The walk
Got to run… Got to get away… Got to escape…
This is how my need to runaway always starts… those words, repeated over and over. Sometimes they creep up on me slowly; but sometimes, they hit like the freight train. On Sunday, they hit suddenly; although I should have been expecting them… Last week, an inundation of triggers, meant that by Friday, I was a dissociated mess. Through my own actions, and decisions, I set myself up on the road to self-destruction, and despite some last-minute reality checks, things became very messy…
On Sunday, I got that last little push that tipped me over the edge into a flip-book of flashbacks… So, the chant began… Got to run… Got to get away… Got to escape…
This has often been the beginnings of an incident of self-injury, which I know just causes pain to be piled on top of existing pain. I know the pull of self-injury well… it can be hypnotic and alluring… there’s a cold comfort in its familiarity. But, instead of following that path, I took the words literally and escaped by going for a walk.
Considering my social anxieties, I’m not quite sure why I decided to do this… and initially, it seemed a huge mistake. I walked past families preparing BBQ’s, causing flashbacks to summers of watching my father cooking at the family BBQ… past the barking dogs, which brought up images of the scars on my friends back from an attack by a stray Alsatian… It went on, with each new sight, smell and noise triggering a new flashback.
I walked faster, and faster… trying to outpace the thoughts and images in my head. But the chanting in my head got louder and louder… Got to run… Got to get away… Got to escape…
Negative talk started to drown out the chant… I shouldn’t have eaten so much over the past week… I didn’t do enough at work… I’m just an attention seeking nightmare…
It went on and on… until, the words of WPT cut through all the noise. He told me the story of a woman who heard some rattling behind her as she walked; so she walked faster, scared of the noise… She walked faster and faster, until she was running… all the while, the rattling noise became louder and louder. As she scrambled up a hill, she met someone who told her to turn around… The noise was that of the skeleton of her past, tied to her ankle. Until she turned, faced it, and cut it free; it would always be with her. **
This rather butchered part of a story, brought me back to reality… I realised that this is what I was so desperately trying to do… I was trying to outrun the skeletons in my closet. But, they were making their presence felt through flashbacks and anxiety. Because they exist within me, I’m never going to outrun them… or inflict enough damage through self-injury to drown them out for long. Until I turn to face them, and work through what happens in the present as a consequence of those skeletons; I’m never going to ease their hold over me…
The kicker is, that I know this. I know that my self-injury is just another way to try to run… but turning around to face those skeletons is terrifying. I’ve been able to do it at times, but never for long. I get scared, confused and overwhelmed. I can never seem to do it they way they say in the books, or even in the other blogs I read… It seems such an unobtainable goal. How can something summarised in one chapter of a book, be so difficult, and take so long to do?
Of course, my annoyance with not being able to achieve this thing called “healing” is yet another sign of my need to distract and have control…
So, the skeletons of my past keep rattling…
** As a note: I know my recounting of the story isn’t accurate, and I’m not sure of its title; but I think it might be one of the short stories in the book Women who run with Wolves by Clarissa Pinkola Estés.
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Now playing: Missy Higgins – Ten Days
via FoxyTunes
Falling
When I returned from Wellington, I thought I was making my way out of the abyss. Things seemed more settled, and my thinking clearer.
I was wrong.
During the past week I have reconnected with dysfunctional people from my past; and set-up emotional scenarios which mirror different aspects of my past.
I’m a train wreck.
I’m trying to live in the present, and failing. The past has begun haunting me with a vengeance.
I would tell you how my week has been; but I don’t know, it’s a blank. I see from my tweets that there was a problem over the weekend with a neighbour… my hair has been cut… I see from emails that I was concerned about friends… I had Christmas cards to put in the post today, so things were getting done… I was appearing normal. But, I don’t remember it. There’s jumbled glimpses of other things… putting on trackies when I was getting cold talking to a friend on the phone Friday night… It’s Monday, right? That means I need to get the rubbish ready to put out tomorrow… Panic in the mall on Saturday… I hate Allison… Take the team at work to afternoon tea on Thursday, but tell them they can go downtown for an hour if they want – one small way I can make up for them not getting a bonus… I don’t trust anyone… Why is our work Christmas function in a sports bar?
