Out of the Storm

Development of CPTSD in Childhood => Causes => Emotional Abuse => Topic started by: Finding My Voice on August 31, 2014, 01:24:13 PM

Title: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Finding My Voice on August 31, 2014, 01:24:13 PM
Who here has experienced emotional incest (a parent relying on you for emotional support or fulfillment) and/or enmeshment?

Fully detaching from BPDm and getting rid of all the emotional programming is an ongoing task for me.  For anyone else struggling with this, I recommend The Emotional Incest Syndrome by Patricia Love.  The author is a therapist and experienced emotional incest during her own childhood with an alcoholic mother.
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Kizzie on August 31, 2014, 05:47:07 PM
Welcome to OOTS Finding My Voice!

My father was an alcoholic and my mother suffers from Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD) which meant I was trained to fulfill their emotional needs, my Ms in particular.  I am 58 and my brother is 60 and she stills refers to us as "the kids."  Wish I were kidding but I'm not.  I think that probably would constitute emotional incest (EI), but maybe you can shed some light on exactly what EI is.  Do you think you ended up developing CPTSD as a result of your M's EI? 


Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Kizzie on August 31, 2014, 06:58:11 PM
I was just flipping through John Bradshaw's book: Healing the Shame that Binds You" (20050 and came across this:

What the shame based mother was unable to find in her own mother she finds in her own children. The child is always at her disposal. A child cannot run away as her own mother did. A child can be used as an echo, is completely centred on her, will never desert her, can be totally controlled, and offers full admiration and absorbed attention..... Now the child is taking care of the parents' needs rather than the parents taking care of the child's need ..... This caretaker role is strangely paradoxical. In an attempt to secure parental love and avoid being abandoned,, the child is in fact, being abandoned (p. 67).

Hard to have a strong sense of self in this kind of family.   
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Finding My Voice on August 31, 2014, 09:30:54 PM
Quote from: Kizzie on August 31, 2014, 06:58:11 PM
I was just flipping through John Bradshaw's book: Healing the Shame that Binds You" (20050 and came across this:

What the shame based mother was unable to find in her own mother she finds in her own children. The child is always at her disposal. A child cannot run away as her own mother did. A child can be used as an echo, is completely centred on her, will never desert her, can be totally controlled, and offers full admiration and absorbed attention..... Now the child is taking care of the parents' needs rather than the parents taking care of the child's need ..... This caretaker role is strangely paradoxical. In an attempt to secure parental love and avoid being abandoned,, the child is in fact, being abandoned (p. 67).

Yes, that's pretty much what emotional incest is, as far as I understand it, and that's what happened to me.  I had a mother with BPD (who was herself the daughter of a BPD mother) and she used me to meet her emotional needs.  I listened to her talk about her depression and wishes to die, I had to reassure her that she was a good mother, etc.

Quote from: Kizzie on August 31, 2014, 05:47:07 PM
Welcome to OOTS Finding My Voice!

Thanks!

Quote
Do you think you ended up developing CPTSD as a result of your M's EI?

It was more the overall package of living with a BPD mother, I think -- not being allowed to express thoughts or feelings that contradicted my mother's, isolating myself and silencing myself in order to avoid her rages, the EI and being used by her while my own needs were unmet, criticism that alternated with compliments I couldn't believe, etc.  I was an only child so I was both a GC and SG and got the full force of her maternal attention.
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: emotion overload on September 01, 2014, 02:27:15 PM
This is one of my primary issues today.  I dealt with enmeshment with uBPDm as a child, and still have the problem today.

I really struggle with this now that I am OOTF, because I can't blame the enmeshment on uBPDm anymore.  I have trouble NOT telling her things.  It's why medium chill and boundaries are such a scary idea for me.  Especially now, when I am lonely and don't have a boyfriend, I go to her with most of my problems.  And it embarrasses me to admit this.  I know better.  I know that I am just giving her ammunition and perpetuating an unhealthy relationship.  But it's habit and conditioning, I guess.

