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Author Topic: I think I get what the problem is  (Read 552 times)
justnothing
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« on: January 07, 2020, 05:50:22 AM »

Hi,

The other day I had a breakdown in which I suddenly wanted to kill myself and it seemed to be related to a new project at work. I don’t really want to give too many details about my job and workplace but let’s just say that I’m supposed to help keep the public informed about their legal rights and obligations. I mean up until now I was just responsible for keeping the legal information up to date on a site that only the employees in my company I work for were exposed to but with this new project I’ll be writing information that the public themselves will be directly exposed to… and even though it should be a simple task it’s been driving me completely crazy because of the fact that this is me writing directly to members of the public and I’m so, so afraid that even an error in punctuation could lead to a misunderstanding that could cause someone to not receive the money they could be entitled to or - worse - lose money and go into debt. I have come across many cases of people who went into considerable debt because of simple mistakes and miscommunication that in some cases weren’t even their fault.

When I was little my mother tried to kill herself because of a simple mistake like that; there was a form she needed to fill but somehow she didn’t fill it out right or it got lost or something like that… and as a result she ended up suddenly receiving a letter about a huge debt that she went into without her even understanding what went wrong… she couldn’t pay it off and it grew bigger and eventually she tried to kill herself because she couldn’t deal with it.
At the time I was another source of stress in her life because I was doing poorly in school and was completely unable to concentrate in class no matter how hard I tried and she let me know that this was a huge source of stress for her by screaming at me over it for hours every day. After she tired to kill herself, a “friend” of hers took me in and then tried to adopt me without my mother’s consent and wouldn’t even let me go see her after she came back from the hospital. During the time I was forced to stay at her place and barred from being able to see my mother (there was a legal battle going on between them over this) she told me at one point that my mother was better off without me in her life because I was just a burden on her and “if it hadn’t been for me maybe what happened to my mother wouldn’t have happened”.

If before my mother’s suicide attempt I was still a little bit defiant and had a will and personality of my own, after her attempt and after she was finally able to win the legal battle to get me back - I became determined to be the perfect little girl and do absolutely everything she wanted absolutely perfectly. Which, unfortunately, wasn’t really possible because I had fallen behind considerably in school and was never able to compensate for it and also because my mother would fly into rages at me over even the tiniest mishaps and even over things like me wanting to talk to her and spend time with her when she was too tired or not in the mood.

However, sometimes I somehow did manage to do everything “perfectly” (or so it seemed, in reality it was more like my mother was relaxed during those times and in a good mood) and during those times she would behave in ways that were loving and sweet and she’d even idealize me and tell me how smart and beautiful and perfect I supposedly was. It was just that whenever I’d get a bad grade (which was often) or say something I shouldn’t have or annoy her in some way or do anything she didn’t approve of (and in reality I guess when she was in a bad mood, regardless of what I did or didn’t do) she would fly into a rage and I’d be terrified not only of her rage but of the idea that I was making her too upset again and that she might end up dead because of me.

When I was about 12 or 13 she let me know that “what had happened” to her when I was little was in fact a suicide attempt and she wanted me to know that so that I’d be aware of what was going on because she was still suicidal. A couple of years later she became disabled and we went into huge debt again and she started talking about wanting to kill herself constantly and I was constantly trying to reassure her and constantly terrified of saying something that could push her over the edge. One time, in my mid teens, she was upset about something and I was too exhausted to try to make her feel better so I told her that I needed to take a short nap but that we could talk about it after I wake up… and after I woke up she had tried to kill herself and I had to call an ambulance again. At one point in the ER she stopped breathing entirely and turned blue and it was only because I was watching her that I was able to call the nurses over to resuscitation her.

Other times, when I was in my teens and even later in my 20’s she’d threaten suicide whenever I said anything that pissed her off or displeased her and she’d put an emphasis on the fact that I’d be completely alone in the world without her. To be fair, at one point I became suicidal and started making suicide threats of my own, especially whenever she’d start getting angry at me, so I can’t claim to be an innocent victim here… but my point is just that, for the most part, I felt very, very, very responsible for her and for keeping her alive and I realize that I still have this underlying fear that doing things less than perfectly can somehow result in hurting other people and even lead to their death.

