Part II: Discovering the Roots (For background information, please see my
previous post, Part I.)
As you heal, life becomes more and more beautiful! |
As I have researched EMDR on
the Internet, I have read comments regarding the efficacy of the
treatment. Some folks claim that EMDR is
a sham, that it does not do a bit of good in reducing the emotional load of
trauma memories. Some folks claim that
EMDR is the only therapy that has helped them.
And some folks claim that it may be of some use in defusing trauma
memories but that it is not the “miracle cure” that the EMDR Institute and
Francine Shapiro seem to think it is. My
position is that EMDR in combination with Ego State Therapy is helping me to
reclaim the self that I was born to be, the self I was before my parents taught
me otherwise. I describe my most recent
session here so that you may witness my experience and, if you wish, use what I
say to inform your opinion.
When I began my EMDR session
on Monday, April 29th, I had no idea as to what my work during the session
would reveal. I hoped that I would be
able to defuse my childhood sexual abuse experience, but I was not sure that
would happen. As I was to discover,
however, my work on Monday revealed much more than I had hoped, for during the
session I identified the taproots of all my abuse, including the domestic abuse
I endured during my twenty-year marriage.
At the beginning of my
treatment on Monday, my therapist suggested that I imagine the living room and
the couch of the neighbor woman who had sexually abused me. We planned to move from the living room into
the neighbor’s kitchen, the room in which she had violently sexually abused me,
when I felt I could do that. However, we
didn’t get out of the living room, for as she tapped on my knees, the word
BOUNDARIES came to my mind. And with
that word came so many other thoughts as we advanced through the session. By the time we were finished with an hour of
EMDR, I understood why I had been abused by the neighbor, by my parents, by my
husband, and by others. I will summarize
my understanding below in three words:
LACK OF BOUNDARIES!
In recent years, a lot of
parents and schools have taught children about “stranger danger” and saying
“no” to people who attempt to harm them. In other words, many of today’s children are
learning that they have boundaries and also have a right to protect those
boundaries. In addition, those same
children are learning that they are worth protecting. After all, it's natural to protect something of value from harm. When I was a child, little girls were often not given permission to
protect themselves. In the first place,
people did not talk about such topics as sex abuse, rape, and kidnapping. Thus, often the context for teaching little girls
to be assertive in protecting themselves did not exist. In addition, many little girls were not taught
that they were of value and were worth protecting. In some respects, girls and women were still
regarded as second-class citizens in the 1930s and 1940s, the decades of my
childhood. That fact plus the fact that
my parents made it clear to me that they had not wanted a girl when I was
born—indeed, they had not wanted a child of either gender—led them and me to believe
I was not worth protecting.
In my case, even if people
had talked about abuse and sex crimes, I could not have protected myself
because most of the time, my parents did not allow me to use the word "no." My parents espoused a Nazi-like authoritarian
philosophy of child rearing, and I was punished if I did not comply with all
their demands. My mother believed that
babies and small children had to be taught “who was boss” so they didn’t
believe or feel they were important. To
her, breaking a child’s will was an essential element of child raising, and
showing love and positive attention led to a child feeling too important, too
valuable. If a child felt important,
according to my mother, that child would become spoiled and would become a
tyrant in the household. Thus, I learned
that I was not valuable and not important—and not worth protecting from harm.
If you have read the posts
in which I describe my childhood abuse, you read that my mother would put me
out to roam the neighborhood after breakfast.
I was the perfect prey for the neighborhood predator, the woman next
door. She was an adult, and I had been
taught that adults knew best and could do whatever they wanted to do to me, and
I was too afraid of punishment to say no.
My mother didn’t want me in the house, and the neighbor woman invited me
into her house and paid attention to me.
So I always accepted her invitation, hoping that she would not put her
hands where they didn’t belong. And when
she did, then I froze and couldn’t run out the door. On my final visit, her abuse was so violent
that I did manage to break free and run home.
I sneaked into my house and hid from my mother until I was able to leave
my hiding place. I never did tell her
about the abuse because I was certain that she would blame me and punish
me.
I grew from being a child
with no sense of value and no boundaries into an adult who had no protective
boundaries and no sense of self worth. If
a woman has no sense of self worth, then why would she protect herself? And because I had been taught that everyone
else knew what was best for me and everyone else was right and I was wrong, I
fell for the first man who told me that he knew I wanted sex whether I knew it
or not. I married the second man who
showed any interest in me. My
twenty-year marriage was a nightmare of sexual abuse and psychological
abuse. The nightmare ended only because
I caught my husband doing the same thing to my daughter that he was doing to
me. I knew that my daughter did not
deserve the abuse, so I reported my husband to the authorities, saw him prosecuted
and sentenced, and got a divorce.
I have spent the past thirty
years trying to make sense of the mess I have called “my life.” On Monday, April 29th, during my
EMDR treatment, many of the puzzle pieces fell into place. I now can trace all
my abuse back to the fact that I had never been taught that I was worth
protecting and, therefore, that I had never been taught to protect myself by
saying “no” to a potential abuser. In
addition, until I caught my husband in the act of abusing our daughter, I had
thought that he, like all other adults in my life, was always right and I was
always wrong. Finding him using our
daughter for his own selfish purposes caused me to re-think that belief, but I
continued to believe that I was worthless—until Monday’s EMDR session.
Now I understand that my
parents, in addition to my former husband, were wrong. I am still trying to wrap my mind around that
one! And now I am in the process of
re-thinking the entire matter of my value as a human being. I have always considered other people as
being valuable, and now I feel as if I’m in a department store fitting room,
trying that concept on my own self, looking into the mirror to see if it fits,
trying to decide if it is comfortable.
As with most changes, this new concept may take me a while to adopt, but
I’ve taken the first step. One step at a
time—that’s the only way to go. For me,
at least. One step at a time.
Somewhere in my brain, I’m
processing the material from that recent EMDR session. Chances are, I’ll be working on it a
while. After all, I’m 74 years old, and
for that amount of time, I’ve believed I’m worthless. It may take a while to forge the new neural
pathways that will change my attitude and cause it to be reflected in the way I
think about myself. Thanks to the EMDR
treatment, I know now that I feel worthless because I was TAUGHT to feel
worthless! When I came into the world,
my brain was new, ripe for learning the lessons of life. Unfortunately for me, my parents, both public
school teachers, taught me the wrong lesson, a tragic lesson. Now it’s up to me to erase their lesson and
teach myself the correct lesson—I have value, and I am worth protecting!
To conclude, I firmly
believe that if I had not had this EMDR session, I would not have had the
insights that surfaced on Monday—the insight that my parents failed to give me
the tools I needed to protect myself from people intent on taking advantage of
and harming children and women. Now that
I understand that it was my parents’ failure to do this and that it was, as
people say, about them and not about me, I can go about the work of rebuilding
my self-concept. I am sure that this
process will involve more EMDR work.
So—full speed ahead!
Here are a couple of
Scottish proverbs to help you along your path—
“Be happy while you’re living, for you’re
a long time dead.”
“Twelve highlanders and a bagpipe make
a rebellion.”
(This one may not be
relevant to healing C-PTSD, but I thought it was worth throwing in. You never know when you might need to make a rebellion!)
Photos taken at tulip farm in April of 2013. |
Very inspiring post and I'm glad you're finding your sense of self worth. I suspect you've always harbored some self love since you were such a brave and action oriented mother. How many people have the courage to go through the divorce and prosecution process? Keep up the great work!
ReplyDeleteJean, cheering you on!
ReplyDelete