I will look into The Emotional Incest Syndrome again.  It's on my amazon wishlist, but I was afraid it was more directed towards mother/son or father/daughter relationships.  I wasn't sure how helpful it would be for mother/daughter.  But Finding My Voice, your recommendation lets me know it should help with me.
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Butterfly on September 02, 2014, 12:48:10 PM
Goodness my uPD mum brings new meaning to being enmeshed and engulfing beyond relying on me for emotional support. It's like she's not a separate person, she mirrors my likes and dislikes and even steals my health issues as her own. If she does have her own health issue then I must have it too because I'm her daughter so she projects and advises me to see a doctor even though she hasn't for herself. Anything I do she does too and she befriends my friends. It's so suffocating I used to wake in the middle of the night choking and a sleep study showed no physical cause for the phenomenon.

Most recently she stole my near fatal illness for her own to gain sympathy and go around to her friends who in turn came to me during my illness expressing sympathy for my mother that she has this too. There no possible way on earth for her ever to had such a medical emergency as I have had, yet she somehow got others to believe it and feel sorry for her.

I'm not sure I could read about emotional incest without having a major emotional breakdown. Having LC and using MC when I do engage, employing Boundaries when I've had enough, has helped me so much. At least I know I'm separate and function on by own.

ETA - in fact DH was trying to understand how it felt for me and in trying to explain it to him I finally said the only way I can think to say this in a way he could comprehend is to use the word rape. Because despite my 'no' she takes without my permission what belongs to me, what is mine alone, and makes it her own. It was a painful realization for me.
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Badmemories on September 02, 2014, 05:30:01 PM
 @Emotional overload.

I really struggle with this now that I am OOTF, because I can't blame the enmeshment on uBPDm anymore.  I have trouble NOT telling her things.  It's why medium chill and boundaries are such a scary idea for me.  Especially now, when I am lonely and don't have a boyfriend, I go to her with most of my problems.  And it embarrasses me to admit this.  I know better.  I know that I am just giving her ammunition and perpetuating an unhealthy relationship.  But it's habit and conditioning, I guess.

I really haven't been working on this too much at the time. MY M either is a uMPD person or she has lots of fleas. At this point I mostly get irritated. We went out to Supper the other day and Since I was in range of a wifi I was trying to update my apps. She get a little prissy, because I am not paying attention to her. "I calmly state that when I get finished, I will give you my undivided attention." it will only take a few minutes. She did wait patiently.I did have her on no contact for a while a few years back. She is not on such a high horse now. I also set boundaries. I can actually ask her for advice now. before she'd get mad IF i asked for advice and did not take it. She does call me almost everyday mostly she talks about the news. All of her friends are in nursing homes, or so disabled that She has no one to do things with. In a way I think that I was the Golden Child for many years. She depended on me to be the Mother for her when she worked. Right now she is the least of My problems. As I do need to, I set boundaries. She pretty much accepts them now! Sometimes she tell me when I am very depressed to just get up and do something. She has no understanding of what I go through. I am not sure I can blame her for being abusive. Her parents were very physically abusive. She did not physically punish us very much. Mostly she was emotionally abusive.  I do tell her when I have a different point of view.

She gets mad when I don't answer the phone.... I tell her I am not always at home to answer the phone. If I don't feel like talking to her I don't. One day a while back she actually apologized for chewing me out. I was really surprised.

So, start with the smallest of boundaries. Does she use your chats against you? If so then YOU night want to decide what you will and won't talk about with her. Boundaries are for YOU to protect YOURSELF.. not to control her. how does she act when you state your opinions. does she listen to you at all or is the conversation one sided? Do you have time to do things together? Maybe like me you will have to put your emeshment on the back burner until you get so other support system in place.
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Kizzie on September 02, 2014, 06:45:47 PM
Quote from: Badmemories on September 02, 2014, 05:30:01 PM
Maybe like me you will have to put your emeshment on the back burner until you get so other support system in place.

