Hey Lise, glad you're back and on this topic, too!
For me... I need to know I'm "OK" - just as I am - that I'm safe - including safe being me, worth caring for, and that when my emotions are in turmoil - I've been to your black hole - that someone, somewhere will help me find my way back to emotional balance, or equilibrium. That this turmoil matters enough for someone to try to help me get back to balance. That it doesn't make them uncomfortable, rejecting, or drive them away.
You mentioned smoking the last time... I've finally realized that my habit is based on the needs I just described. That I used it for a substitute for really getting those needs met. It's just ironic, isn't it? That I'd choose something like this - the "comfort that kills" - which so accurately symbolizes and represents the kind of attachment style I had with my mother.
Her "care" of me, was "comfort that kills". And it was my "need" for comfort & "OK-ness" that kept me going back ; kept me "hooked"- even knowing it came at a very high price. It was my own unsatisfied/unsatisfiable need for an impossibility - that I could make my mother normal and have a normal relationship with her - that needed an outlet; a vent. And since it "could've been worse" (according to mom) that was interpreted as a unspoken "it's OK... it's OK that you're smoking".
And it was something that wasn't her - a boundary of sorts - it was the only one I was permitted to have. So it also served to separate me from her projections and distortions - it served as a "safe zone". I could say more... but it's only more of the same type of connection/association that I've picked apart and tried to understand.
I'm starting to understand that this kind of self-sabotage is a learned habit... a substitute for the "good enough" attachment equilibrium that I happened on by accident while 100% desperate for that equilibrium - that helped me "cope" with my emotions (which weren't safe to have or express) and that unconsciously, I chose something that mirrored the attachment that existed in reality. It was what I was familiar with; I didn't know any better or different. THEN.
I'm at the stage now, with this... where I'm figuring out how to let this go. The problem for me is, how does one "let something go"? What does that consist of? What does "letting it go" MEAN in practical terms? I've only recently decided that for me, it doesn't mean that I simply forget it and put it out of my mind... that's like denying my own existence for all these years. I do have to accept it and my real need behind the substitute--gratification system.
Right now, this is how I'm defining what "let it go" means:
I don't HAVE TO stop thinking about it "forever"...
I only have to stop letting "it" (and "it" can be anything) control my feelings, thoughts and actions... control "me"...
to have let something go
I'd love to know what you think about this, whether any of it makes sense to you and if you have anything to add, or clarify on this "theory".