The worst trick a childhood anxiety disorder pulls is, you spend your early years being applauded for being so much more mature than your peers, because you aren’t disruptive, you don’t want any kind of attention, you don’t express yourself, you keep yourself to yourself – this makes you a pleasure to have in class, etc etc – and you start to believe it’s virtue. But you’re actually way behind your peers in normal social development, and who knows if you can ever catch up.
Never heard a truer thing in my life.
holy shit wait you mean being just morbidly terrified of doing anything wrong ISN’T necessarily the same as being “well behaved?!”
Convenient children =/= healthy children
Convenient children do not equal healthy children
Tag: emotional abuse
It’s fucked up to expect emotional support from your child when it comes to their disability.
That’s really all their is too it. If I have to explain further you’re not going to get it anyhow.
Growing up in an abusive household is a fucking trip dude……If you’ve never had someone angrily wash a dish at you or fold a sock in your direction then how are you gonna understand why I get nervous when you quietly do the laundry, or why I ask “are you mad at me?” when you set the bag of groceries down too hard? It’s a totally different way of living and it impacts you long after you’ve left the situation.
This is so important.
Abused kids speak a language you can’t learn
My heart races when I hear someone sigh and then the adrenaline takes forever to wear off. I hate having these reactions even when I know I am safe.
We Can’t Keep Treating Anxiety From Complex Trauma the Same Way We Treat Generalized Anxiety
I’ve been living with the effects of complex trauma for a long time, but for many years, I didn’t know what it was. Off and on throughout my life, I’ve struggled with what I thought was anxiety and depression. Or rather, In addition to being traumatized, I was anxious and depressed.
Regardless of the difference, no condition should ever be minimized. If you are feeling anxious or depressed, it’s important and urgent to find the right support for you. No one gets a prize for “worst” depression, anxiety, trauma or any other combination of terrible things to deal with, and no one should suffer alone. With that in mind, there is a difference between what someone who has Complex PTSD feels and what someone with generalized anxiety or mild to moderate depression feels.
For someone dealing with complex trauma, the anxiety they feel does not come from some mysterious unknown source or obsessing about what could happen. For many, the anxiety they feel is not rational. General anxiety can often be calmed with grounding techniques and reminders of what is real and true. Mindfulness techniques can help. Even when they feel disconnected, anxious people can often acknowledge they are loved and supported by others.
For those who have experienced trauma, anxiety comes from an automatic physiological response to what has actually, already happened. The brain and body have already lived through “worst case scenario” situations, know what it feels like and are hell-bent on never going back there again. The fight/flight/ freeze response goes into overdrive. It’s like living with a fire alarm that goes off at random intervals 24 hours a day. It is extremely difficult for the rational brain to be convinced “that won’t happen,” because it already knows that it has happened, and it was horrific.
Those living with generalized anxiety often live in fear of the future. Those with complex trauma fear the future because of the past.
The remedy for both anxiety and trauma is to pull one’s awareness back into the present. For a traumatized person who has experienced abuse, there are a variety of factors that make this difficult. First and foremost, a traumatized person must be living in a situation which is 100 percent safe before they can even begin to process the tsunami of anger, grief and despair that has been locked inside of them, causing their hypervigilance and other anxious symptoms. That usually means no one who abused them or enabled abuse in the past can be allowed to take up space in their life. It also means eliminating any other people who mirror the same abusive or enabling patterns.
Unfortunately for many, creating a 100 percent abuser-free environment is not possible, even for those who set up good boundaries and are wary of the signs. That means that being present in the moment for a complex trauma survivor is not fail-proof, especially in a stressful event. They can be triggered into an emotional flashback by anything in their present environment.
It is possible (and likely) that someone suffering from the effects of complex trauma is also feeling anxious and depressed, but there is a difference to the root cause. Many effective strategies that treat anxiety and depression don’t work for trauma survivors. Meditation and mindfulness techniques that make one more aware of their environment sometimes can produce an opposite effect on a trauma survivor. Trauma survivors often don’t need more awareness. They need to feel safe and secure in spite of what their awareness is telling them.