Some good advice from Badmemories Emotional Overload.  Perhaps instead of feeling badly about being enmeshed, try to let it go for now and just focus on doing more for you. You may find the enmeshment starts to take care of yourself. 

I attend a support group (going today as a matter of fact) for people with a mood disorder and it helps.  Is there something like that in your area perhaps?  I love the online forums and all the support and information and encouragement, but it's nice to get an actual hug or smile once in a while.

And do you have any interests that would take you out of the house, that you would enjoy (it can be anything from small to large), and that would help you to focus on you rather than your M? 

My uNPDM who is ground zero for my CPTSD came for a visit in June, not all that long after I went through a really bad stretch and surprise, surprise it actually went quite well. I didn't have a single EF and that's a first in my 58 years.  WE have lots of techniques in palce now for dealing with her, but the main one this time was that my H and I made sure that we always had something in the day that made us happy so if she got on a roll we were not just simmering and sidestepping the PD behav, we had something for ourselves. And it worked! 

So if you want to brainstorm some ideas here I'm sure we can help to get the "It's all about me for a change" juices flowing  ;D
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Finding My Voice on September 02, 2014, 06:58:50 PM
Quote from: emotion overload on September 01, 2014, 02:27:15 PM
I really struggle with this now that I am OOTF, because I can't blame the enmeshment on uBPDm anymore.  I have trouble NOT telling her things.  It's why medium chill and boundaries are such a scary idea for me.  Especially now, when I am lonely and don't have a boyfriend, I go to her with most of my problems.  And it embarrasses me to admit this.  I know better.  I know that I am just giving her ammunition and perpetuating an unhealthy relationship.  But it's habit and conditioning, I guess.

I can empathize, I have my own trouble separating emotionally from my mom even though she's not even here anymore.  If she was your only emotional support growing up, as my mom was, it's hard to give that up.

Quote
I will look into The Emotional Incest Syndrome again.  It's on my amazon wishlist, but I was afraid it was more directed towards mother/son or father/daughter relationships.  I wasn't sure how helpful it would be for mother/daughter.  But Finding My Voice, your recommendation lets me know it should help with me.

Yes, I was just thinking too that it might address what I think you were talking about elsewhere with rapid up-and-down mood swings -- I think she talks about that as an effect of being a "chosen child" (i.e. the child the parent leans on for support).
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: emotion overload on September 02, 2014, 08:40:51 PM
I read the book, and it was ok.  I am not sure it gave me more info than I already had regarding enmeshment.  I guess this is a topic I've read about and discussed in therapy for years.  A T brought up the term to me about a decade ago. 

The take away from the book is that I need interests and friends.  Yep, I already knew that.  This is very hard for me to do right now, and I have some issues to work thru before I can even attempt that.  I don't leave the house much, I'm isolated, and don't trust people. 

I know that it would be easier to rely on my mom less if I had other support.  I don't know of any support groups.  I live in a poor, rural area.  Actually, my location is part of my reason for being scared to try to make friends.  The majority of people I have met in my area are poor and needy and not afraid to ask for money, rides, etc.  I have had to cut off a few of these sorts of people, and I don't want any more in my life!
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Badmemories on September 03, 2014, 01:51:03 AM
Quote from: emotion overload on September 02, 2014, 08:40:51 PM
I have some issues to work Thur before I can even attempt that.  I don't leave the house much, I'm isolated, and don't trust people. 

I know that it would be easier to rely on my mom less if I had other support.  I don't know of any support groups.  I live in a poor, rural area.  Actually, my location is part of my reason for being scared to try to make friends.  The majority of people I have met in my area are poor and needy and not afraid to ask for money, rides, etc.  I have had to cut off a few of these sorts of people, and I don't want any more in my life!

This is MY problem exactly. I own a mobile home court (with uNPDH) All the people there are needy! At first as a part of MY Christianity, I tried to help them ALL.  I tried to make them MY friends. One reason or another I have gone LC with them. I also discovered some of the Women reported back to H about things I was saying.

