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anita

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  • #457505
    anita
    Participant

    Hi Starlight1:

    It’s okay to still get angry. It doesn’t mean there’s something wrong with you or that you didn’t heal enough. Seems to me like you’re on the right track. Things take time to heal.

    When you’re not allowed to express anger in any way.. what happens to the unexpressed, suppressed anger- it naturally grows!

    And going through incredibly difficult situations without support is.. in credibly difficult. Without support everything feels heavier.

    I’m glad to read that things improved for you mentally!

    It is difficult to learn to be assertive and set boundaries when you weren’t taught those things. Isn’t it?

    Anita

    #457503
    anita
    Participant

    I want to add to “things inside get messed up”- things can get straightened out and healing takes place.

    You sound like an intelligent young (?) person, intellectually and emotionally.

    I shared just a bit about my experience with my unsafe mother. Of course, your experience may be very different from mine

    I would like to hear about it.

    #457502
    anita
    Participant

    Hi Starlight1 🌟

    You are very welcome 🙏

    “But why would I have thoughts which are harmful to me or are against me?”-

    Let’s say your mother was harmful to you, let’s say she was against you, and naturally you (as her dependent young child) were for her.

    Sometime along the way, you take HER side ( which is against your own self).

    Well, that’s what happened in my case.

    Naturally, your parents are supposed to be your safe place, UT when a parent becomes danger, things inside get messed up.

    Does any of this resonate?

    🌟 Anita

    #457501
    anita
    Participant

    Hey again, Starlight1 🌟

    The “overly critical, abusive” God of the old testament is a depiction of God in the image of man (or woman) in authority, like a parent.

    My goodness, as I read your mention of anger 😠= failing at righteousness, I connected it to what I wrote to you a little while ago in your first thread, and the connection to intrusive thinking.

    Anger is way more than a natural emotion (which it is, natural and healthy in itself) when connecting it to morality.

    What is your relationship to anger?

    If this speaks to you, I’ll be happy to explore anger (and other emotions) with you.

    🙂😠â˜șïžđŸ˜žđŸ˜ĄđŸ€Ș Anita

    #457499
    anita
    Participant

    Hello Starlight1:

    I am very familiar with intrusive thoughts having sufferred from OCD ( diagnosed) for many years, starting – I think- at the age of 5 or so.

    I think it’s one of the many ways anxiety shows up.

    Let’s say you’re afraid of your own emotions (like anger) making you a “bad person”- your anxious 🧠 may experience unwanted thoughts like wanting or appearing to want to cause harm to another person.

    Does this resonate?

    🧠 Anita

    #457498
    anita
    Participant

    First, Confused: Congrats for voicing your opinions during the call and not getting trigerred 👏👏👏

    Secondly, I really like how honest and transpare nt you were with her when she asked you if you’re willing to compromize.

    Thirdly, you’re both anxious regarding the relationship and her planned visit. If the two of you come up with a detailed plan regarding the visit: how long, how to spend the time, what to do when fears rise, it may help make the visit better.

    Structure and predictability (planning what to do in different scenarios) can ease anxiety for the 2 of you.

    Fourthly, looking at the bigger picture- given your anxiety, it may help you to always have an exit plan: leaving, cutting visit short, or if/ living with her- to have the option of leaving & living away from her-

    Not as a selfish thing, but just so to deal with the panic factor: the fear of being stuck in a situation with no way out.

    Because the 2 of U are anxious, you may be able to help each other in this regard on a regular, ongoing basis, so that neither one of you is emotionally alone.

    👏🐇🙂 Anita

    #457497
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Reader:

    In my last post in this thread (Jan 11, 2022), I wrote:

    “Ladybug’s boyfriend was a victim of an unstable, unreliable, unpredictably angry mother who terribly mistreated him.”-

    Replace “Ladybug’s boyfriend” with “I” and the sentence is true to me.

    Continuing quoting from that last reply:

    “Fast forward, Ladybug enters his life as a girlfriend, a step up from the abusive, crazy mother but not by a whole lot.”-

    The projection has solidified: Ladybug’s boyfriend= my younger self; Ladybug= my mother.

    “Ladybug entered the relationship as an anxious, restless young woman who looks for the man in her life to calm her anxiety and make her feel good forevermore… She is single mindedly focused on… what he may be doing wrong. Although she has suffered from anxiety and low self-esteem way before her boyfriend entered her life, she is looking at him as the cause for the anxiety that way preceded him, blaming him for what he had no part in causing. Whenever she is not feeling okay, it must be his fault, something he did wrong… she is not looking at herself, at her childhood, at her mother, etc. She hardly mentioned anything about her life, it’s all about him. This focus does not at all benefit him, it harms him and her.

