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Dear limbikanimaria:
I want this morning to study all your previous threads and offer you what I understand, hoping that maybe it will be of some help to you. The photo by your screen name reads: “Before you speak, let your words pass through three gates: Is it true? Is it necessary? Is it kind?”- I will keep these three gates in mind as I proceed.
January 2016, four years ago (age about 23), you wrote about dating a man for a few months, you wrote: “Honesty is obviously important in all relationships, but I am obsessive about needing people to be honest with me”. Your boyfriend misstated the truth about a topic that was not important to you (maybe because he forgot), but your response: “I can’t get over that he lied to me.. I feel like he knew that he was lying, but he says it was an honest mistake.. I know myself and that I’m a nazi about people being honest with me… I keep going back and forth between feeling like I should forgive him or getting the f*** out of this relationship… It concerns me that if he did in fact lie about this, that he might lie about more important things in the future. .. a part of me feels like he lied to tell me what I wanted to hear in that situation”.
December 2016, a bit over three years ago (age about 24), you wrote that you’ve been suffering on and off from bulimia for about seven years, since you were around 17. You wrote: “I’m focused on working through shame that I feel toward myself right now and examining the reasons why I began to feel this shame in the first place”. You shared that when you were about 17, your mother “made shameful comments” toward you, such as: “did you enjoy your binge?”, “All you’ve been doing is eating all day”, and “You can do whatever you want when you leave the house. No more puking”. You felt that she didn’t care about you, that she “didn’t want to deal with my feelings or disorder, and didn’t care for my wellbeing”, and that she left you “to feel immense amounts of shame about my eating disorders”; that you needed her “support during these vulnerable moments, not to be shamed”. You wrote: “I try to understand it from her point of view, but I also feel enraged.. These comments are haunting me”. You resolved to “not let my mother’s shameful comments have power over me anymore.. not judge her for making those comments.. but rather.. empathize with her more”.
July 2017, about six months later (age 24), you wrote that you are “working towards recovery from an eating disorder” and you shared again about your on and off relationship (first thread), two years long, at this point. You wrote: “it has been eating at me that he is following 800+ people on Instagram”, including women he came across at Tinder before he dated you, and that he “liked” photos of attractive women. You stalked his Instagram. You told him that you want him to unfollow these women and he told you that you are controlling, “I can’t seem to let go of this and allow it to continue eating at me”.
October 2017, three months later, you shared that you’ve been working full time, and that you were living on your own two years by that time, and that living alone made it “too easy t give into binging and purging”, so you considered moving back to your parents’ home so to have your parents around, “to help me get back on my feet from my ED”. You then decided to stay where you were because commuting is three hours less than it would have been if you moved back to your parents’, and because you loved your apartment. So you asked your mother “if we could have weekly phone calls to check in and make sure I’m headed in an upward direction”. She agreed and indeed made supporting comments to you during those phone calls, like “we’re in this together and things will get better”, and “This isn’t your fault”.
April 2019 (age 27), you wrote: “I have been feeling stuck the last few years and very resentful towards my mother for neglecting to support me/ getting the help I needed when my disorder first started”, you told her on the phone the day before this thread, and you told her that you felt very angry at her. She then told you that it wasn’t her fault that your disorder started or that you were angry at her, that what you remember (her shaming, uncaring comments) didn’t happen. “She kept saying over and over, ‘I would never say that. Maybe it was a dream you had. Maybe you misunderstood something else that I said'”, “it was almost as if she was trying to convince me that my memory was false.. It almost felt scary how genuinely she was denying it… Now I must accept that she denies my memory”.
Same month and year, April 2019 you posted about a new boyfriend you’ve been seeing since January that year. He told you during a conversation: “I’d be happy to call you my girlfriend”. You wrote about his statement: “it sent me he message that he wanted to be exclusive”. Next, “anxiety set in for some reason and I felt an impulse to check if he was still logging into his dating profile”, so you checked and found out that he did log in there. You were confused, “Why didn’t he just say he wanted to keep things open? It just seems like his words aren’t matching up to his actions”.
And now my input: sometimes reality is much simpler than we think it is. We think things are more complicated than they are because we refuse to see a part of it. If we saw that blind-spot, so to speak, the whole picture will become simple and clear.
I will get to that blind spot and the whole, simple picture in a moment. Before I do, I want to clarify the following: I never communicated with your mother and never will. I don’t feel angry at her. I don’t have a desire that she suffers or that she will be punished. What I care about here is your well-being, trying to offer you something helpful.
I don’t have a desire that you continue to feel angry at her. I am very well aware that not feeling angry… feels way better than feeling angry. I am also aware that there is a valid message behind every emotion, and that the message behind anger has to be acknowledged before the anger relaxes and we are free from it, no longer being stuck in it.
The blind spot I am about to suggest will not be easy for you to read, this is why you haven’t seen it so far. But seeing it will make the whole picture simpler and clearer, and that will definitely be helpful to you. It is very possible that as you read the following it will mean nothing to you because .. after all, it is a blind spot and you may very well not see something noticeable in the following, plus you may deny it all and get angry at me. Nonetheless here it is:
The blind spot: your mother lies. And I don’t mean just about the specific comments she made when you were 17, denying that she has made them, but before you were 17, way before and after.
I will now elaborate: you know that people lie, you suspected the two men you shared about lied to you. You read and hear about people lying frequently, don’t you, in the news, otherwise? We all do. Here is the blind spot: children can’t wrap their minds around the idea that their own mother lies.
Realistically, lots of women in the world lie. Many of the women who do lie are mothers. But a child can’t hold this in awareness, that her own mother lies. Often children of adult age can’t do that either.
How do I know she lies? Because you shared Jan 2016: “I am obsessive about needing people to be honest with me.. I’m a nazi about people being honest with me… if he did in fact lie about this, that he might lie about more important things in the future”- but you didn’t mention anything about his behavior that explains this obsession. You did mention a previous boyfriend lying to you. But you also mentioned your mother, and I know that our mothers, our main caretakers, are the most powerful people by far, in our lives. And you clearly stated that she lied to you about those comments.
But how many times did she lie to you and you don’t remember, how many times did you turn a blind eye or ear to her lies.
You turned a blind eye to her lies but you open your eye wide to anyone else who may lie, stalking an Instagram account of one man, checking the dating profile of another and obsessing about being lied to.. by other people, not by your mother.
We keep re-experiencing our childhood experience as we move on into adulthood and through adulthood. She lied to you way before the beginning of your ED and repeatedly over the years, and you keep experiencing being lied to. Children’s perceptions by the way, are very accurate, they don’t have any prior experience to project into their parents, what they see about their parents is true. But when what we see is scary, we close our eyes to it.
anita