Reasons why I quit each one.

So I am not sure what to do to make friends in this area. I don't have no problem keeping friends (except uNPDH scares them off on way or another)I was a successful Hairstylist for years, but I don't go to bars, the church I was going to UNPDSis hijacked. Thought about getting to know grand daughters Grandma, but realized she has some sort of PDD also!

I am friendly to everyone, but just don't know how to make dates etc. So I sit here with My OOTF and OOTS forums and research things to help me...
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Finding My Voice on September 08, 2014, 07:25:12 PM
Quote from: Butterfly on September 02, 2014, 12:48:10 PM
ETA - in fact DH was trying to understand how it felt for me and in trying to explain it to him I finally said the only way I can think to say this in a way he could comprehend is to use the word rape. Because despite my 'no' she takes without my permission what belongs to me, what is mine alone, and makes it her own. It was a painful realization for me.

I'm so sorry you had such awful experiences, Butterfly.  The N moms who try to upstage their children's problems, s your mother did to you, have stood out to me as being particularly awful.
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Kizzie on September 08, 2014, 08:51:01 PM
I agree with FindingMyVoice Butterfly, I had many similar things happen with my NPDM, but one in particular stands out because it was so like what you describe.  I was diagnosed with ovarian cancer in 2007 and my M phoned me shortly after we told her to tell me that SHE had been crying all day. I was supposed to comfort her!  I said "Imagine how I feel" hung up and nearly put my fist through the wall.  It was devastating.

FMV, just on a (hopefully) lighter note - my H and I figured out that my NPDM liked to one up me no matter what it is/was so I started telling her I was having to get up earlier and earlier to get work done.  (I teach online and in a time zone that is about 4 hours later than my students.) In the end she was getting up at like 5 AM to get up before me.  We couldn't believe it. She's 85 and has no real reason to get up at any time except when she chooses. Anyway, I took pity on her and started to tell her I was getting up later and later, and eventually she got back to more regular hours, she even slept in a few days so it all balanced.

I know, I know - childish but hey we had a good chuckle, a very nice change.
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: schrödinger's cat on September 09, 2014, 06:28:54 PM
I hardly know what to say... Your stories sound harrowing, and I'm hoping things will get better as soon as possible.

Does someone have a good definition of Enmeshment? It's to do with unclear or wonky boundaries, right? If it is, I might have experienced it with my mother. I think she's come to project onto me all the worry and concern that she doesn't let herself feel for herself. We've had entire phone conversations that consisted of her worrying about my own, personal concerns. She worries, I reassure her, she doubts, I explain, she has strong reservations, i get defensive, she gravely tells me that one must not underestimate the danger, I start arguing, she recommends that I learn to take things easy.

...It almost sounds funny if I write it down like that. It isn't funny while it's happening. I feel as if I'm suffocating under some huge duvet and someone keeps pushing it at me so I can't even move.

I still feel silly for posting this. It's not in the same league as parentalization. But it undermined my trust in myself completely. I've learned to never admit to a single problem that I haven't yet fixed. I never let myself show anyone even a moment's uncertainty or vulnerability. Which is a great thing to do if one is suffering from PTSD or CPTSD, yes? It's like being ill with the flu and then having to tapdance and beam at the camera. ... The fact that I kept finding social interactions tiring makes more and more sense.
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Butterfly on September 10, 2014, 07:45:11 PM
Deepest thanks for commenting on my feelings. I'm at the same time comforted to not be alone and sad for everyone else at the same time. Kizzie I hope the cancer is in full remission.

schroedingerskatze, Please (and I know this is wrong to probably word it this way) but don't ever feel silly for posting. All of us are damaged in some way and there is no degree of damage it is simply damage.

