty sure that's not a sign of secure attachment. 2) When I was small and walking through a parking lot with my mom, she would say, ”Hang onto mama's beltloop. These people like to hit little children.” Maybe 1 and 2 are related, huh? |
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Member
Member Since Jan 2012
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#9
To more directly respond to your post, though, I can totally relate to the constant religious messages about being bad and worthless and never enough. I think those do incalculable damage, especially since they were the one consistent msg I got from authority figures about who I was. Because, god knows, my parents messages were anything but consistent.
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Chopin99
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Chopin99
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Magnate
Member Since Apr 2011
Location: Northern California
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#10
Quote:
My T now is extremely gentle and never labels me unless it's positive. I'm slowly gaining some sense of self-worth but it would never have gotten as far as it has if she had ever treated me the way your T treats you. I am very sensitive and skittish and would have hidden myself very deeply if I ever had have been punished for sharing my feelings. It took a while for trust to develop. I needed to see again and again that T accepted me - all parts of me - the positive and the not so good. I could never have handled such a cold response that your T has given. It's like your T is hot sometimes and cold other times. How can you develop trust? How will you know what is a punishable offense? I give you credit for being able to continue on. Last edited by skysblue; Mar 19, 2012 at 02:08 PM.. Reason: grammar |
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PreacherHeckler
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Magnate
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#11
Chopin, I'm sorry she cut you off over an email, especially with the comments she made. Most therapists really want emotions to come out, no matter what kind of emotions they are. Repercussions like that are not the way to encourage clients to emote.
Like Skysblue, my therapist is patiently waiting for and would be thrilled by any display of emotion from me. I'm too much in my head for his liking. I suspect even if I lashed out directly at him, he'd be cheering me on. |
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CantExplain, Chopin99, PreacherHeckler
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Elder
Member Since Dec 2009
Location: Southeastern US
Posts: 5,221
14 3,569 hugs
given |
#12
Quote:
I've told T I want her to be "real", maybe she took me TOO seriously!! __________________ Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life you have imagined. - Henry David Thoreau |
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Magnate
Member Since Apr 2011
Location: Northern California
Posts: 2,885
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#13
Quote:
But the kicker for me is how she 'confessed' how she didn't feel comfortable about doing something for you (was it hugs, I can't remember) but did it for you anyways. And then realized it was a mistake.I think it's terrible for a T to say something like that. |
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PreacherHeckler, Snuffleupagus
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Big Poppa
Member Since Oct 2011
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#14
Hi Chopin!
Your posts are really valuable. It's like seeing myself from the outside. I'm getting triggered and overwhelmed, but I'm doing my best to keep up! Take care. __________________ Mr Ambassador, alias Ancient Plax, alias Captain Therapy, alias Big Poppa, alias Secret Spy, etc. Add that to your tattoo, Baby! |
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#15
I really admire you for these "processing" posts you've been doing-- they're well thought out and clearly you are doing a TON of work with all this. That's amazing.
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Elder
Member Since Dec 2009
Location: Southeastern US
Posts: 5,221
14 3,569 hugs
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#16
Quote:
This is what T has wanted me to do all along. So all the criticism of T aside, she got me to start really working on my problems. Fear motivates me more than anything else. Money, ego, health, stability...pffft. Fear. Gets me every single time. __________________ Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life you have imagined. - Henry David Thoreau |
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Veteran Member
Member Since Oct 2010
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#17
__________________ Conversation with my therapist: Doc: "You know, for the past few weeks you've seemed very disconnected from your emotions when you're here." Me: "I'm not disconnected from my emotions. I just don't feel anything when I'm here." (Pause) Me: "Doc, why are you banging your head against the arm of your chair?" Doc: "Because I'm not close enough to a wall." It's official. I can even make therapists crazy. |
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Elder
Member Since Dec 2009
Location: Southeastern US
Posts: 5,221
14 3,569 hugs
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#18
Quote:
I have never had boundaries of my own and I don't respect the boundaries of other's. Or if I did, it was out of fear...not respect. I believe everything happens for a reason. All of this did. If it got me to focus more on myself than on my relationship with her, all the better. __________________ Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life you have imagined. - Henry David Thoreau |
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Big Poppa
Member Since Oct 2011
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 19,616
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#19
__________________ Mr Ambassador, alias Ancient Plax, alias Captain Therapy, alias Big Poppa, alias Secret Spy, etc. Add that to your tattoo, Baby! |
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likelife, stopdog
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#20
Quote:
Not to be devil's advocate, but based on what you've written it does appear that your T struggles with boundaries. You do as well (as do I!), BUT I think that Preacherheckler is onto something. How can you learn about good, healthy boundaries from someone who cannot model this for you? You and your T have localized boundaries as one of your core issues. Even if her boundaries might be healthier than yours comparatively, when learning something difficult like this (particularly not when we were supposed to--i.e., growing up from our parents) we need an extra good model for this. Do you feel that your T can model good boundaries for you? |
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