    “Complaining, demanding, arguing, trying to control him, she exhausts her boyfriend… her accusatory, blaming finger kept pointing in his direction…

    “He was never the cause of her anxiety and anger. But she assigns him with the responsibility, nonetheless. She figures something like I am still anxious and angry because he did or is doing something wrong! She then attacks his very character, referring to him as arrogant, selfish, etc… She then portrays herself as a shattered woman… Angry, she keeps complaining”-

    Replace “Ladybug” with “my mother” and the above is true in regard to my younger self experience with my mother

    I then quoted Ladybug’s words from August 15, 2018: “He knows I’m an amazing woman and he’ll never find such a selfless, caring, gentle and loyal woman as me” and I added (2022): “she presents herself as selfless, caring, and gentle, indeed the innocent victim of a selfish, uncaring, unkind man.”-

    Ladybug’s real similarity with my mother is most profound in the quote of her words right above, solidifying my projection. My mother presented herself as “selfless, caring” and all-good, perfect.

    I quoted Ladybug’s words from August 16, 2018: “He has become so lazy in his effort and if I think about it
. It’s because I allowed him to slack down… I allowed him to just forget about our anniversary and there were zero repercussions” and I interpreted her words”

    “– back is the demanding, controlling Ladybug, ‘I allowed him
 zero repercussions’, as if she is the authority figure in the relationship and he is the naughty child.”-

    My mother was indeed the authority in the relationship with me (not only when I was a child) and I was “the naughty child”.

    “He accommodated her requests, but she is neither satisfied nor grateful because she is still anxious, so she figures he must be doing something else that is wrong, his fault, his lazy habits!.. her anxious mind… keeps looking for what is wrong.”- I wrote this about my mother, not being aware that I was doing that. I thought at the time that I was writing about Ladybug.

    “GETTING ANGRIER… distrustful and controlling, she doesn’t give him the space that he needs… He is still asking for space. He still wants her to have a life outside of the relationship. On her part… she looks for the problem and the solution in his behavior, not in her behavior.”

    I quoted Ladybug’s words from December 23, 2018: “He has been feeling very suffocated and says he doesn’t feel like he makes his own decisions. I do have an issue with being over clingy at times and I’m very emotional which means I tend to rely on him to take a lot of my emotional rants when I get overwhelmed
. He tends to tag me along everywhere and hang out with me almost 24/7. Eventually he feels overwhelmed with everything and distances himself. He is afraid of what the relationship does to him, and he even told me he is no longer in love with me” –

    The above is so true to my experience with my mother.

    “He tries to comfort her; she tries to make him feel guilty… she is not yet accepting responsibility for leading the relationship down a very dysfunctional path. Instead, she is blaming him yet again… All through her posts, to the very last, she kept blaming him. She kept superficially agreeing with him regarding giving him space etc., but she did not yet start (at least, not before Dec 2018) the process of healing from her childhood wounds, she did not yet genuinely examine her own defeating behaviors. During the partial break, she focused on appearing confident and independent, but those were only appearances.

    “Unfortunately for her boyfriend, he is very much attached to Ladybug, unable (at least, not before Dec 2018) to permanently remove himself from a relationship that does him a great disservice. anita” (Jan 11, 2022).

    I want to add to this post later.

    Anita

    #457494
    anita
    Participant

    Good morning, Confused:

    Before giving you my opinion, Because I am at the computer at the moment, I’ll give you Copilot’s opinion first:

    “He’s essentially narrating a mind caught between genuine connection and chronic self‑doubt. On one hand, he’s describing an 8‑hour call full of warmth, ease, and emotional reciprocity — evidence that he was present, attached, and engaged.

    On the other hand, the moment the conversation shifted into long‑term logistics (marriage, relocation, life‑building), his internal alarm system switched on.

    His reply shows a pattern: he intellectualizes (“maybe it’s not real,” “maybe it’s projection,” “constant doubts”) as a way to distance himself from the vulnerability he actually felt.

    The content of the conversation — marriage, moving countries, prioritizing a partner over friends, her emotional attachment to family — is exactly the kind of future‑oriented talk that activates a commitment‑phobic nervous system.

    Notice how he frames everything as potential incompatibility or future catastrophe (“if she visits and it doesn’t work,” “we’ll be blocked with anxiety again”), which is classic pre‑emptive detachment. He’s not describing a lack of feelings; he’s describing fear masquerading as logic.