To me the easiest way to describe enmeshment is all up in each other's business but it's a step further. Projection and mirroring are part of it too. See link below for detailed official definition.
http://www.outofthefog.net/CommonBehaviors/Engulfment.html

I think of the term Engulfing from the other persons point of view the term Enmeshment to describe the relationship. Essentially they're the same meaning.

If you're familiar with Star Trek the concept of the Borg really defines the enmeshment and that's how I feel. If you're unfamiliar with the Borg theme google it. Here's a post from OOTF.
http://outofthefog.net/forum/index.php?topic=32126.msg300614#msg300614

Now thanks to MC she knows hardly anything. Not even what I'm making for dinner because any tiny detail of my life was used to enmesh, share, tell others and show how close we are. She over shared every detail about me but would bite my head off if I said a word about her at all in front of anyone.

It's sad for me not having a mum to be close to and its sad for her not having the daughter she wants. The whole thing fills me with sadness.
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Kizzie on September 10, 2014, 09:15:56 PM
Hi Butterfly - yes the cancer is in remission thankfully, so many women lose their lives to but I was one of the lucky ones.  At a walk in Calgary to raise awareness this type of cancer a few years back, the coordinator asked survivors to step to the front and lead the walk. Out of about 500 people 9 of us stepped forward. It was one of those moments in life when everything stops becasue it is a lifechanging understanding of something that is deeply sad.   

I forgot to mention in my earlier post that when my M phoned she told me about all the people who had phoned her because they knew she was upset - she was enjoying all the attention and using my life threatening disease to do it just like your M. It triggered one of the worst EFs I ever had although I did not know what was happening then.

It is a huge loss and truly, truly sad that we did not have parents who could love and support us in the way we deserve. Walker is so right when he suggests that those of us with CPTSD need to anger and grieve for what we lost in the past, can't have now in the present and what we will never be available in the future in order to recover.  I used to get so angry when people would say "Forgive and forget" and rightly so - the only way out of trauma is through it - stuffing/ignoring/denying/minimizing does nothing.  The positive thing for me about Walker's work is that it affirms our need to be angry and grieve as a way to recovery, to move out of the FOG/storm. 

I like what you said about it being sad that your M is unable to receive the love and caring she could have.  I've found that as I do work through my anger and grief I am becoming more compassionate. I am sad that my FOO because they have lost so much due to a disorder that is a result of the intergenerational cycle of abuse/neglect. 

Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Butterfly on September 11, 2014, 12:13:17 AM
Words of wisdom Kizzie, words of wisdom. Compassion for "they have lost so much due to a disorder that is a result of the intergenerational cycle of abuse/neglect"

So glad you're in remission but wow 9 out of 500, that must've been so surreal to step forward through the crowd and be one of the few. Ultra sickening your M would use your cancer to gain sympathy.

"stuffing/ignoring/denying/minimizing" I once had a TCM doctor tell me if I didn't learn to express and continued to stuff it would kill me. Sadly. He told me this nearly 9 years ago. Better late than never I suppose.

Thank you for being here and creating this site.
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: schrödinger's cat on September 11, 2014, 10:04:44 AM
My computer seems to have eaten the reply I thought I'd posted. I wanted to thank Butterfly for her definition and for her kind words. So: thanks! Funny thing - I thought about the Borg too.