At the first sign of anxiety or depression, traumatized people will spiral into toxic shame. Depending on the wounding messages they received from their abusers, they will not only feel the effects of anxiety and depression, but also a deep shame for being “defective” or “not good enough.” Many survivors were emotionally and/or physically abandoned, and have a deep rooted knowledge of the fact that they were insufficiently loved. They live with a constant reminder that their brains and bodies were deprived of a basic human right. Even present-day situations where they are receiving love from a safe person can trigger the awareness and subsequent grief of knowing how unloved they were by comparison.
Anxiety and depression are considered commonplace, but I suspect many of those who consider themselves anxious or depressed are actually experiencing the fallout of trauma. Most therapists are not well trained to handle trauma, especially the complex kind that stems from prolonged exposure to abuse. Unless they are specially certified, they might have had a few hours in graduate school on Cluster B personality disorders, and even fewer hours on helping their survivors. Many survivors of complex trauma are often misdiagnosed as having borderline personality disorder (BPD) or bipolar disorder. Anyone who has sought treatment for generalized anxiety or depression owes themselves a deeper look at whether trauma plays a role.
damn, this is important!
We Can’t Keep Treating Anxiety From Complex Trauma the Same Way We Treat Generalized Anxiety
behavioural and emotional patterns of living in abuse:
- you spend most of your time shut in your room
- you’re scared of footsteps approaching your door
- you prefer not to come out unless there’s nobody home
- when they come back you run to your room/safe place
- you’re nervous and anxious if you have to spend time in presence of others
- you try to get away from your home, you wish you could live somewhere else
- your self-confidence is very low
- you worry about making too much noise (have a feeling you’ll get yellet at
or abused for it)- you try to move around as silently as possible and try to not be noticed by
anyone- you feel uncomfortable and uneasy sitting at the same table as rest of
family/housemates- you don’t feel like you belong here
- you feel like a burden to your housemates
- you don’t feel like you’re worth having around or supporting in any way
- you don’t feel like anyone will ever love you or believe in you
- you don’t feel like anything you do is good enough
- you can’t stand someone watching you do things like cleaning or anything
else you need to get done- you try really hard to still find good points about your life and cling to
them- you strongly worry that you are somehow worse than anyone else
- you feel like you’re behind on everyone and that you’re failing to live
your life properly- you don’t feel like anything would have changed if you died, or even that
it would be better if you didif you’re experiencing most of this, you’re going through abuse. Your value
isn’t in any way less than other humans, and you are absolutely not any kind of
burden. You are human who is forced to live in a way humans aren’t meant to
live. You are in living conditions that disable you from feeling happy,
fulfilled, or even seeing yourself as a human being. You are suffering. What is being done to you
is not okay. You deserve better than this.
butts-bouncing-on-the-beltway:
i mean, maybe this is my inner “survivor of child abuse” talking, but I am not going to tell abusive parents that they’re bad at bringing up their children without a bullet proof plan with regards to how I could protect my student from the emotional and physical backlash of that meeting.
Important thing to remember about intervening in abuse in general. Any actions taken by others to hold the abuser accountable WILL be taken out on the victim and not the person doing the confronting. Do not confront an abuser about their actions unless you know for absolute certain that you can protect their victim from the fallout.
AN ABBREVIATED GUIDE TO ‘holy shit my friend is in an abusive relationship what do I do’
Dysfunctional Beliefs That Are Common in Estranged Parents’ Forums | Issendai.com
this is probably the scariest page
I remember reading that series a while back.
It’s odd how there’s a network of forums that are effectively forums for abusive parents, even though they wouldn’t accept that label, although it probably comes down to bad driving out good more effectively than the reverse. She mentions in one of the posts that people who are estranged from their children through no fault of their own occasionally show up, but they don’t stick around.
twelve months on the parallels with incel culture are obvious.
