Home Menu

Menu



advertisement
Reply
Thread Tools Display Modes
rainbow8
Legendary
 
rainbow8's Avatar
 
Member Since Mar 2009
Location: US
Posts: 13,284 (SuperPoster!)
15
9,983 hugs
given
PC PoohBah!
Default Sep 03, 2016 at 09:29 PM
  #1
I finally get it that "chasing after", "obsessing about", people, especially Ts, isn't healthy or healing for me. I have to stop, and I'm motivated to stop. But I'm still confused about why I have done it my whole life. I thought people want what was missing. My mother loved me so why do I continuously want love from T's? It seems like I go over and over this without understanding the answer, and wondering if there IS any answer. I feel like I'm trying to make my parents fit into a keyhole that doesn't fit!

I am going to discuss this again with my T, of course. She thinks the cause is my being a preemie. I wonder how that could have caused my wanting to attach to and obsess about all of these people in my life. What I always thought was that the fantasy was that life would be better with the person I was thinking about. Or fantasizing about a romantic relationship when I didn't have one.

I'm grieving because I'm giving up the fantasy but I want to know what the fantasy was and why it is so hard to give up. What did I gain and lose from it? It's confusing to me. These aren't new questions but I'm in a different place and looking at them again. Does this make sense?
rainbow8 is offline   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
 
Hugs from:
ABeautifulLie, anon12516, Cinnamon_Stick, Gavinandnikki, growlycat, Yours_Truly

advertisement
Anonymous37926
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Sep 03, 2016 at 09:42 PM
  #2
Could it be lack of object constancy? Lack of Object Constancy ? Out of the FOG
  Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
 
Thanks for this!
rainbow8, unaluna
unaluna
Elder Harridan x-hankster
 
unaluna's Avatar
 
Member Since Jun 2011
Location: Milan/Michigan
Posts: 39,880 (SuperPoster!)
12
66.4k hugs
given
PC PoohBah!
Default Sep 03, 2016 at 10:09 PM
  #3
unaluna is online now   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
 
Thanks for this!
rainbow8
atisketatasket
Child of a lesser god
 
atisketatasket's Avatar
 
Member Since Jun 2015
Location: Tartarus
Posts: 19,150 (SuperPoster!)
8
12.4k hugs
given
PC PoohBah!
Default Sep 03, 2016 at 10:19 PM
  #4
My mother loved/loves me, yet in my twenties I got very attached to several older women about her age - because they were more maternal than she was. I outgrew it, but you can know someone loved you and still want more.

The preemie thing...it's something like babies not being touched or physically loved in their first weeks hinders their attachment abilities? It could be that, mixed in with other factors unique to you.

__________________
The secret to eternal youth is arrested development.—Alice Roosevelt Longworth
atisketatasket is offline   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
 
Thanks for this!
may24, rainbow8
rainbow8
Legendary
 
rainbow8's Avatar
 
Member Since Mar 2009
Location: US
Posts: 13,284 (SuperPoster!)
15
9,983 hugs
given
PC PoohBah!
Default Sep 03, 2016 at 10:26 PM
  #5
Quote:
Originally Posted by Skies View Post
Could it be lack of object constancy? Lack of Object Constancy ? Out of the FOG
Thank you, Skies. I think that applies to me somewhat. I don't know how I was as a preschooler or before that as an infant. Did I lack object constancy for my mother? I have no idea. But the people I obsessed about were unavailable to me anyway so object constancy doesn't apply. Before Ts, they were crushes on guys like my brother's or my H's friend.
rainbow8 is offline   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
Anonymous37903
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Sep 03, 2016 at 11:33 PM
  #6
I think sometimes mother's love isn't about the child. That's when the child doesn't get it's needs met and this plays out in ways got describe.
Is not about fault, it's just what it is.
Have you & T addressed the mother issue
  Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
 
Thanks for this!
rainbow8
annielovesbacon
Grand Poohbah
 
annielovesbacon's Avatar
 
Member Since Apr 2016
Location: USA
Posts: 1,527
8
1,271 hugs
given
Default Sep 04, 2016 at 12:00 AM
  #7
I wonder the same thing. I was pretty attached to my T (thought I worked very hard not to let it get out of control) but my whole life, even as a little girl, I always got attached to older women, usually teachers. I saw them as mother figures.
My mom was always there, and she does love me, but she is not super emotional/touchy-feely/expressive. Neither am I, though. I don't know why I so longed for the motherly love of teachers I've had.