Kizzie, glad to hear you're in remission. I can't even begin to feel what it would be like to have someone steal sympathy from me. A woman of my acquaintance did that once to her mother. It was just surreal to witness. I remember thinking that she has something predatory about her, like a part of her always lies in wait and jealously eyes the good things you have, and if she sees something she wants for herself, she darts out of cover and snatches it. "Mine mine mine."
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Annegirl on September 21, 2014, 04:19:39 AM
Yes it's so awful that. Just found out about emotional incest from Ross Rosenberg on YouTube. My mother was like that too. I looked after the whole household, my younger siblings my father etc...And I'm so sad to see SO many mothers like that out there. I remember a friend of mine when I lived in NZ telling me while her baby was crying so badly in the other room "no this is the only way they will learn about nap time" I tried to tell her babies need your touch and connection and they sleep when they are tired not when we find the convenient time and try to force them to sleep.  I think there are varying degrees but this type of thing is harmful to children and that is why our society has so many mental health issues.
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Badmemories on September 21, 2014, 08:43:05 PM
I agree to what YOU ar saying! My mother had the babies on strict schedules. I remember people telling me when i had babies "let them cry" I refused to do that! If they are crying then there is a reason. I used to think Hungry, Angry,Lonely,and Tired. HALT  and sometimes a diaper change... No wonder so many of us are mentally ill!
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Annegirl on September 21, 2014, 10:40:37 PM
You're so on to it Bad memories!!! Good for you not listening to those pushing you to let them cry, I too had many people pushing me about that and I even tried it for 5 minutes or so with my son, but never again.
I'm really happy and so impressed after everything you went through you didn't follow the pattern, that's probably one reason why you have a relationship with your grandchildren. Your children etc trust you.
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Badmemories on September 22, 2014, 12:01:01 AM
Thank You Annie,

Even though I did not know about CPTSD and was not even diagnoised with Bi-polar disorder then I knew that there Had to be a better way! I read everything on parenting I could when I was parenting. My Son was ADDH I read everything on that too!

I am a gentle spirit... In the trailer court the cats and dogs even follow me around! kids follow me around. I have always tried to make any kids life better. In the trailer court that I lived in before( bad poverty, drinking and drugging parents,) I knew the kids well and was always giving out snacks, they all would come to my house IF for some reason their parents did not make it home when school was out. I still get grown Kids that I don't even remember coming up to me and saying Hi when I go to the town to shop. i guess that is My "calling in life".  I guess IF MY life wouldn't have been so screwed up I think I would have liked to be a teacher. so much power helping kids! Something that lasts for generations!
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Annegirl on September 22, 2014, 01:55:11 AM
I think what you do/did is better than teaching. You were there for them even after school, when they needed you. :)
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: schrödinger's cat on September 22, 2014, 01:25:57 PM
Quote from: Annegirl on September 21, 2014, 10:40:37 PM
Good for you not listening to those pushing you to let them cry, I too had many people pushing me about that and I even tried it for 5 minutes or so with my son, but never again.

Someone talked me into that too, once - my baby was hungry, and a friend said: "if you keep her busy for a time, she'll learn to not be hungry so often." She even offered to help, and carried my baby around, showing her things. My little one was very interested - but even so, when I took her back, she gave me such an indignant look, like she was thinking: "WHERE WERE YOU??" She was only a few weeks old! I never, ever did that again. I never pushed any of my kids into independence - I'm letting them set their own timescale. They're ready when they're ready, end of story.

But doesn't that just prove that even tiny children really FEEL parental abandonment, even in such tiny, "trivial" things? So much for the argument that "you were so tiny, you don't remember a thing".
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Annegirl on September 22, 2014, 08:06:43 PM
Quote from: schrödinger's cat on September 22, 2014, 01:25:57 PM


. My little one was very interested - but even so, when I took her back, she gave me such an indignant look, like she was thinking: "WHERE WERE YOU??" She was only a few weeks old! I never, ever did that again. I never pushed any of my kids into independence - I'm letting them set their own timescale. They're ready when they're ready, end of story.

But doesn't that just prove that even tiny children really FEEL parental abandonment, even in such tiny, "trivial" things? So much for the argument that "you were so tiny, you don't remember a thing".