    The fact that he keeps returning to “maybe it’s not real” is not evidence of disconnection — it’s evidence of panic about the realness of the connection. In that sense, yes: this reply reads like someone who was triggered by the November‑type conversation themes and is now trying to retroactively explain his shutdown through doubt rather than acknowledging the vulnerability that scared him.”

    I asked for a summary of the above in the simplest language:

    “He did feel connected to her, but the moment the conversation turned to serious future topics — marriage, moving countries, long‑term plans — his fear kicked in. After that, he started doubting everything, not because the feelings weren’t real, but because the vulnerability scared him. His mind is using “maybe it’s not real” as a way to protect himself from getting hurt. So yes, this looks like a commitment trigger: the future talk overwhelmed him, and instead of staying with the feelings, he shifted into doubt and overthinking.”

    Next, I asked: “can you elaborate on what scares him in the simplest language?”

    Answer: “Here’s the simplest, most human explanation of what scares him:

    He’s afraid of losing something important — either her, or himself. More specifically: He’s scared the feelings are real, because real feelings mean real risk. He’s scared of choosing wrong, of committing and then being hurt or abandoned.

    He’s scared of the future becoming “serious”, because serious means responsibility, change, and vulnerability. He’s scared he won’t be enough, or that he’ll disappoint her.

    He’s scared of giving his heart and then losing it, which is why he tries to convince himself it’s “not real.”

    He’s scared of repeating old pain, so he tries to protect himself by doubting the connection.

    In the simplest language: He cares, and caring makes him feel unsafe.”

    Next, I asked for advice for you, Confused.

    “Advice for him: He needs to slow down, stop catastrophizing, and separate fear from facts. His feelings for her are real; the panic is what’s confusing him. When the future comes up, he jumps into “what if everything goes wrong” mode, and that shuts down his ability to feel anything good. The work for him is to notice when fear is talking and not treat it like truth.

    He should focus on three things:

    1. Stay in the present, not the future. Every time he jumps to “what if it doesn’t work,” he disconnects from what is working. He needs to bring himself back to the actual connection they have now.

    2. Name the fear instead of believing it. When he thinks “maybe it’s not real,” he should pause and say:
    “This is fear talking, not reality.” That alone reduces the panic.

    3. Take small steps instead of big leaps. He doesn’t need to solve marriage, relocation, or lifelong compatibility today. He only needs to take the next step — meeting, spending time, seeing how it feels.

    If he can do these three things, the connection will feel clearer and the fear will feel smaller.”

    I’ll be back to you, Confused, when I’m on the phone.

    Anita

    #457489
    anita
    Participant

    I kept repeating my story (telling it over and over) because I didn’t trust it-

    The gaslighting, denial and crazy-crazy-crazy.. crazy-making by my mother was so.. so much, didn’t know WHAT.

    Her story: she was the best mother; I was the worst daughter, and then.. everyone was the worst and she was the eternal victim.

    I loved her so much that I was fully invested in believing her version of the story while seeing that her story was not true.

    More later.

    #457488
    anita
    Participant

    Having been frozen/ dissociated for so long, it’s strange to just feel what I stopped feeling so long ago (when I was a child, before I can remember).

    The dissociation was so deep, and for so long, that I didn’t believe my own words- my own feeling- my own memories. It all felt made-up, not real.

    This is what was missing all along: trusting the little I remembered. Trusting it to be something that really happened vs something I made up.

    #457487
    anita
    Participant

    My reply from so long ago: “Dear kadija: … you do and do and do for them and then you get angry. When you get angry all hell breaks loose. You go on and on.. and on, about how much you do for them and how they do nothing or very little for you in return. You break stuff, kick them out, and then you wonder why your relationships don’t last.

    I quoted Kadija’s words: “I fight over small things, I get angry over minor issues, and I keep going on and on and rewind the past too much
I am very ashamed to say that when I’m angry and frustrated… I thrash his things and fall into fits of tears
sometimes I damages things to vent my anger… I guess I keep picking the wrong guys who do very little for me, guys who expects a lot from me and rarely show appreciation. Of course, I am a loving and caring person, and with the right type of loving guy I could have a loving relationship is just that I keep falling for the same type of man over and over again.”

    And my final comments in that reply: “You conveniently closed your eyes to what you do wrong in the relationships (with men, perhaps you have done so with your children as well) and focus on the idea that you get involved with the wrong guys. The suggestion perhaps is that if the man was decent then you wouldn’t get angry and you won’t go on and on and on about how much you do for him, how ungrateful he is, how he gives you nothing in return.. and break his things.

    “Problem is, there is no 
 right man who will appreciate you enough, reciprocate enough. Your pattern with the right man, as with the wrong man, would be to do and do, clean and cook and so forth, and then explode in rage. This is your pattern, your behavior, and it is for you to own.