__________________
stay afraid, but do it anyway.
annielovesbacon is offline   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
 
Hugs from:
anon12516
 
Thanks for this!
atisketatasket, may24, rainbow8
rainbow8
Legendary
 
rainbow8's Avatar
 
Member Since Mar 2009
Location: US
Posts: 13,284 (SuperPoster!)
15
9,983 hugs
given
PC PoohBah!
Default Sep 04, 2016 at 12:29 AM
  #8
Quote:
Originally Posted by _Mouse View Post
I think sometimes mother's love isn't about the child. That's when the child doesn't get it's needs met and this plays out in ways got describe.
Is not about fault, it's just what it is.
Have you & T addressed the mother issue
LOL! I've discussed my mother with all of my Ts. I saw my first T about 4 months after my Mom died but it took months before I told my T. She was kind of in shock as to why I hadn't thought to tell her, and maybe that was why I was depressed! Then we got into the "unmet needs" stuff and how my mother gave me too much or too little, but how I shouldn't blame her. That T was the first to diagnose me with BPD, which she did via discussion with a consultant, as my T was a social worker.

My next T, a child psychiatrist, psychodynamic like the first, talked a lot about my Mom. They both thought my pattern was about making the fantasy relationships any way I wanted. Not sure how that relates to my Mom. These Ts were back in the 1980's and early 90's. I should reread my journals!

Also saw a CBT psychologist who went over the diagnosis with me in the DSM and confirmed it with me. I forgot what BPD has to do with relationship with mothers.

The Ts thought I had problems with developmental stages though never used word attachment. Only heard that from current T. Mostly it was unmet needs due to Mom not being attuned to me but how they figured that out I have no idea! Or from being a preemie. Or my brother and his sexual play.

So Mouse, that's what my Ts said. Like you say. No one's fault. It was what it was!
rainbow8 is offline   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
Anonymous37903
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Sep 04, 2016 at 12:32 AM
  #9
So why are you saying I don't why in like this because my mother loved me? It's feeling like click bait.

People wrote something in a way to elict a response (for whatever reason) than twist it. That's how it feels to me.
  Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
 
Thanks for this!
rainbow8
rainbow8
Legendary
 
rainbow8's Avatar
 
Member Since Mar 2009
Location: US
Posts: 13,284 (SuperPoster!)
15
9,983 hugs
given
PC PoohBah!
Default Sep 04, 2016 at 01:00 AM
  #10
Quote:
Originally Posted by _Mouse View Post
So why are you saying I don't why in like this because my mother loved me? It's feeling like click bait.

People wrote something in a way to elict a response (for whatever reason) than twist it. That's how it feels to me.
Because I don't understand. Why am I looking for mother's love if I had it?

What does click bait mean? I'm twisting words? I don't know what you mean. I'm honestly unclear why I have my pattern.
rainbow8 is offline   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
atisketatasket
Child of a lesser god
 
atisketatasket's Avatar
 
Member Since Jun 2015
Location: Tartarus
Posts: 19,150 (SuperPoster!)
8
12.4k hugs
given
PC PoohBah!
Default Sep 04, 2016 at 01:54 AM
  #11
Quote:
Originally Posted by rainbow8 View Post
Because I don't understand. Why am I looking for mother's love if I had it?

What does click bait mean? I'm twisting words? I don't know what you mean. I'm honestly unclear why I have my pattern.
Click bait = stuff on the web (posts, articles, etc.) that has been made to sound sensationalist so that people will click on it. Usually it's to generate advertising revenue.

FWIW, I don't think that's what you're doing.

__________________
The secret to eternal youth is arrested development.—Alice Roosevelt Longworth
atisketatasket is offline   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
 
Thanks for this!
junkDNA, rainbow8
venusss
Maidan Chick
 
venusss's Avatar
 
Member Since Mar 2010
Location: On the faultlines of the hybrid war
Posts: 7,138
14
14 hugs
given
PC PoohBah!
Default Sep 04, 2016 at 02:18 AM
  #12
Maybe it is because you had your "fantasies" so long and never really build satisfying relationships in real life? Because nobody will ever fullfill your fantasy critizeria. And unconsciously... you fed this over the years.

__________________
Glory to heroes!

HATEFREE CULTURE

venusss is offline   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
 
Thanks for this!
pbutton, rainbow8, scorpiosis37
retro_chic
Poohbah
 
retro_chic's Avatar
 
Member Since Oct 2011
Location: Australia
Posts: 1,150
12
253 hugs
given
PC PoohBah!
Default Sep 04, 2016 at 03:53 AM
  #13
I think I get what you mean Rainbow. I have a very loving and caring mother yet I still feel strong maternal transference towards my T. I am beginning to understand that while my mother loves me I often feel (and have done for a long time) that she doesn't really understand me and consequently is unable to meet a lot of my emotional needs. I often feel judged by my mother and often feel as though I need to hide how I feel to protect her. I don't feel either of those things with my T and that makes me wish T was my mum.

