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January 31, 2026 at 9:31 am #454791
anitaParticipant* edit: if we want to put an end to some of the negative consequences
January 31, 2026 at 9:28 am #454790
anitaParticipantHey Confused:
As I was looking at your Dec 19, 2025 posts, I came across “In my case too, the relationship with my mother was very chaotic, violence and arguing constantly, throwing some awkward affection here and there, then rinse and repeat. I can’t remember if I was dissociating when I was a kid, definitely trying to escape in imaginary worlds and games though”-
And it occurred to me how much we do have in common. I too escaped into imaginary worlds, daydreaming for hours every day, every chance I got. There were no computers back then, so my escape was strictly mental, imaginary.
A member here in the forums (Robi1992), only 3 years older than you, also grew up in a chaotic home with an unpredictable, sometimes violent mother, and like you, he escaped into imaginary worlds and games: (Robi, Feb 18, 2024: “When I was about 11, my parents bought my first computer. I was hooked from the early beginning. I would spend an entire day and sometimes night playing games and watching films. The internet has become my playground. Finally, there was a place where I could hide, explore and fit in… For many years, as an adult, I would spend my days in front of the computer.”
Children who grow up in chaotic homes like you, me and Robi, need an escape. But we can’t escape the consequences of growing up in chaotic homes. Neither the suffering nor the consequences end just because we become adults and live away from home. As adults, we have to take on the difficult but necessary healing process if we want to put an end to the negative consequences of growing up in chaos.
đ¤ Anita
January 31, 2026 at 8:40 am #454789
anitaParticipantGood morning, Confused đ
In regard to “something is missing/not rightâ-
You mentioned OCD and depression a few times, beginning in your very first post here (“I have started therapy with someone that specializes in ocd/depression”, Dec 19).
It’s common that people with OCD (I was one) describe a strong internal tension like: ‘This isnât complete.’ ‘This doesnât feel right.’ ‘I need to fix this.’, ‘Something is off and I canât relax.’
The feeling itself â âsomething is missing/not rightâ â can appear in other emotional states, such as in anxiety and depression. But in OCD, the ânot rightâ sensation is usually followed by a strong urge to fix it, such as checking, re-reading, re-thinking, mentally reviewing, seeking reassurance, trying to get the ‘perfect’ feeling.
The person feels driven to do something until the internal tension goes down. Itâs not just discomfort â itâs pressure.
People with OCD often know nothing is actually wrong, but the feeling is so strong that it overrides logic. It feels like: ‘I know this makes no sense, but I canât shake it.’, I need to fix this even though I know itâs irrational.’ That mismatch â insight + compulsion â is very characteristic of OCD.
In OCD, the goal is to get the right feeling, the person often tries to reach a sense of ‘rightness’, ‘completion’, ‘certainty’. Itâs not about solving a real problem â itâs about chasing an internal sensation.
In other contexts, people donât chase a ‘perfect feeling.’ Theyâre just distressed or confused. The feeling (âsomething is missing/not rightâ) doesnât create compulsions.
In one sentence, in OCD, the âsomething is missing/not rightâ feeling creates a compulsive drive to fix or complete something, even when the person knows it doesnât make sense. In depression, it is about loss of emotional connection, of an internal spark, a feeling of aliveness and missing the old (not depressed) self.
It’s an internal emptiness without a compulsion/ drive to fix or complete something. The feeling doesnât demand a specific mental or physical action. Itâs uncomfortable, distressing, maybe confusing, but not compulsive.
Maybe this distinction is helpful, what do you think, Confused?
đ¤ Anita
January 30, 2026 at 8:35 pm #454784
anitaParticipantI will email the address you provided Sat morning (it’s Fri night here), đ good night, Q
January 30, 2026 at 7:48 pm #454782
anitaParticipantI want to add, I have communicated via a private email with about a dozen + tiny members over the years, still ongoing with only one member.
My best communication was with members on tb forums, right here.
So, I prefer these public forums. It’s just that if you think a private forum is advantageous, you are welcome to offer me a private email.
đ¤ Anita
January 30, 2026 at 7:22 pm #454781
anitaParticipantI have no social media account (Facebook and such). I have an email address but it has my full real name and I don’t know how to produce a more anonymous email address ( I am very, very low tech). You are welcome to provide me with an email address you are comfortable sharing here, if you want to
January 30, 2026 at 7:00 pm #454779
anitaParticipantDear Q:
The most important thing đ is that you’re doing well, that you are less anxious and better at regulating emotions. I am thrilled đ to read this, this Fri evening.