Just a mess of thought fragments being tossed around my head.
I was scrolling through my YouTube playlists, and came across this piece which calmed me briefly…
If I’m falling, I wonder where I’ll land?
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Now playing: Arvo Part – Spiegel Im Spiegel
via FoxyTunes
Fragments
Fragments… just bits and pieces flying around inside my head.
That’s what the last week has been like. Nothing tangible to hold onto.
The only constant are feelings of disgust. I feel dirty, disgusting, sub-human… unclean. I don’t think the layers of filth can be, or will ever be, removed. It is part of me as surely as the colour of my eyes. It is a part of me, and I am a part of it.
I think I could handle it, if all of the fragments flying around my head were of horror. Horror has the ability to sweep you away in a dissociative haze of lost time. But when there are everyday scenes intermingled with the horror, it makes you pause. You pause and look. You turn the fragment around, inspecting it from all angles. You look into the heart of it, and only then do you see the horror. The unmitigated horror of seeing how brazen and normal the abuse was. In those everyday scenes, you see the range of emotions on the faces around you – discomfort, curiosity, embarrassment, and the knowing smiles. What they don’t know, is that they are being manipulated. This is part of their entrance exam into the Old Boys Club. They all pass. Even the ones who question the young girls presence in a place she shouldn’t be, with their joking protests quickly turning into silent observation.
It was the perfect scenario. There was no obvious abuse, but it was implied. Every person in the room probably knew that something was wrong, but there was nothing tangible that they could take to the authorities. It opened the door to silent consent, and they walked through. They became accessories; and in order to ease their own conscious, they will stay forever silent. They didn’t see anything, after all. Just a young girl with her father walking by the shower room. He might not have known that the team were in there. They’re both hearing impaired, after all.
It changed the way those men looked at me. Some of them turned away more quickly. Some saw through me more readily. Some smiled, and beckoned me over more often.
Then the memories of horror draw you into their grip. Grounding techniques are lost in the wave that overwhelms and batters your mind.
But still, you force the smile and talk inanities to the person asking about patron upload problems.
You pack up the box of horrors for another time. Stamp down the lid and push it backwards. You hope that you never have to look at the box again. But, you know you will. Not because of the memories in the box, but because of the emotions it evokes. There is anger at looking at the horror, and anger at looking away. In a world of no-wins, I walk the minefield of navigating the present, while trying to understand and heal from the past.
It’s all done in the hope of having a future. My father took me past the shower room in order to have a future that he wanted. I walked past that shower room because I had no concept of choice. Despite often losing my way, I do have choices now. I have choices based on experience, education and understanding. The only thing more soul-destroying than the abuse, is seeing how I seem to make choices which encourage, or perpetrate self-abuse.
I know that there should be a positive note to the end of this, but there isn’t. I sit here at work, looking at the huge pile of work that is expected of me. I feel the effects of the medical problems which I was told yesterday will require minor surgery. I feel the dissociation starting – the slight fuzziness at the back of my head which is creeping forward steadily. It’s difficult to find that positivity, when the layers of stress in the present, add to the layers of horror from the past. Your head becomes a maelstrom of emotions, and the only relief is dysfunctional coping.
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Now playing: Tracy Chapman – All that you have is your soul
via FoxyTunes
When safety contracts fail
I’ve talked briefly about Allison’s encouragement of a formal safety contract (see Becoming unstuck); well, something happened about a month ago which forced the issue, and a safety contract was written. It has been covering one week at a time and listing the two actions which are considered to be the most dangerous, the reward for keeping the contract, and the consequences of breaking the contract. It is kept simple, and driven by me as a way to try and maximise the chances of success. This week, there was huge resistance to making the contract for an entire week for several reasons… but mainly because there is a big rugby game being played here tomorrow. My reservations weren’t about wanting to break the contract and self-injure; but instead, there was a fear that I would break it, and in so doing, break a promise. The idea of potentially breaking a promise created huge amounts of tension… like lies, broken promises is not allowed.