Despite understanding this, I still don't think it is a "good enough" reason for my issues. Maybe that is what is happening for you? As in logically you can kind of see what's happening but it doesn't feel justified maybe? I don't know, just a thought.
retro_chic is offline   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
 
Hugs from:
anon12516
 
Thanks for this!
annielovesbacon, rainbow8, unaluna
divine1966
Legendary Wise Elder
 
divine1966's Avatar
 
Member Since Dec 2014
Location: US
Posts: 22,386 (SuperPoster!)
9
1,277 hugs
given
PC PoohBah!
Default Sep 04, 2016 at 05:27 AM
  #14
Have you been diagnosed with OCD or was it suggested to you that you might have traits of it.

Obsessing over people might be due to that.

I really have hard time with linking it to being a premature baby. So many people are born premature so I just don't see how they all obsess about other people their whole life. Is there any valid research on that?
divine1966 is offline   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
 
Thanks for this!
rainbow8
TishaBuv
Legendary
 
Member Since Dec 2014
Location: USA
Posts: 10,195 (SuperPoster!)
9
1,873 hugs
given
PC PoohBah!
Default Sep 04, 2016 at 05:50 AM
  #15
There is ROCD- relationship OCD. I have had a few obsessions over unrequited love interests and have spent a lot of time trying to figure it out and understand why. The interesting conclusion I came to is if they had returned my affection, I probably would have stopped feeling such pure infatuation and started to see their flaws and decide they weren't right for me and lost interest! It might have to do with the black/white thinking of BPD (which i have traits). I think of them, I obsess about them, but I attribute qualities to them that I imagine they have when I have no idea what they are really like and I understand this.

You haven't mentioned your father.

I have classic unavailable daddy issues. I have a loving, but non touching, emotionally abusive mother who is narcissistic.

I also feel that I fixated on these fantasy objects because my needs were not getting met IRL. I am not able to truly connect with my h because he is not able to connect with me. We are having an intimacy issue. I even told him about the fantasies. I don't know how much of all this is me and how much is him, but I feel that if we could be happy, i wouldn't resort to imaginary friends.

__________________
"And don't say it hasn't been a little slice of heaven, 'cause it hasn't!"
. About Me--T
TishaBuv is offline   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
 
Thanks for this!
rainbow8
Pennster
Poohbah
 
Member Since Aug 2013
Location: US
Posts: 1,030
10
442 hugs
given
PC PoohBah!
Default Sep 04, 2016 at 06:12 AM
  #16
Quote:
Originally Posted by divine1966 View Post
Have you been diagnosed with OCD or was it suggested to you that you might have traits of it.

Obsessing over people might be due to that.

I really have hard time with linking it to being a premature baby. So many people are born premature so I just don't see how they all obsess about other people their whole life. Is there any valid research on that?
If you google "psychological effects of trauma in infancy" there is lots of research on how trauma can cause all sorts of post-traumatic effects and problems with attachment.

Weren't you in an incubator for months as a newborn, rainbow? At a time when doctors knew nothing of the importance of bonding and attachment? I suspect that plays a big role.
Pennster is offline   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
 
Thanks for this!
rainbow8
objectclient
Member
 
Member Since Mar 2015
Location: Somewhere far away
Posts: 150
9
Default Sep 04, 2016 at 06:34 AM
  #17
Rainbow8, I can relate to this a lot. Almost as far back as I can remember I have obsessed about people in a position of authority who were always unavailable to me as the parent figures I wanted them to be. Ts are just the latest in a long line. I have so many interpretations as to why I do this when I always had a mother that loved me, I guess the truth is I'll perhaps never really know. However, some things that other posters have said jump out at me personally: lack of object constancy, fantasizing about ideal relationships (my escape from reality) and a mother's love not being about the child. I also wonder if for me there could be a theme of obsessing over unavailable people. Maybe my mother was emotionally unavailable. Maybe however painful this obsessing and fantasizing is, it is not as frightening as actually meeting my emotional needs in real life. Who knows?

I can completely understand feeling that the obsessing isn't justified when you had a mother that loved you though. I feel the same but for me it's because I feel terribly guilty and ashamed for these obsessive attachments. It seems as if I'm ungrateful and greedy. Most of all, I hate living with this day to day. There is always this need to obsess over someone and it never goes away. When one person exits, I find another.

