By Pia Mellody
OK, some surprising things I'm taking away from this book.
Pia Mellody was experiencing huge people pleasing behaviors, and the resulting rage and frustration that goes along with never pleasing everyone, with feeling unappreciated, feeling fearful, feeling inadequate and not doing everything perfectly as a wife, mother, nurse, and social creature living in a world she felt was responsible for her feelings of being good enough.
She felt resentment, and her anger kept building until she couldn't go to meetings at the Meadows Treatment facility for Addictiuon, where she worked. The anger came out of the blue, and scared her, and the people around her. The anger kept growing, and she didn't understand it. She wanted to understand it.
When she sought treatment and help, the professionals just blinked at her, like she had three heads, and was crazy (I'm paraphrasing everything here) she finally realized she'd have to figure it out on her own. She was instructed to figure it out on her own. It was amazing she was IN a treatment facility where she had access to people suffering with many similar symptoms, child abuse in particular.
Through her work at the Meadows she began to understand the term "abuse" was broader than overt physical and sexual abuse. She included intellectual, emotional,and spiritual forms, and includes "any experience in childhood (birth to age 17) that is less than nurturing."
She did much of the work to identify Codependence, it's causes, and boundary work to cure it.
Wow, think about that. It changes the conversation for me, certainly, to think about "abuse" in terms of ANY experience that's less than nurturing. In my own childhood, and as a mother.
I think this book would have been helpful in my twenties, and maybe teens. I wish I could have internalized it when I was in grade school, honestly.
The journey continues.
Lighter