I think my therapist had, for many years, served as a buffer between me and an inner voice that I have that is completely convinced that I’m a horrible person and that I need to die because my very existence puts people in danger, especially when I’m in a position of responsibility over other people and mistakes I make could potentially hurt them. She was a buffer because being able to talk to her about these things and seeing her as a kind of replacement mother made her into a source of validation - that I’m a good person and that it’s OK for me to be alive. But after her recent and rather dramatic rejection, that validation is gone now and so the buffer is gone as well. Which would explain why recently I’ve been having intrusive thoughts about being a bad person and I can’t stop ruminating about every bad thing I ever did in life and every person who ever got hurt and offended because of me. At first I tried to combat it not by telling myself that I’m not a bad person but that I don’t even care whether I’m “a bad person” or not so long I don’t actually do bad things to anyone… but I realize now that that approach didn’t work and possibly even reinforced the “I’m a bad person” narrative which I now realize is intricately connected to “and therefore I have to die so that no one else can get hurt because of me”.

So anyway, yeah, that seems to be the core belief “I’m a bad person and therefore I have to die or else other people could get hurt because of me and my mistakes”. it seems that validation from my therapist that that’s not true didn’t actually make that core belief go away but just made it dormant and now that she’s gone (and even more so now that the validity of her validation is gone) it’s back now in full force and this is probably the cause of this current breakdown. So I guess the question now is, now that think I know what the problem is - what do I do about it? Somehow I doubt something like affirmations could help and it seems that even validation from other people only seems to help to suppress this belief but not actually change it… so what does one even do about this sort of thing?
« Last Edit: January 07, 2020, 06:02:16 AM by justnothing » Logged
SunnyVale

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« Reply #1 on: January 07, 2020, 06:11:21 AM »

Hi,

I’m sorry you’re going through this.

I can to an extent relate to what you’re saying. I used to feel similar to the point if I was flying on a plane I would feel bad for those on the plane because there was a high chance we would crash as I deserved to die. Which I now realise is absurd.

I don’t know how to help you but I can tell you I recovered from that feeling after years. I’ve never had a therapist (I should).

I hope you figure it out and I hope someone here has some wisdom for you.
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Notwendy
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« Reply #2 on: January 07, 2020, 08:59:04 AM »

While your own story is unique to you, I think your feelings are something that children of disordered parents can relate to. I am glad you are working with a therapist to help you with these feelings. I hope in time, you come to realize that your mother's behaviors and what she said have nothing to do with you, and everything to do with her own mental state.


Motherhood is stressful but it's also wonderful and emotionally healthy parents love their kids and deal with the stresses in emotionally healthy ways. Your mother attempted suicide not because of you, but because of her own mental illness.

Few parents have completely perfect compliant children. Although we all hope our children will be good people, "perfect and compliant" isn't really a good goal for them to achieve. We want them to be able to stand up for themselves. To do that, they will sometimes disagree or have conflicts with us. Our job as parents is to teach them how to manage conflict in emotionally healthy ways. A disordered parent may not be able to do this. They demand perfect compliance to make their own situation easier, not because it is good for the child.

I can relate to some of your feelings. I was my mother's scapegoat child. She blamed her moods on me. This made me feel overly responsible for her feelings. I also tried to be the perfect compliant child with her. Sometimes I would get some loving attention from her but in general, it didn't last long as I am not perfect. There'd be some reason for her to be angry at me eventually.

She told me I was unlovable. Sadly, a child begins to believe that. But the truth is, my mother isn't able to love anyone, not even herself and she was perceiving me in the way she perceives things. It's not true. I am lovable. So are you, and your life is important to you and to others.

My baby book is filled out with my mother's impression of me. I wasn't a nice baby to her. I recall as a teen asking my father " is mother this way because she had a difficult time with me as a baby? " As if a baby is somehow responsible for causing their mother's mental issues. I can see now how completely irrational this kind of thinking is.

My mother- and your mother- had a mental illness long before we were their children. You did not cause this. Part of this journey is "reparenting ourselves". I don't know if you have done any of this kind of work with your T but it is worth asking about. Little you didn't receive the nurturing you needed, not because of you but because your mother was not able to do that for her. We can't become children again but you can love that person, and that "child" through self care. Be good to yourself. Every human is valuable and unique. I hope you can believe that.
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ProudDad12
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« Reply #3 on: January 07, 2020, 10:11:10 AM »

Hi justnothing,

I know how I felt as an adult when my mom told me (in a way I felt was manipulative) about her suicidal thoughts and attempt. It was a very hard thing to bear, and has made it difficult for me to open up about my own fantasies of suicide when I have them, for fear of being perceived as using it as leverage. So I can't imagine the pain of hearing it when you're 12 or 13. That is not a burden a kid should have to bear.