I really hope you can get to the bottom of this with your T and find some peace of mind.
objectclient is offline   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
 
Hugs from:
Anonymous37925, Anonymous37926, rainbow8
 
Thanks for this!
rainbow8
junkDNA
Comfy Sedation
 
junkDNA's Avatar
 
Member Since Sep 2012
Location: the woods
Posts: 19,301 (SuperPoster!)
11
8,149 hugs
given
PC PoohBah!
Default Sep 04, 2016 at 08:20 AM
  #18
I could be the poster child for girl with daddy issues. I don't really like that term though. Anyway I was thinking about it and it seems that fantasies are a whole lot safer than when they become a reality. In a fantasy you are the one in control. When it becomes a reality there are other people in the mix and **** gets unpredictable. I also obsess A LOT. I know how annoying it feels. Maybe there is an Ocd component to it. Or maybe it's just the way you're wired. In any case, it might not even matter who and why. Maybe the issue that could be focused on is coping with it and trying to alleviate yourself from the obsessive pattern

__________________
junkDNA is offline   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
 
Thanks for this!
annielovesbacon, rainbow8
Anonymous37925
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Sep 04, 2016 at 08:30 AM
  #19
I was going to say the same as JunkDNA. Sometimes we just can't know exactly why something is as it is. Sometimes we just don't have the memories or the information to know. We are so very complicated and it could originate in a number of experiences.
What is important is learning to accept these feelings and rather than trying to change them, to manage it in a healthy way. Working to find ways to soothe these very young feelings with self compassion and patience.
  Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
 
Thanks for this!
annielovesbacon, atisketatasket, rainbow8
Anonymous55498
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Sep 04, 2016 at 09:09 AM
  #20
This is just my opinion, but I often think that the power of our parents / relationship with parents gets a little over-hyped in psychotherapy, as though they are the only source of our behavioral patterns. I don't mean to devalue the importance of whtever happened (or did not happen) with our parents in critical periods of development, and it's supported by ample scientific evidence also. What I mean is that we are also influenced by a myriad of other factors, people and relationships in our lives, both as children and as adults. Like Echos mentioned, it is very complicated.

I also have strong obsessive tendencies and I often think that wanting to know the answer to everything, figuring out how everything works is one of the most prominent of these obsessions. I sometimes pride myself on thinking of this so called "seeker mentality" as a positive feature, but all the searches can equally be just other manifestations of the obsessional tendencies. So I am trying to consciously stop myself and needless to say, it is rarely comfortable. Asking all the "why" questions and getting answers is often a good thing but just like everything, it can also turn negative when done in excess.

I have a tendency for obsessive interactions with people who piqued my interest and it did start in childhood/adolescence but I don't think primarily in relation to my parents, more other kids and people. In the first 10 years of my life I was frequently bullied by other kids and so felt like being an outcast in my social environment most of the time, except with some adults (e.g. my father and some of his friends, some teachers etc) mostly, but even with the adults it was very selective. As a result, I developed a strong tendency to look for individuals that I feel are similar to me, and then get obsessive. For me the "similarity" factor also often meant similarity in relational style, including this interpersonal intensity but just as much a very strong desire for independence and often withdrawing. Needless to say how this combo has created a dual drive of polar opposite forces, which often got reinforced throughout my life due to encounters with similar people, or even just perceived (imagined) similarities. In other words, a strong transference pattern, which in my case I think was reinforced by relationships with other people who had their own push/pull ambivalent style. The desires rarely remained unrequited, much more characterized by intense fluctuations on each side. Of course all this comes back boldly in my therapy relationships, even with current T who is trying really hard to remain even and consistent, but is undeniably affected by it (we discussed it in the last couple sessions).

So what is the solution to all this? I honestly don't know but I believe more and more what others also pointed out on this thread, that it is just something I carry and it will be much more constructive for me to really learn to accept it instead of the intense waves of confusion and shame I often experience due to the ambivalence.
  Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
 
Thanks for this!
atisketatasket, rainbow8
Reply
attentionThis is an old thread. You probably should not post your reply to it, as the original poster is unlikely to see it.




All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:02 PM.
Powered by vBulletin® — Copyright © 2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.



 

My Support Forums

My Support Forums is the online community that was originally begun as the Psych Central Forums in 2001. It now runs as an independent self-help support group community for mental health, personality, and psychological issues and is overseen by a group of dedicated, caring volunteers from around the world.

 

Helplines and Lifelines

The material on this site is for informational purposes only, and is not a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis or treatment provided by a qualified health care provider.

Always consult your doctor or mental health professional before trying anything you read here.