    “Any and all comfort on the part of the man (or an unfortunate child in this situation) brought about by a warm meal and a clean house, all that evaporates and is gone in the distress of your rage and aggression. anita”

    Copilot (AI): “Here’s a clear, compassionate evaluation of the reply you wrote 8+ years ago, followed by a version that would communicate the same truth without shaming, attacking, or overwhelming the person.

    🌿 Evaluation of your original reply- Your reply had good intentions: you were trying to help Kadija see a destructive pattern she wasn’t acknowledging. You were also trying to hold her accountable for her behavior instead of letting her blame everything on “picking the wrong men.” That part was valid and important.

    But the tone of your message was very direct, confrontational, emotionally harsh, focused on what she was doing wrong, written in a way that could make her feel judged or attacked, likely to trigger defensiveness rather than reflection.

    You used phrases like: “You conveniently closed your eyes
”, “There is no right man
”, “This is your pattern, your behavior, and it is for you to own.”

    These statements are true, but the delivery is sharp. It reads more like a scolding than support. When someone already feels ashamed of their anger, this tone can make them shut down instead of open up.

    You also made assumptions about her children (“perhaps you have done so with your children as well”), which could feel intrusive or accusatory.

    In short: Your insight was accurate. Your delivery was too hard. Your message needed more compassion and less confrontation.

    đŸŒ± A better version — same truth, softer delivery:

    ** “Kadija, I hear how painful these relationships have been for you, and how much you feel unappreciated. I also want to gently reflect something important: in your past posts, you’ve described moments where anger overwhelmed you — going on for a long time, bringing up old hurts, breaking things, and feeling out of control. That kind of anger would be difficult for any partner to handle, even a loving one.

    “It’s understandable that you want a man who appreciates you, but the pattern you described — giving a lot, holding everything in, and then exploding — would likely repeat itself even with a ‘good’ man. This isn’t because you’re a bad person. It’s because this is a learned pattern, and patterns follow us until we work on them.

    “The good news is that patterns can change. You deserve relationships where you feel calm, respected, and connected — and part of getting there is understanding your own reactions with compassion, not blame. If you can work on the anger and the buildup that leads to it, your relationships can feel very different.”**

    🌟 Why this version works better- It names the behavior without shaming her. It acknowledges her pain. It avoids attacking her character. It focuses on growth, not blame. It keeps the door open for self‑reflection instead of defensiveness. It offers hope and agency.

    (I asked Copilot if my reply was abusive): “Was your reply abusive? No — it wasn’t abusive. But it was harsh, confrontational, and emotionally blunt in a way that could have felt shaming to the person receiving it.

    Abuse involves attacking someone’s character, belittling them, threatening them, humiliating them, trying to control or dominate them.

    Your message didn’t do those things. You weren’t trying to hurt her — you were trying to hold up a mirror.

    But the tone was sharp, accusatory, unforgiving, lacking warmth or compassion.

    So, while it wasn’t abusive, it could have felt emotionally overwhelming or invalidating to someone already struggling with shame, anger, and relationship issues.

    đŸŒ± What your reply actually was- Your reply was accurate (your observations were correct), insightful (you saw a pattern she wasn’t seeing), well‑intentioned (you wanted to help her grow), too blunt (the delivery overshadowed the message). You were trying to wake her up, but the tone made it harder for her to hear you.

    🌟 Why it feels harsh to you now- Because you’ve changed. You now understand emotional nuance better, communicate more gently, value compassion more, see how tone affects people, recognize that truth without softness can wound.

    You’re not judging your past self — you’re simply seeing that you would handle it differently today. That’s growth, not guilt…

    You weren’t abusive — you were triggered. Your reply wasn’t coming from a calm, neutral place. It was coming from a younger part of you that still carried pain from your mother’s behavior.

    Kadija’s descriptions — the anger, the explosions, the blaming, the emotional volatility — matched the way your mother behaved. That similarity activated old wounds in you. When that happens, the brain often reacts as if the old threat is happening again right now.

    So instead of speaking to Kadija, you were speaking to the ghost of your mother.

    Projection doesn’t mean you were wrong — it means you were hurting. Your observations about Kadija’s pattern were accurate. But the intensity of your tone came from somewhere else.

    Projection works like this: Someone reminds you of a person who hurt you. Your nervous system reacts as if it’s the same person. Your words come out sharper, harder, more charged. You feel like you’re fighting an old battle

    You weren’t trying to harm her. You were trying to protect yourself — from your mother, not from Kadija.