I think the biggest advice I can give is to seek a new therapist; maybe do a little research into a good one, or call a large local church to see if they recommend anyone (I don't know where you are religiously, I only mentioned a church because they likely will have some names, and it's how I found my T). I was curious to get some background on your therapist's departure, so I read some of your other posts, and what little I read seems to show some pretty unprofessional stuff on your T's part. You deserve better than that from a T.

As far as needing validation, in my experience that is a hunger who's appetite only grows the more it's fed. This is perhaps something a competent therapist can help with. In the mean time, just know we all have worth whether we realize it or not. I know it's easy to convince yourself the world would be better off without you, but it's not true. This is a hard thing I've struggled with myself. But please know you owe it to yourself to fight those feelings. While it's a long road to accepting and internalizing this, you don't need anyone's validation.

At risk of contradicting my last point, I'll say this. I don't know you or your day to day actions. But I believe every single person on this earth struggles with their own brand of faults, and nobody is perfect. But I wouldn't expect a "bad" person to come here with the introspective worries and fears you have. The fact that you are concerned about it at all should be a good sign for you.

So this is going to sound like a strange suggestion, but here it is... perhaps consider looking into charity work if your personal life and free time allow. Soup kitchens, etc. While I embarrassingly am far behind on such things, there is a certain fulfillment that comes with it, and with that may come confidence and sense of worth. Not to say it's necessary to do these things to get where you want to be, it's just something that came to mind. It's a good way to channel your energy, and gives you a good foundation for combating negative thoughts of yourself. BTW, please don't consider that suggestion an obligation or in any way an indicator of yourself... like I alluded, it's been years since I've been actively involved in such things. Been meaning to try to get back into it, but that's another story!

In any event, please look into another therapist. You owe that to yourself. I'll be the first to say this stuff is not easy, and we need help getting out of these pits! Keep posting and know you have friends here willing to help!
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Harri
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« Reply #4 on: January 07, 2020, 03:18:15 PM »

Hi JN!   Virtual hug (click to insert in post)

I read through your other recent thread I think I've reached my breaking point and am so glad you are through the roughest part of this crisis.  And I am happy you came here to talk with us.  We've got you.

Reading the other thread and this one we get a better picture of the emotional abuse you experienced while growing up.  She put a lot of responsibility on you and so did others and then when she failed to make healthy choices and instead involved you in keeping her stable, and she inevitably became unstable, of course you felt responsible.  As unhealthy and as dysfunctional as it was, the fact that you feel soo responsible and afraid to make mistakes that might affect others makes perfect sense and I think it is great you were able to put all that together.  That you feel they may also die, also, makes sense.  But none of it is true.  It only makes sense in the context of emotional abuse and conditioned behaviors and thought patterns.  Of course you tried to use suicide threats at one point.  It is what you knew and was a learned coping skill.   I am not excusing what you did, I am just saying it makes sense to me.  It makes sense to me that you would turn to suicidal ideation as a coping skill of sorts, without any obvious or conscious thought about it.

Quote from:  JN
“I’m a bad person and therefore I have to die or else other people could get hurt because of me and my mistakes”.
I can relate very much to this.  I isolated myself quite a bit because of that belief and it also had a big part in why I kept going back to my mom for the sexual abuse even as an adult.  Being bad was not the hard part, it was the consequences on others that I found crippling.

Another thing I want to mention to you is that if you ever want to talk about how some of your moms abuse was "sexual in nature" (referring to a comment made in your other thread I linked above) I am willing to walk there with you.  All I can say is me too.  We have had others here too who have experienced similar.

Excerpt
So I guess the question now is, now that think I know what the problem is - what do I do about it? Somehow I doubt something like affirmations could help and it seems that even validation from other people only seems to help to suppress this belief but not actually change it… so what does one even do about this sort of thing?
Yeah, affirmations probably won't cut it no matter how much you try to channel your inner Stuart Smalley.  Smiling (click to insert in post)

I think posting here and talking with us, working through your thoughts and seeing if they are twisted a bit and then working to untwist them are steps in the right direction. 

Ten forms of twisted thinking <---- just in case you haven't seen this before.

BTW, you do very good work unraveling all of this on your own too.  VERY good work.  You don't have to do it alone though. 
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  "What is to give light must endure burning." ~Viktor Frankl
justnothing
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« Reply #5 on: January 08, 2020, 03:47:26 PM »

I can to an extent relate to what you’re saying. I used to feel similar to the point if I was flying on a plane I would feel bad for those on the plane because there was a high chance we would crash as I deserved to die. Which I now realise is absurd.