Allison listened to my fears about shortening the contract, but said that part of the reason to have the contract, is to see what happens when it is broken. That sounded reasonable, so with little thought, and despite the warnings, the contract for the week was sent through to Allison.
The backlash was severe, and immediate. I had again ignored the warning signs, and instead of listening, I rode roughshod over the concerns.
I’ve done this before, and it’s never pretty. In my head, I counter all the concerns with very adult logic… “It will be alright, there’s only three days difference. What’s the big deal?” Implied within that line of thinking is the thought… “Just get over it”. It’s a sign of my intolerance, as well as my inability to accept what is happening in the present, and what happened in the past. It’s telling different ones that their opinion doesn’t matter, and that their feelings are meaningless. It’s another way in which I try to express my need for control…
Whenever I’ve tried to impose any form of unilateral control in the past, there has been an outright rebellion. The control tends to be harsh, and the responding consequences are just as harsh. This time was no exception. I have no one else to blame, but myself. I should have listened. I should have paid attention.
The problem is now that the contract has been broken, there is a reaction to breaking a promise to Allison. Ones within the system don’t want to see her again, for fear of what she will do and say. Others see the breaking of the contract as an invitation to push the self harm to new levels – the contract is already been broken after all, so may as well make the most of it, right? I know that the feelings driving this line of thought are the worthlessness and shame arising from the self harm, but it’s still confusing.
My head is a mess. I’m struggling to stay present.
As I write this, I hear the background chatter… the taunts, the derisive comments, the hatred, the self-hatred, but most of all… fear.
The rugby game hasn’t even started. The tourists haven’t arrived. That will happen tonight and tomorrow… how ironic that the big game should happen on a Friday night, which has always been one of my most difficult nights to get through.
Did I mention that my head is a mess?
Solitude within the storm
Some days, you just want the world to slow down… preferably stop. It feels like you’re being swept along on a tidal wave of noise, anxiety and demands from others… but all you want to do is stand still and ask it to stop. The thing is, it will never stop… our only hope is to change the way we deal with those feelings.
The past few months have been a fairly constant series of tidal waves, dragging me under and tossing me about. This has come to some sort of head this week… my mother is visiting for her 70th birthday; the Rugby World Cup starts tonight (the hoopla associated with such an event has been intense); Winnie’s health is failing; and I was offered the position of team leader. Being offered the job seems to have been the last straw. As soon as the offer was made, an internal cacophony erupted… “Yes” … “No” … “$%^# NO” … “What?” … “YES” … “I’m scared“…
Possibly because there was so much confusion, I didn’t do an immediate people pleasing response of “Yes”. They gave me the weekend to think it over, but it feels like I’m running on a mouse wheel, going nowhere. I already struggle to cope with work, so why would I want to increase that stress? My manager and current team leader say that I am ready for the move… but, am I? Is someone who needs fairly major doses of sedatives before they can teach, really be able to lead a team? I’m already showing physical signs of the stress, so would this push me over the edge?
It feels like I’m being pulled in all directions. It feels like the only way out is through the old coping mechanisms. To say “Yes” and take the punishment. Be a good girl, and play the game.
You always have to play the game, no matter what.
I just want to be alone… alone and clean. I feel so dirty and disgusting.
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Now playing: Christina Aguilera – Beautiful
via FoxyTunes
What if…
It’s 2011. That means that I can go to the city where the father lives. I can stay for the weekend, and I can leave without being hurt.
That is what the adult part of me knows. I know that he no longer wants to hurt me. I know that I can go to a big city and stay there without him finding out. I can go to the museums and the shops. I can celebrate my birthday with my mother. I can leave without him even being aware that I was there. It’s 2011, and I have the ability to stay safe.