Dysfunctional Beliefs That Are Common in Estranged Parents’ Forums | Issendai.com
men’s loyalty to violence is disturbing. when women want a life free of abuse, assault, threat, & coercion, men’s first suggestion is “learn to fight back. learn to defend yourself”. i don’t want my life to be a fight. i don’t want to “prove myself” through inflicting pain & fear.
i don’t find violence and physical conflict fulfilling or self-actualising.they’re exhausting & dehumanizing
Tea only
“Emotional abuse works like this: You are screamed at, and then, not knowing any better, you stand up for yourself. You think this is a way of being strong. You think this is a defense tactic.But this only provokes more screaming. Going silent provokes more screaming too, but usually it keeps the threats to the minimum. It keeps it just at screaming and not: a shove down the stairs, or order to pack your stuff and get out. So you learn how to go silent. How to play dead. How to cry without making a noise. How to swallow noise. How to wipe your cheeks, get out of the car, and go about your day. You learn. And when the screaming has stopped, when the two of you are in the car or out to dinner and they’re all smiles, all asking for favors, all questions, you are still hurt and annoyed and want to ask them, how? How can you speak to me like that? How can you pretend you did not say those things? How can you have forgotten? But you’ve learned. So you listen to, “Can I borrow your key”s and “how was your day”s and you play dead. You swallow the noise. And sometimes it doesn’t matter who is speaking to you, it doesn’t matter if they’re a friend, it doesn’t matter if their criticism is constructive, it doesn’t matter. You’ve learned. Any sort of speaking, any raising of the voice, any insult and you play dead.”
— Good Girl, Lora Mathis (via cylon)
What is the “friend” trauma/abuse response? Never heard of that one before.
I’ll run through the others very quickly too.
Fight is when the adrenaline surge helps you kick the shit out of whatever is threatening you. In an “animal attack” sense, it means beating up a wolf or whatever. In a modern interpersonal sense, it tends to mean “screaming at your boss until you get fired.” That said, even a confrontation as simple as saying “no” to an abuser is a type of fight response. Anything where you set and defend boundaries is fighting, in this context.
Flight is when the adrenaline surge helps you run away. Whether this means outrunning a wolf, or finding an excuse to leave the room and lock yourself in the bathroom where your angry parent can’t reach you.
Freeze is when you become immobilized by fear. If you’ve ever been so scared that your entire body locked up and you couldn’t even scream, that’s the freeze response. In an animal context, many predators have movement-prioritizing sight, and may overlook you if you seem like just another pattern of light through trees. In an interpersonal context, freeze tends not to be overly useful, though some abusers will stop attacking someone who doesn’t fight back. In either case, if a confrontation gets physical, highly contracted muscles are harder to hit, and provide some degree of pain reduction.
Flop is the opposite of freeze. Rather than overwhelming muscle contraction holding you still, it involves overwhelming muscle relaxation. Fainting, playing dead, etc are all “flop” responses. The stereotype of urinating due to fear is because of involuntary muscle relaxation, and is also a flop response.
Friend is actually one of the first things human beings learn to do when faced with a threat. It’s the thing babies tend to do when they scream for an adult to help them. It involves trying to get the attacker “on your side,” whether by using baby talk and some treats at that wolf, or agreeing with everything your aggressive partner says in the hopes of satisfying them and getting them to leave you alone. Begging for mercy, becoming extremely submissive and agreeable, laughing at everything your abuser says is if it is brilliant and hilarious rather than a real threat, complimenting them, doing everything they say. These are “friend” behaviours.
Because “friend” is the first thing we as human beings learn, and because we are such social creatures who rely on befriending each other constantly, it is most people’s go to response to human-centered fear. Our brains are built from day one to see compromise and collective action as the “right” solutions to problems.
This, unfortunately, also makes it very, very, very easy for abusers to train their victims into being extremely obedient, and into doing things that the victims would not normally do.
The prevalence of this kind of fear response is why cults operate the way they operate. It’s why people in abusive situations are rarely able to leave them until they get outside impetus. It’s why people love shitheel cops who can and would kill them without a second glance. It’s why brown nosers and teachers’ pets exist.
Human beings are built to make friends, so much so that we rely on that skill in most confrontations.
And that makes us easily exploited by anyone who doesn’t see us are friends, but rather, as fodder.