It is a credit to you that you were/ are so in tune with you LO ( little one's) needs. Yes it's amazing the trust versus mistrust thing is one of the first things they are learning and it gets attacked by many authors etc
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Butterfly on September 23, 2014, 10:18:22 AM
How in the world can a baby learn not to be hungry?!?!?!? I can't learn not to be hungry, its a body function for goodness sake. Crazy really crazy.
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Annegirl on September 23, 2014, 12:54:45 PM
Yes Butterfly, it's amazing how people promote letting the baby 'cry it out' to teach them to 'self soothe'  our unconditional love and touch and holding them teaches them to feel safe and loved while they are crying. This helps the brain develop properly and stops them from having depressed or anxious problems later on in life where they feel guilty for being sad or angry etc. it lets them know it is ok to have these feelings and  that they are normal and that they can handle them because we  comfort them. If we isolate them while they are crying all the wrong chemicals start developing in the brain, fight flight response starts already and  they learn that their strong feelings are bad and not listened to.
Quote from: Kizzie on September 10, 2014, 09:15:56 PM

It is a huge loss and truly, truly sad that we did not have parents who could love and support us in the way we deserve. Walker is so right when he suggests that those of us with CPTSD need to anger and grieve for what we lost in the past, can't have now in the present and what we will never be available in the future in order to recover.  I used to get so angry when people would say "Forgive and forget" and rightly so - the only way out of trauma is through it - stuffing/ignoring/denying/minimizing does nothing.  The positive thing for me about Walker's work is that it affirms our need to be angry and grieve as a way to recovery, to move out of the FOG/storm. 

I like what you said about it being sad that your M is unable to receive the love and caring she could have.  I've found that as I do work through my anger and grief I am becoming more compassionate. I am sad that my FOO because they have lost so much due to a disorder that is a result of the intergenerational cycle of abuse/neglect. 



This is good to hear Kizzie sometimes I feel guilty thinking about the past, just today my bro rang up for my bday and he said I shouldn't think about the past...... I wish I couldn't I want to forget. Sometimes I can forget but then I believe you are right more compassion comes from going through it and grieving. And anger helps me to vent and then let go of it.
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Milarepa on October 25, 2014, 06:05:40 AM
Quote from: Butterfly on September 02, 2014, 12:48:10 PM
Because despite my 'no' she takes without my permission what belongs to me, what is mine alone, and makes it her own. It was a painful realization for me.

:yeahthat:

I vibe so strongly with this, I can't even tell you. By and large, I think emotional incest and enmeshment are present in most C-PTSD generating families. The lack of healthy boundaries is just devastating.

Both of my parents were emotionally incestuous towards me, but it was especially bad with my dad. He was so *needy* and constantly manipulated me with guilt whenever I said "no" or set boundaries of any kind. It was like he had no ability to differentiate between mother, wife, and daughter; it was all just the feminine pressed into the service of King Baby.

[Trigger warning]

To this day, I feel gross whenever I think of how it was. It's like his sloppy, sweaty, messy, smelly little stunted baby boy penis was all over me all the time. Even though I have no memory of any sexual abuse, I get so triggered during sex sometimes that it feels like my father is in the room.
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Badmemories on November 07, 2014, 05:46:57 AM
Trigger alert!  Trigger alert!  Trigger alert!  Trigger alert!  Trigger alert!  Trigger alert!  Trigger alert!  Trigger alert!  Trigger alert!  Trigger alert!  Trigger alert!  Trigger alert!  Trigger alert! 



For My whole life  I have had this sexual feeling that I could never identify. a certain touch kind of feeling. It is something that I am always on the look out to see what causes this sensation. well... I finally realized what it was quit by accident this week. Now that i know what caused this feeling then I am just sick to MY stomach. Since all I remember is the FEEL then I don't remember, who,when what where how, etc. So I must have been VERY YOUNG.