So why is there that little voice inside me asking questions in a terrified voice? Asking whether the sister will tell him where we’re going to be. Asking whether the aunt knows, and will tell him. What if he comes into the city and sees us? What if he touches us again? What if the mother doesn’t protect us again? What if we can’t escape?
What if…
Confused religion
Please note that this entry might trigger due to the issues of child abuse and religion being discussed.
Over two years ago, I wrote the post Religion and Karma. In it, I shared some of my confusion around religious concepts. Since I wrote that piece, my confusion has, if anything, deepened. Conflicted and distorted messages about religion, and my self worth, have driven much of my dysfunction over the last two months. I have been bombarded with messages about being evil and not worthy of being here, or of this healing journey.
To give a bit of background as to where much of the distortions come from, my father is Roman Catholic and attended a Catholic school. It was a strict (or traditional) school, with his left handedness being beaten out of him, and intimacy a taboo subject. In contrast, my mother based her religious affiliations on which church had the best outdoor basketball (netball) team – Baptist won. When they married, my mother converted to Catholicism and regularly attended church. My siblings, and myself, were all christened, and my brothers confirmed. The families pathway through Catholicism ended after my mother had me. She was advised that if she had any more children, she would probably die in childbirth. When the church heard of my mothers decision to use birth control, she was asked not to return. As she was the driving force behind our going to church, this meant that none of the family returned.
This is what I now know of the families leaving the fold. But, as I was growing up, my brothers told me that we were asked not to return to church because I screamed too much during the service. Being a sensitive and trusting child, I took those stories, and internalised them. I became convinced that I was the reason that the whole family was going to go to Hell for eternal damnation.
Later, I had several encounters with religion… My sister attended an extremely devout and divisive youth group… I attended religious camps during the school holidays; where, along with John 3:16, we were taught Matthew 25:46 – my sensitivity meant that I took both as signs that I was a sinner… I later joined Rally (similar to Girl Guides), which had a strong religious basis. It was here that things became very confused, as I was old enough to be aware of the messages and expectations, but failed to live up to them. I was told that I needed to pray for God to come into my heart, and I would know that this had occurred when I felt a warmth and peace. Well, I was so disconnected by this stage, that there was no way I was going to feel any warmth in my heart, or anywhere else. This was the final blow, and I turned my back on any further attempts to connect to a higher power.
Throughout all of this, I was being abused. Some of the abusers used phrasing with religious connotations as part of the abuse. I now realise that this had nothing to do with me, but I still internalised it at the time, and took it as further proof as to why God had turned his back on me. I was evil and a sinner. I was beyond salvation.
One of the system, W, has great problems with anything religious. I had never really understood why this trigger was so big, when I had never been abused by a religious figure. Then, last Thursday, Allison asked W what her role was within the system… her answer “to pray”. To pray for forgiveness. To pray for help.
When I was eight, I was abused by some teenagers in the school grounds. The location of the event is significant, because on the rise, about 50 metres away, was a church. About 3 metres away from the structure I was being abused in, there was a thoroughfare for pedestrians and cyclists. It wasn’t busy, but there were usually some people walking by. As I was being abused, W was created within my mind to pray to the church on the hill… to the God she had heard about… she prayed for help from the people walking by… she prayed for salvation from what was happening. When no one answered those prayers, she saw it as proof that we were evil, and therefore not worthy of God’s help.
I was never really exposed to the positive side of any religion. It was all doom and gloom… damnation… selfishness, and selfish acts. My God was a very fearful, vengeful one, and he wasn’t pleased with me.
As I learned about God, I was getting hurt, as were millions of others in the world. That didn’t seem fair, or just. I never liked the overly simple explanation of free will. I still don’t understand how such evil can be in this world. Then, if you have evil, then surely there must be a counter balance to that; and what is that counter, if not a God?
As you can see, I’m still very confused. I initially made this private because I don’t know if I can handle comments on this issue. But, after a couple of people read what I wrote, I realised that maybe I need others reading this in order to challenge my thinking around all of this. I still don’t know what I need to help me understand all of the distorted and confused messages in my head, but this post was one step in trying to sort it through. I don’t know how much help Allison is going to be on this, as when she was questioned last week, there was a sense that she wasn’t firm in her beliefs, so therefore can’t be believed.