Of course, I am curious about recent events, but I understand your discomfort sharing about it in a public forum. I qouldn’t mind communicating with you on email, if it’d be helpful to you (?)
If it might, you are welcome to give me an email address I can write to. Otherwise, we can talk here about anything you want to talk about.
đ¤ Anita
January 30, 2026 at 6:45 pm #454778
anitaParticipantHey Confused:
Let the part of your mind that knows better (the wiser part) resist the craving of the restless,craving part đŤ so that you can rest.
Really, resting đ´ is what you need.
đ´ đ¤ đđ¤ â¨ď¸ Anita
January 30, 2026 at 3:57 pm #454774
anitaParticipantBrilliant point đ about patience, Confused! You need Time and Patience T&P-P (T&P-Pressure). The pressure to understand, to figure it out.. that’s in your way.
Do your best to not fight within yourself anymore, to rush. Give yourself a break, a vacation, please đ
đ¤ đ¤ đ đ Anita
January 30, 2026 at 11:51 am #454767
anitaParticipantHey Confused:
What you described isnât madness or paranoia â itâs your mind reacting to a lot of emotional stress all at once. Dissociation can come in waves, and it can move through different layers just like you explained. It means your system got overwhelmed and tried to protect you the only way it knows how.
The confusion you feel about your emotions, the memories feeling distant, the crying that suddenly shuts off (reading this just reminded me experiencing the exact thing, the crying stopping abruptly, it puzzled me at the time, made me feel that I am a freak) â these are all things that can happen when someone is overloaded.
Try not to fight with yourself about what you âreallyâ feel. When youâre dissociated, itâs almost impossible to get clear answers. Your mind is trying to make sense of numbness, and that can create a lot of tangled thoughts.
Youâre not losing yourself. Youâre not going crazy. Youâre going through something heavy, and your body is trying to keep you safe. Give yourself time. Be gentle with yourself. You donât need to solve everything today đ
đ¤ Anita
January 30, 2026 at 11:06 am #454765
anitaParticipantDear Robi (part 4, final part for today):
Copilot to Robi (and remember, Robi, the last input it received was from Feb 19, 2024): Someone in your position can begin to shift these patterns by first recognizing them clearly. Understanding that your reactions were shaped by your environment helps reduce selfâblame.
Building a sense of self happens slowly, through small choices and small acts of independence. Setting emotional boundaries â even tiny ones â helps separate your needs from your parentsâ expectations.
Allowing yourself to feel both anger and longing makes space for healing, because both emotions are natural responses to inconsistent caregiving. And forming relationships where you are seen as an equal, not a child, can gradually rewrite your internal map of what closeness can feel like. Over time, you can build a life that feels larger, freer, and more your own than the one you grew up in.
ÂJanuary 30, 2026 at 11:03 am #454764
anitaParticipantDear Robi (part 3):
Copilot: Your father comes across as a quiet, passive, emotionally distant man. He doesnât seem intentionally hurtful, but he also doesnât offer the emotional support, guidance, or protection a child needs. He avoids conflict, avoids emotional intensity, and stays in the background. Because of this, you didnât grow up with a strong model of confidence, engagement, or healthy adulthood.
His passivity also meant your mother carried all the emotional weight in the family, and that weight often fell onto you. He didnât cause harm directly, but he allowed harmful patterns to continue because he never stepped in, never set boundaries, and never protected you from emotional pressure.
* Me: I am amazed today, Robie, to clearly see the similarities between your mother and mine as well as between you and me.
Like your mother, my mother too showed love through control, not through attunement. She equated Closeness with Control. When I was emotionally compliant, and behaving the way she expected, she became warm and approving. But the moment I asserted any kind of independence (as a teenager, I suppose) or expresses my own needs, she becomes cold, distant, or angry.
She didn’t relate to me as a separate person. She related to me as an extension of herself.
When I brought up painful childhood memories (as an older teenager or a young adult) â being hit, being threatened, being controlled â she immediately denied it, minimized it, or blamed me
She couldn’t emotionally handle the idea that she caused harm, or that she was wrong. So, she protects herself by rewriting history, shifting blame, insisting I was âdifficultâ, and shutting down the conversation. This is a common pattern in emotionally immature parents.
She too used withdrawal as a form of emotional punishment, giving me long silent treatments, not speaking to me for days, as well threatening abandonment (in my case, in the form of suicide threats). Itâs emotional coercion â it was a way to regain control by making me feel guilty, scared, or responsible for her feelings.