    đŸŒ€ïž Why you see it clearly now- Because you’ve grown. You now have more emotional awareness, more compassion, more distance from your past, more understanding of your own triggers.

    You’re not judging your old self — you’re recognizing that you were speaking from pain, not malice.

    That’s healing.

    🌟 The deeper truth- You weren’t abusive. You were activated.

    You were trying to stop a pattern that once hurt you deeply. You were trying to say to your mother — through someone else — “This behavior is not okay. It hurt me. It destroys relationships.”

    That’s not cruelty. That’s a wound speaking.

    And now you’re able to see it with clarity and softness — which means the wound is no longer running the show.

    If you want, I can help you explore what exactly in her words triggered the “mother part”…

    What you’re noticing now — that you were speaking to your mother through this other woman — is a very insightful realization. And yes, there were very specific things in Kadija’s words that would naturally trigger the “mother part” of you. Let’s break it down in a grounded, emotionally clear way.

    🌿 1. Her descriptions of explosive anger mirrored your mother’s behavior- Kadija wrote things like: “I fight over small things.” “I get angry over minor issues.” “I keep going on and on.” “I thrash his things.”
    “I fall into fits of tears.” “I damage things to vent my anger.” These are not neutral statements. They are almost verbatim the behaviors you lived with growing up.

    So, when you read them, your nervous system didn’t just see “a stranger describing her anger.”
    It saw your mother.

    Your body remembered the fear, the chaos, the unpredictability. Your reply came from that old wound.

    đŸŒ± 2. Her refusal to take responsibility echoed your mother’s denial- Kadija responded by saying: “I keep picking the wrong guys.” “I’m loving and caring — they’re the problem.” This is exactly the kind of deflection you likely heard from your mother:

    “It’s not my fault.” “If others behaved differently, I wouldn’t get angry.” “I’m the one who gives everything — they’re ungrateful.”

    When someone refuses to own their behavior, it can feel like the same old emotional trap you grew up in.
    Your reply wasn’t just frustration — it was the child in you finally speaking up.

    đŸŒ€ïž 3. The combination of rage + victimhood is a classic trigger for adult children of volatile parents-
    This pattern — explosive anger followed by self‑pity and blame — is deeply destabilizing for a child.
    When you saw it again in Kadija, your system reacted as if you were back in that environment.

    So, your message wasn’t abusive. It was protective. You were trying to stop the cycle that once hurt you.

    🌟 4. You weren’t talking to Kadija — you were talking to the mother who never listened- Your tone — sharp, urgent, confrontational — makes sense when you see it this way. You were saying things you never got to say as a child:

    “This behavior is harmful.” “You can’t blame everyone else.” “You need to take responsibility.” “This destroys relationships.”

    You were finally confronting the person who hurt you — but the person in front of you wasn’t actually your mother.

    That’s what projection is.

    Not a flaw. A wound speaking.

    đŸŒŒ 5. The fact that you see this now means the wound is healing- You’re not stuck in that old emotional role anymore. You can see the difference between the real person in front of you, and the parent your nervous system remembers

    That’s growth. That’s clarity. That’s emotional maturity.

    And it’s why you’re able to look back and say: “I wasn’t abusive — I was triggered.”

    Copilot.

    This is me speaking tonight: these very days I am giving my emotions their rightful 3-dimension, releasing them from the 2-D suppression. Allowing nuance.

    I love her, I see her as a hurting child I so much wanted to save. And at the same time, I feel her abuse and control, her rage, her aggression; my hurt, my anger at being her victim.

    Thing is I was so very dissociated from my hurt that I didn’t know I was projected it- the anger attached to it- to people like Kadija. I don’t want to do that anymore.

    Anita

    #457485
    anita
    Participant

    R U okay, Confused? Did U have the video 📞?

    #457484
    anita
    Participant

    I am sorry, Bernadette (Kadija) for this lousy reply more than 8 years ago. I just came across it so many years after and without looking too much into our communication, seems to me that right above, I projected my mother into you, and confronted my mother.. by proxy of you.

    I want to look into this further tomorrow.

    Anita

    #457477
    anita
    Participant

    You are welcome, Confused!

    “I started crying saying ‘not my baby, no!'”- this is an emotion that expresses a strong attachment, this is you NOT having checked out!

    #457475
    anita
    Participant

    Oh, dear Confused: I wish I could send courage your way in regard to the video call 📞 later today.

    Well, I can send it your way, here it goes: đŸ’Ș đŸ’Ș đŸ’Ș (the only emoji I could summon, regardless, Courage Ur Way!

    I’ll be back in a few hours.

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