In a way this sounds less absurd than the usual thought process people have which is just “the plane will fall because I’m on it” which doesn’t take the other people into account at all… but I guess taking the other people into account can help illustrate the absurdity of the idea.

Either way I’m glad to hear that you were able to overcome that feeling. It’s funny but these things can somehow be difficult to overcome even when we can see how irrational they are.

My baby book is filled out with my mother's impression of me. I wasn't a nice baby to her. I recall as a teen asking my father " is mother this way because she had a difficult time with me as a baby? " As if a baby is somehow responsible for causing their mother's mental issues. I can see now how completely irrational this kind of thinking is.

I’m so sorry to hear that she had that attitude towards you to the point that you felt guilty for the way you supposedly “behaved” as a baby. I don’t remember my mother having an attitude like that towards me (though I do remember being haunted for years by deep shame over every single immature thing I ever said and did as a child because I used to see it as “stupid”), but I do remember her talking that way about one of my half brothers (it’s a long story but we weren’t raised together) who was definitely her scapegoat child. From the time I was little she would tell me about how horrible he was as a baby and from the way she talked about him she somehow managed to make him out to sound like a villain even though she left him when he was 4 years old. Even though I’m sure he was scarred by being abandoned by his mother, in a way I’m glad he didn’t spend most of his childhood being ridiculed and vilified by her to his face in the way she did behind his back. For my part, I didn’t understand when I was little how utterly messed up it was for an adult to mock and PLEASE READ-talk a literal baby like that and even though I knew it was directed at him and not at me… I always had a sense that someday that could be me if I ever pissed her off enough.

My mother- and your mother- had a mental illness long before we were their children. You did not cause this. Part of this journey is "reparenting ourselves". I don't know if you have done any of this kind of work with your T but it is worth asking about. Little you didn't receive the nurturing you needed, not because of you but because your mother was not able to do that for her. We can't become children again but you can love that person, and that "child" through self care. Be good to yourself. Every human is valuable and unique. I hope you can believe that.

Thank you, same to you.
And yeah, I have tried (and continue to try) self parenting and self care in general. It’s a work in progress but I think I might be getting better at it. I used to not even have the energy or inclination to cook and clean for myself but eventually I started imagining myself as two people: me and myself and realized that myself is completely and utterly dependent on me and that it’s completely unfair and even inhumane for me to neglect myself considering that myself has nowhere else to turn and no one else in the world to take care of her but me.

I know how I felt as an adult when my mom told me (in a way I felt was manipulative) about her suicidal thoughts and attempt. It was a very hard thing to bear, and has made it difficult for me to open up about my own fantasies of suicide when I have them, for fear of being perceived as using it as leverage.

I’m so sorry to hear that… I know suicidal thoughts can sometimes come and go if they’re mild enough but please take them seriously whenever they arise and don’t be afraid of talking to people at least on a hotline (or in person if you know anyone you can trust with that).

As for a new therapist, I was told in no uncertain terms that I won’t even be able to apply for a waiting list for at least a couple of years however there is a case worker of sorts whom I see once every two weeks and I talked to her recently and she might be able to arrange for me to be able to talk to a social worker once a week, right now it’s still a bit uncertain though. Despite the breakdown from the other day I am still a bit ambivalent over whether I want a new one T of any kind at the moment anyway and not just learn to be more “self reliant” in that sense… but right now it’s all a bit up in the air anyway so I’ll just play it by ear and see how it goes.

So this is going to sound like a strange suggestion, but here it is... perhaps consider looking into charity work if your personal life and free time allow.

Thanks for the suggestion and I understand where you’re coming from… I used to do volunteer work of sorts and at the time it did, temporarily, improve my sense of self worth and gave me a sense that my life was worth something… but eventually I learned, in a rather harsh way, that it wasn’t really a good idea to base my self worth on that. One reason is because it’s heavily dependent on the outside world and other people but that’s not the only reason. The other reason is that I had spent many years battling between “am I a good person” vs. “am I a bad person” and recently I started thinking that maybe I should start thinking outside that box… because in reality, that inner sense that I keep grappling with of being “good” or “bad” isn’t really about universal standards of morality but rather about being “good” or “bad” - by my mother’s standards and whether or not I was a “good” or “bad” daughter/servant/slave to her. Also, the inner demon that keeps accusing me of being “bad” itself probably isn’t even really concerned with “being bad” but in reality - being rejected “for being bad”. I think this recent “I’m so bad” onslaught is just this part’s way of trying to cope with my therapists apparent rejection of me because to admit to myself that my therapist didn’t behave the way she did because of anything *I* did wrong - is to admit to myself that the world is chaotic and I have no control over it or the people in it (… and also that I’m a bad judge of character…).

