| As a psychotherapist,
it is clear to me that the main reason why people
suffer is because their emotional growth stopped
somewhere in their childhood. And when people
stop growing emotionally, important parts of themselves
don’t develop fully. We might say that important
parts of their personality were lost somewhere
in the emotional wreckage of their parent’s
home.
The home is the place where a fundamental developmental
drama takes place for each and every human being:
One’s home is either an emotionally validating,
understanding, and supportive environment wherein
one is able to fully experience and express his
feelings, needs, and opinions and thus develop
him or herself fully or it is an emotionally invalidating
or even traumatizing environment where one is
not allowed to experience and express his or her
feelings, needs, and opinions and thus can’t
develop himself fully. To paraphrase Descartes’
famous tenant in psychological terms, “I
feel, therefore I am.” By being allowed
to feel and express our feelings, we grow, differentiate
and develop a positive feeling about who we are.
This is the psychological drama of what goes on
for every child in every home. And as we will
see, the stakes for living are tremendously high!
Sue has been trying to become a more spiritual
person for ten years, but constantly experiences
a variety of conflicts within herself. She almost
never feels certain about her decisions, and often
feels shameful after making them. She struggles
with bouts of depression, anxiety, and insecurity.
Her marriage is shaky at best and often feels
angry at her husband and blaming him for not helping
her enough with her confusion. She is always reading
self-help books and going to self-development
seminars, but can’t find the answer as to
why she never feels good about herself or her
life. She hoped that becoming more religious would
“fix” her problems, but it hasn’t
and as she feels more and more hopeless, she feels
less and less motivated to be stay religious.
She has spoken to spiritual teachers and friends
who have given her great advice and wisdom, but
nothing has really helped her to feel better.
She has gotten to the point where she is considering
taking antidepressants to relieve her pain.
I worked with Sue as a patient with the assumption
that somewhere in childhood her emotional growth
was significantly impaired, and thus lost her
unique, creative self. Sue’s mother is and
has always been a very needy and critical person.
Throughout her childhood and adolescence, Sue’s
mother questioned Sue’s decisions, preferences,
and judgment. She questioned and criticized her
choice of clothes and friends. Sue was not allowed
to have her own feelings or opinions around her
mother. The message from her mother was, “My
feelings and opinions are right; yours are wrong.”
Because of the chronic invalidation she experienced
as a child, Sue developed an unconscious organizing
principle that, “It is bad to think for
myself and make my own decisions. I must do what
others say, because my opinions are wrong.”
Because this organizing principle (often taking
the form of her mother’s voice) was always
active in her unconscious, whenever Sue tried
to make her own decisions, she felt a tremendous
amount of shame, as if she was doing something
terribly wrong by asserting herself. This became
her psychological destiny; a destiny that has
produced much pain and suffering.
Hypothetically speaking, Sue had two options
as child. She could have left home and rejected
her mom’s constant invalidation in order
to become her true self or she could stay and
submit to mom which meant dismissing and denying
her feelings and opinions in order to secure and
keep a relationship with her mother. Obviously,
an eight year-old is not able to make the choice
to leave home. She must stay in order to survive.
This is the tragic story that millions of people
must endure as children and which dooms them to
a life of never fully being able to differentiate
from their parents and become their true selves.
The limitations imposed by their organizing principles
developed in childhood shape the core of their
personality. They have stopped growing emotionally
and have lost themselves in “the house of
their father.”
Adults who are still imprisoned by, what my
mentor calls, “killer” organizing
principles usually go through life with one of
three types of emotional struggles:
- A life of relentless, tormenting ambivalence,
endlessly torn between his own true inner aspirations
and needed relationships which seem irreconcilably
opposed to one another. This is the path of
wrenching indecision and noncomittment.
- Or the person may attempt to preserve and
protect his core individuality by choosing to
distance himself from others thereby adopting
a pattern of resolute defiance and rebellion.
This is the path of isolation and estrangement.
- Lastly, a person may abandon any hope of becoming
himself and finding any authentic self-expression
in order to maintain indispensable ties to caregivers
and others. This is the path of submission and
chronic depression.
Those who have lost touch with their true feelings
and thus their true self suffer constantly. They
often struggle with depression, identity confusion;
fear of intimacy and closeness, emptiness, anger,
oversensitivity, and generally, never feel that
they are the pilots of their ship and in control
of their lives. And like Sue, such people often
turn to religion in an attempt to find inner peace
and happiness. Often, religion turns into another
type of slavery. But if it’s not religion,
these people may turn to anything that will relieve
their deep inner anguish, such as drugs, dependent
relationships, and a variety of other addictive
behaviors. Such people will almost always end
up in marriages and relationships that compromise
their individuality and authentic self-expression.
As adults, such people have a choice: They can
remain lost in the emotional wreckage of their
parent’s home or strive to leave their parent’s
home and become their true self. The only solution
I know to free a person from this type of emotional
prison is to revive their arrested emotional growth.
Real emotional growth means discovering how to
experience and express one’s true feelings,
needs, and perceptions. When this occurs, a person
finds out who he or she really is, which reinstates
the arrested emotional growth and which always
results in authentic joy and fulfillment.
PRACTICAL TOOLS TO GET STARTED
Although, as I just mentioned, I believe psychotherapy
is the ultimate way to free oneself from one’s
limiting organizing principles, there are some
tools that can start a process of authentic emotional
growth. The following are some tools that can
help a person to become more aware of his feelings,
begin to reveal deeper pockets of pain that may
be hidden from his consciousness, and begin a
process of self discovery which might begin to
free him or her from the crippling legacy of one’s
childhood.
The most important tool I can suggest is to
keep a daily “feelings journal.” Keeping
a feelings journal is especially important for
those imprisoned in their “father’s
house”, because such people generally do
not allow themselves to feel their feelings. So
what you are doing by keeping a journal is giving
yourself permission to feel your feelings. Something
your parents may not have allowed you to do.
Track your most intense negative feeling for
a given day. Once you’ve identified a particularly
strong feeling, ask yourself the following questions:
1. What was the circumstance and what was the
feeling? The feelings to be most aware of are:
sadness, anger, fear/anxiety, shame, and guilt.
2. What caused the feeling?
3. Did this experience feel familiar, like you’ve
been in a similar place before? Did it feel like
a similar place you’ve been before somewhere
in your childhood?
4. Can you recall a childhood memory when you
felt the same way?
5. Describe the memory and what caused you to
have that feeling.
6. Can you make a connection between the present
experience and childhood experience? What can
you learn about yourself by linking the memory
and the present event?
7. Go back to the memory. If it were being shown
as a movie, stop the action on the most powerful
and intense frame. What is happening in this frame?
What are you feeling and thinking?
8. If you could write a title for that frame
what would it be? For example, “Little girl
is verbally abused by father for taking a cookie
before dinner.”
9. Is this message one that has continued throughout
your life?
Note: Often our childhood memories indicate themes
or organizing principles that play out throughout
the course of our lives!
Therefore intense childhood memories can give
us huge insights into key patterns that have and
currently continue to shape our lives!
10. If you could rewrite the memory to make it
have a happy ending and a positive outcome, how
would your rewrite it?
Note: Being able to rewrite the memory indicates
your potential for changing your destiny and handling
similar situations in a more empowering and self-nurturing
way.
11. Can you find ways to apply this rewrite to
your present situation and your life in general?
Another way to apply these steps is to identify
the person in your life who causes you the most
pain or the person you are most afraid of. Does
this person remind you of how you felt as a child
with mom or dad? Is there a childhood memory that
captures how you feel now with this person? Work
the memory through using steps 5-11.
© Dov Heller, 2006
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