:yes: :yes: :yes: :yes: :yes: :yes: :yes: :yes: :yes: :yes: :yes: :yes: :yes: :yes: :yes: :yes: :yes:

What I realized is someone had oral sex with me! I am hoping that since My brain finally let me know what the feeling was...I am hoping it will find me trustworthy to let me know the details.  ??? :stars: :pissed: :blink: :yeahthat: :aaauuugh: :spooked:

Keep on keeping on!
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: schrödinger's cat on November 07, 2014, 09:14:43 AM
Oh yikes. I'm so sorry to hear that, Badmemories.  :sadno:  I can imagine that this must have simply freaked you out. How are you doing now? Are you alright? Do you have any ways of digesting that memory?
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Badmemories on November 10, 2014, 01:05:37 AM
I am alright... really was surprised that I realized what the feeling was!  :hug:
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Milarepa on November 10, 2014, 08:28:36 AM
That sounds very disturbing and disorienting.  :stars: :blink: I'm sorry that this happened to you, but I'm glad that you're figuring it out. I hope you have professional support to get you through as you make sense of what happened to you.

Are you willing to share more detail about *how* you this memory surfaced? I'm trying to decide if I want to make a project of going after memories of CSA and hearing other people's experiences has been helpful to me as I make up my mind about what to do.
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Badmemories on November 10, 2014, 10:15:43 AM
Possible trigger alert! Possible trigger alert! Possible trigger alert! Possible trigger alert! Possible trigger alert! Possible trigger alert! Possible trigger alert! Possible trigger alert! Possible trigger alert!


For many years I had this feeling that I could NOT identify. It was a memory type feeling. even though it was a memory, physically sometimes I could feel it. I would go over it in My mind and wonder what the feeling was... It was not any feeling that I had actually felt during sexual intercourse, or any thing else that happened during sex but just a feeling down there that once in a while I would physically feel. It happened quit by accident that I discovered what had caused the feeling...but it was like a light bulb moment....

At that point I  realized what had caused that problem. as I said I do not know the who, when where... I was abused by My first step Dad so probably it was him...he has long been dead. He was in My life since I was one +. I did confront him when I was grown up... by then he was senile or playing senile so he had no idea what i was talking about!  :stars: :stars: Either he was in a state of denial OR I was nothing more than a toy for him. His father was also somewhat abusive as he used to french kiss me and my sister. Step Dad's sister I think was sexually abused.   

At this point I do not know what to do with this NEW information... maybe the inner child will reveal more to me at one point. I guess all this WORK I have been doing is causing things to stir in My brain. Maybe just recognizing this fact is healing in it own right?  :blink: :yes: otherwise I am just going to wait and see what comes up next!

Keep on keeping on!
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Butterfly on November 10, 2014, 09:06:04 PM
Oh so terribly sorry and big hug.
:bighug:
Can think of no words.
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: schrödinger's cat on November 11, 2014, 07:48:39 AM
No words either, but I'm glad you're here and talking about it. Silence is distressing enough, if it's not voluntary. All the best for your continued recovery - it's amazing to see how much has happened in just a few weeks, and how far you've come already.   :hug:
Title: Re: Emotional incest and enmeshment
Post by: Badmemories on November 26, 2014, 04:49:48 PM
@ be healthy. :hug: :bighug:

Right now that is what I am having trouble with...how much to reveal to myself. I love this group and I am seeing great progress! I have been real resistant to buying Pete Walkers book. I have been buying the books on abuse etc. I realized this week that I am STILL buying books to help me understand OTHER people and How the abuse happened! So today I finally the  a book by Pete Walker, also
DBT® Skills Training Handouts and Worksheets, Second Edition by Marsha M. Linehan PhD ABPP. although I have great links to some very good DBT/Cbt I think that it will be easier to just have a book! I need to get my printer working. but haven't. :blink:  I also ordered a journal for PS (my inner child) It was a journal that My grandaughter had and PS did not want anything else but that! so, I finally found the one she wanted  ;D. I have been trying to Play with My grandaughter more...coloring, playing games etc. I think PS likes it. Amazing how the enmeshment did not allow me to have a childhood!

www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00PKG71ZG/ref=ox_sc_act_title_3?ie=UTF8&psc=1&smid=A2R7M2RFBOPP1 (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00PKG71ZG/ref=ox_sc_act_title_3?ie=UTF8&psc=1&smid=A2R7M2RFBOPP1)

Keep on keepin on!  :bigwink: