So - this is going to take me a while to "get out" coherently. And I may not have the luxury of time to put it all out here, all at one time, so I'm going to lock the thread until I do. THEN, I really want everyone's thoughts about this and viewpoints and debate/discussion. But I think I've finally come up with my personal theory - personal roadmap or treasure map, if you will - about how to go about this type of healing.
DISCLAIMER: This is a theory - as such, it may be over-generalized; over-personalized to my individual situation and I continue to experiment and try to "prove" parts of the theory in actual experience; in reality. I expect that there are those of you that will question some of my basic premises - which may in fact be "leaps of faith" or magical beliefs. Hell, I could be flat out wrong about some things. It's OK to tell me that. [deleted] The "theory" is my way of learning about things that I could've learned in a "normal" FOO... and changing my personal dysfunctions enough to become healthier, happier, and to lose the anxiety while building confidence in myself. To feel "safe" - as much as humans can. We can still be eaten by a grizzly bear or wiped out by a meteor.
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Some basic terms and a description of what I think "The Problem" is:
"Attachment" is simply knowing that there is someone who will take care of your needs. As an infant, to create an environment of physical comfort. Later, to mirror back to the infant their emotions and to "mark" when those emotions differ from "mom's" emotions. Mirroring and marking help establish the boundaries of the "self" - me (and my emotions) and you (and your emotions). Those boundaries are the foundation of what is called "self-efficacy" - which is a fancy word for confidence in your own abilities. Those basic boundaries are also the nutritious soil which allow the child to become his/her own unique "flower" - a separate, independent individual with a coherent "SELF". Growing up, those boundaries shift - the child needs less from the parent and is more self-sufficient - and eventually can "standalone" as an adult in "real life" outside of the family.
"Parentification" is a word that describes a reversal of family or parent-child roles. The child satisfies the parents emotional/physical needs, instead of the usual relationship. This situation can take different forms - using a child as spouse or expecting, demanding, or requiring the child to parent the parent. Obviously, parentification disrupts the normal "attachment" process.
"Boundaries" is a word to describe a bit of the human condition. I can't know what he thinks, feels... unless he tells me. Often, dysfunctional parents claim some sort of "extrasensory" perception, claiming to know the child better than he/she knows him or herself. This usually scares the bejesus out of the child who comes to believe that "there's no place to hide", there is no place safe or peaceful or quiet where the child can simly BE who he or she is.
Some confusion arises through the use of the word "boundaries" (though it's still appropriate) to describe an individual's right to accept/decline participation in some activity.
"Let's go jump off this cliff"! "No, I don't want to".
"You're going to Harvard - it's the only legitimate university". "No, I want to go to art school".
"I want to be a scientist when I grow up" "No, you can't. Girls can't do the math and it's not "right" for girls to compete with men. Only men can be scientists". (Hear this long enough, and you believe it through every little mistake you make - you see the mistakes as reinforcing the false belief that was projected - pushed into and through your "boundary" of how you define or see yourself.)
"Gaslighting and Projection" go sort of hand in hand. Gaslighting is when someone persuades you that what you know is real, is wrong. Projection is when that person pushes their reality, emotions, beliefs etc into you instead of owning them or admitting to them him-herself. For instance, when some claims in a discussion that "you're getting angry" or "raising your voice" when in fact, they are refusing to hear what you've been saying and they are angry that you don't completely agree with them. In this type of thing, they've just pinned the projection tail on the "donkey" - accused you of their emotion. Ironically, in this situation, the donkey usually feels extremely angry & confused but without being able to explain why!
Gaslighting and Projection are two forms of trespassing, intruding on boundaries.
"The Inner Child" I'm coming to define as my emotional self. For sake of simplicity, I believe that we all have a physcial, intellectual and emotional "center" - "self". They interact - sometimes more than they should; sometimes a lot less than they should. I don't profess to know what the ideal balance of all 3 centers are - sometimes I think I get a glimpse or two. Those glimpses are moments of unsurpassed well-being and delight. Just because they don't last forever, doesn't mean that they aren't totally real. And I'm not totally convinced that "the goal" is to extend those moments to 100% of our waking existence. They arrive... and they pass... like the crocus in the spring. But they are important moments to appreciate.
So, in my theory, my emotional self was traumatized. And because of gaslighting and my need to "prove" what I knew really happened to me (assault & rape which my mom denied had happened) - and to a lesser extent, projection - and because my Nmom insisted on reversing our roles (she NEEDED me to parent her)... my emotional self was banned from existence - snuffed out - shamed into a chinese box and told NOT to come out because how dare I have emotional needs and expect my mom to meet them?
And there (the dark chinese box) is where my emotional self stayed for a long, long, long time.
My 12 yr old emotional self had been effectively "stopped" and told that all those emotions & needs were BAD and WRONG.
"Reparenting" is the process of reassuring my inner child that those feelings weren't bad or wrong - on the contrary, how normal to feel that way. In reparenting, I validate my emotional self's feelings. Like a good parent, I have "rules" of behavior for my emotional self... behavioral boundaries for this awkward pre-teen who doesn't have the built-in, osmosis-learned sense of scale or appropriateness that people normally learn. In reparenting, I meet my emotional self's needs - and reassure her that it's OK and safe to have those needs.
Reparenting and Inner Child is way of thinking and talking about how I care for myself. About my relationship with myself. Not about separate, unconnected different personalities contained in one body.