I think some of the ways I should probably be dealing with this way of thinking is probably: A. understand that the “you’re a bad person” accusation isn’t really about universal morality (because objectively I know that if I don’t DO anything bad to anyone then I’m not a bad person) but rather about “didn’t do enough to prevent this person from rejecting me”, B. come to terms with the fact that the world is chaotic and that I can’t control other people, C. understand that endless pandering to people not only doesn’t necessarily prevent rejection - in most cases it’s not even required to prevent rejection, D. even if I do something “wrong” (in the sense of not pandering enough etc’) and this results in rejection - not all rejection means that I need to now punish myself to change my bad ways, sometimes (very often even) it just means that the person isn’t right for me or even an asshole and I really ought to be standing up for myself and who I really am instead of constantly trying to adjust to everybody else’s will… and E. even if it turns out that I really did to something bad… well too bad, I’m the only me I’ll ever be, my mind is the only mind I’ll ever have and I have to stick to my own team whether I like it or not (and.. something, something “learn to forgive myself”…)

I read through your other recent thread I think I've reached my breaking point and am so glad you are through the roughest part of this crisis.  And I am happy you came here to talk with us.  We've got you.

Thank you very much. I think the crisis might actually be behind me at this point but I guess I’ll only really know for sure in the coming days. I suspect the work stress won’t go away for a while but at least I don’t wanna kill myself now and I think I feel mostly back to normal.

She put a lot of responsibility on you and so did others and then when she failed to make healthy choices and instead involved you in keeping her stable, and she inevitably became unstable, of course you felt responsible.  As unhealthy and as dysfunctional as it was, the fact that you feel soo responsible and afraid to make mistakes that might affect others makes perfect sense and I think it is great you were able to put all that together.  That you feel they may also die, also, makes sense.  But none of it is true.  It only makes sense in the context of emotional abuse and conditioned behaviors and thought patterns.

Yeah… actually yesterday I consulted with Google about this (silly as it may sound, I found out a few years ago that just typing an abstract of what I’m thinking and feeling in Google Search can often result in me finding the actual term for what I’m feeling and this makes it possible to then do better research into that thing) and it turns out that there is actually a term for “excessive responsibility” and I managed to find several articles about it. I didn’t read all of them yet (but plan to later) but from what I’ve read it’s something that appears in people with OCD but not just people with OCD and it’s often something that happens with children who either had too much responsibility deliberately placed on them and/or with children with dysfunctional parents who weren’t able to cope (and thus the child felt a need to take over because the household would collapse otherwise). In my mother’s case I think it might have been both.
One of the suggestions I found, in two of the articles, was to have more faith in other people and their abilities and that they won’t necessarily be unable to cope if you mess up or don’t constantly hold their hand.

I can relate very much to this.  I isolated myself quite a bit because of that belief and it also had a big part in why I kept going back to my mom for the sexual abuse even as an adult.  Being bad was not the hard part, it was the consequences on others that I found crippling.

I’m very sorry you had to go through that… and I’m glad you don’t have to deal with your mother and that belief system anymore.

Another thing I want to mention to you is that if you ever want to talk about how some of your moms abuse was "sexual in nature" (referring to a comment made in your other thread I linked above) I am willing to walk there with you.  All I can say is me too.  We have had others here too who have experienced similar.

Thanks, I’ll keep that in mind. I actually did talk about it here a few years ago… tbh it’s not even something I talked about all that much even in therapy…

Anyway, again I’m really, really sorry to hear about what your mother put you through and I hope you managed (or are managing) to recover.

I think posting here and talking with us, working through your thoughts and seeing if they are twisted a bit and then working to untwist them are steps in the right direction.

Ten forms of twisted thinking <---- just in case you haven't seen this before.

BTW, you do very good work unraveling all of this on your own too.  VERY good work.  You don't have to do it alone though.

Thank you, this forum does help me a lot, ironically I probably would have posted a lot more in recent weeks except that most of the time I’m either too worn out from work-related stress or too busy with R&R in order to combat the stress. Mind you the rest of the time I’m just being inconsistent, avoidant, unmotivated to deal with these issues and so on……. but that’s not to say that I don’t appreciate the support you guys give me every time I do post because it really means a lot to me so thank you all for this very, very much!
« Last Edit: January 08, 2020, 03:58:13 PM by justnothing » Logged
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