I do know that they seriously effect my self worth. The messages about not being worthy of being here, are tied to the messages about religion.
I finish this post, not knowing why I wrote it, let alone published it on the blog. Maybe to show you how bad I really am.
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Now playing: Sarah McLachlan – Angel
via FoxyTunes
Peeling back another layer
I’ve become more reticent to post anything here lately. Many things have contributed to this; but the most important has been my relative destabilisation. The past four months have been filled with anxiety, dysfunctional coping and fluctuating functioning. One of the causes for this has been facing memories which are challenging the way I view myself, and the environment I was raised in. This means that many of my fundamental beliefs are being called into question.
I say “facing memories”, because they have always been there, but up until now I haven’t been ready to look at them. I still don’t know if I am, but this Easter has meant that they’ve arrived like a freight train, regardless of my state of preparation. I’m not sure how you prepare for flashbacks anyway… how do you prepare for emotions which sweep you up and take you on a ride through hell, complete with screams and fire?
In some ways, it could be argued that I began preparing for these memories over five years ago, when I first admitted to a therapist that I was abused in a kindergarten playground by some local teenagers. Kerro talks about peeling back the layers of abuse, and this was my first layer. It was the furtherest from my emotional reactions, so could be told with little affect… it was also the event most quickly relegated to the back of my mind, like headlines in an old newspaper.
Each layer of abuse has posed unique challenges, but this latest layer is causing all sorts of turmoil. It feels as if disturbing this layer is going to change the shape and texture of my life. There is a great deal of fear about this, and many warning signs that the system would like these layers to be left alone. But then these two images keep appearing in flashbacks… they’re not dramatic; in fact, they’re actually rather ordinary… as long as I keep the flashback looking straight ahead… that’s the key, keeping a very tight focus on a point straight ahead. If I look anywhere else, it feels as if the Earth will tilt… and we don’t want that, do we?
Over the past couple of months, I’ve been what can only be described as throwing Allison distractions. Yes, there has been healing work done, but it’s all been dancing around these two related images… testing Allison to see if she will cope, and whether we can trust her reaction to the events. In some ways, I’m still not sure, as some of her reactions seem a little OTT… although, I have a feeling that her reactions are a more authentic reaction to the events; they just happen to clash with my dismissive attitude towards them. I sit there rather bemused, while Allison is telling me how awful it is that those people used me in those ways.
So, back to the images… As I’ve begun to realise the significance of their connection, there has been an all out rebellion inside my head. This has meant that I’ve approached them, and then backed away, several times over the months. This dance with the images is probably my way of desensitising myself to their impact… to allow myself the slower realisation of the implications. I’m not sure if I like this approach, as it sort of feels like a slow torture… why not just do the equivalent of ripping the band aid off, and throw the door wide open?
I recently read a post by Jenny (from artconstellation) about how her stay in-patient helped her realise that she needs to repeat really painful ideas over and over in order for them to sink in and be addressed. I think this is why Allison is regularly asking me to slow down… I’m used to the band aid approach; whereas healing occurs when you allow the emotional connections to happen, and that takes more than one quick telling as you rush through a session. It takes time, grieving, validation and acceptance… things which I don’t traditionally have much patience for. I’m used to approaching a problem at work from different perspectives, but not my healing.
I think this is the reason for my slow dance around these images. Trying to allow the system the chance to accept that these are the memories and emotions that need to be addressed. As the realisation has sunk in that there is a connection between the images, there is huge amounts of fear, confusion and anger. These seem to feed into each other to create a whirlpool of emotions which I can’t label or even begin to comprehend. As I glimpse at these emotions, there is that ever present fear that they will take over my whole being. They seem so much bigger than anything I’ve ever had to face before.
The thing is, I’ve been in this place before. I’ve worked through emotions which have felt so immense, that I didn’t know if it was possible to even begin to go near them… yet I did. Sometimes my coping was dysfunctional, but I always found a way through. So why can’t I believe in my own abilities? The message always seems to come back to not trusting myself. There is that lingering doubt that I’m still paying lip service to healing, and wanting to rip another band aid off… these images, and the parts who hold the associated emotions, are worthy of more respect and care than the band aid approach… I need to remember that.
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Now playing: Bush – Glycerine
via FoxyTunes
Apologies
As a child, it was often up to me to take on the responsibility of the destructive play of my siblings… if something got damaged while the four of us were playing, the others decided that, because I was the favourite, the father would be less angry if I took the blame. This sort of blame game became so advanced, that I would often come home from school to find myself responsible for another broken vase, letting the chooks out, etc. Because I was so much younger than the others, I took on the responsibility that the others gave me without question – I had little choice.
This scenario set me up for taking punishments which weren’t mine to take. It also meant that when I really did something wrong, I thought the world was going to end, because I’d been punished for things I didn’t do, so how bad was the punishment going to be for the things that I did do? I tried in very childish ways to cover up for any of my mistakes, and tried so very hard not to make any to begin with. But, mistakes were inevitable. My father is narcissistic, so often the mistakes were beyond my comprehension… spending too long with a friends family (“Do you like them more than your own family?”), reading too many books (“So you think you’re better than the rest of us, do you?”), and so on.
It seemed as if the goal posts which determined my mistakes, and what I was responsible for, kept changing.
This has lead to what has been described as one of my more annoying traits… the tendency to apologise for everything and anything. I apologise like it’s my responsibility that someone else is having a bad day, and taking it out on you; when someone else makes a bad decision; that you got an B instead of an A for that assignment… you get the idea. I realise that this is my co-dependency issues coming to the surface again… I’ll do anything to placate someone and ease a tense situation. I don’t intellectually believe that I am responsible for these problems; but I believe emotionally that if I don’t apologise, something bad will happen. The more I care about you, or the more I’m scared of you, the more I will apologise.
I’m not sure if it is associated with this trait, but I often don’t remember apologies from others. I can be sure that someone else hasn’t apologised, to then find an email where they clearly state they’re sorry for a misunderstanding. As I write this, I wonder if I don’t remember others apologies, because I don’t want to be in the role of a person doling out the punishment for the wrongs others have done. I vividly remember my father saying that he didn’t want to punish me, but he had to because it was the only way that I’d learn. I could be saying sorry, but it didn’t matter, the punishment had to be done. So now, it’s almost as if I’m scared that by accepting an apology, I’ll be responsible for that person being hurt in some way, just as my father was “forced” to punish when he didn’t want to… so I block out the apology to avoid the consequences.
I often block out the misunderstanding as well, but not always. This can create a situation where parts of me are feeling (rightly) agrieved about a situation; and while an apology has been forthcoming from the other person involved, other parts of the system have blocked the apology as an old self protection coping mechanism. The knowledge that I can block out an apology leads to a situation where I doubt my own experiences and feelings. I’m never sure whether I have a right to be upset about something, or whether it was sorted through at the time of the incident. As a result, I tend to stamp down my feelings and keep on going.
As I heal, I’m finding that the stamping down isn’t as effective. There is more tension around the issue of being hurt by others and apologies in general. I get confused about when I should be offended, and when I deserve an apology. It’s a whole other kettle of fish actually acting on any of those feelings… I often miss the mark, and ask about a situation which I don’t fully remember, and has been worked through. I’d like to think that it’s progress that I took the risk of asking… but in reality it makes me feel like a failure for not having the full picture. I’ve learned to only do this with people that I trust, and are the least likely to be offended if I don’t remember the whole incident… like learning all things new, I’ve still got my training wheels on, and one of them is a bit loose. Until I can fix the training wheel and get more confidence about what apologies mean to me, I’ll keep on apologising at the drop of a hat, and question those that let me land on a soft cushion when I get it wrong.
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Now playing: The Fray – How To Save A Life
via FoxyTunes