Her support is conditional. She was supportive when I was compliant and dependent on her, but the support disappeared if I asserted any independence, if I challenged her or expressed my own truth. To earn her “love” I had to disappear, to minimize myself.
Like you, I grew up with no privacy, no personal space and with constant observation (except when she was at work, not at home). In my case, she talked to me whenever she wanted, even when I was busy with homework, and when I didn’t want to be talked to. Living in tiny apartment didn’t help.
She never learned how to respect boundaries. To her, closeness meant access, involvement, control and constant presence.
She didnât recognize that a child needs space to develop a self.
She wanted closeness but didn’t know how to build connection, so she used guilt, pressure and control to have power over me. She confused closeness with possession.
Like your mother, mine was emotionally underdeveloped, never have learned healthy boundaries, emotional accountability, how to validate a child, never learned how to separate her needs from mine.
Because of her patterns, I learned that expressing needs is dangerous, that independence triggers guilt, that I must hide parts of myself, that I have to focus on her emotions and ignore my own, and that I am responsible for her emotions and for keeping the peace.
* Identity diffusion is a term used to describe a state where a person doesnât have a solid, stable sense of who they are, and that’s what I experienced: not knowing what I wanted or preferred, changing my mind often about goals or values, struggling to feel like one continuous person over time, feeling like I âperformedâ or was fake, had difficulty making decisions because nothing felt solid. And that was a result of growing up (I prefer to say “in”) with my mother.
Identity forms when a child grows up with emotional safety, encouragement to explore, room to express themselves, consistent boundaries, etc., but when a child is controlled, criticized, ignored, invalidated or not given space â the self doesnât get to develop.
In general, identity diffusion in adulthood can lead to difficulty choosing a career, trouble committing to goals, feeling lost when alone, relying heavily on others for direction, feeling overwhelmed by independence, and intense reactions to criticism or rejection. Reads familiar, doesn’t it, Robi đ
(To be continued)
January 30, 2026 at 10:04 am #454762
anitaParticipantDear Robi (Part 2)
Next, I asked Copilot to write you a letter using very simple language. (I won’t quote all of it so to avoid repetition)
Copilot: Robi,
I want to speak to you in a very simple and honest way about everything youâve shared. Nothing about your reactions or your struggles is random. They all make sense when you look at the kind of childhood you had and the emotional world you grew up in.
You were expected to fit into your parentsâ needs instead of being seen as your own person. A child in that situation learns to survive by staying small, by hiding parts of themselves, and by trying not to upset anyone. That kind of environment shapes your sense of self. It makes you feel unsure of who you are, unsure of what you want, and unsure of whether youâre allowed to take up space in the world.
This early pattern shows up in your adult relationships. You want closeness, but you also fear losing yourself. You want support, but youâre scared it will come with pressure or control. You want independence, but part of you still waits for someone to tell you itâs safe. When someone gets close to you, you might feel warm and connected, and then suddenly overwhelmed or irritated. Thatâs not because youâre unstable. Itâs because your nervous system learned long ago that closeness can be both comforting and dangerous.
The mix of anger and longing you feel toward your parents is completely natural. You long for them because you never fully got the emotional safety, encouragement, and presence you needed. A part of you still hopes they might give it to you now. At the same time, you feel anger because another part of you knows how much you were hurt, ignored, or controlled. Both feelings are real. Both feelings are allowed. They sit together because you loved the people who also wounded you. Thatâs a very human experience.
When you go back home or when you ask for help, the old dynamic comes back. You feel small again, watched again, judged again. You feel like youâre losing yourself. Thatâs why accepting money from them feels like a cage. Itâs not the money itself. Itâs the emotional meaning behind it. It pulls you back into the role you had as a child, and your whole body remembers that feeling.
If someone wanted to respond to you with clarity and compassion, they wouldnât dismiss your story or tell you to âmove on.â They would say something like: âI hear how painful this was for you. Your feelings make sense. You were a child who needed care, and you didnât get enough of it. Youâre not wrong for wanting love, and youâre not wrong for feeling angry. Both can exist. Youâre allowed to grow now, even if your parents canât meet you where you are.â
They would see your experience without judging it. They would understand that youâre not broken â youâre someone who had to adapt to an environment that didnât support your emotional development. And they would remind you that youâre allowed to build a life that feels freer, more open, and more your own than the one you grew up in.
(to be continued)
January 30, 2026 at 9:41 am #454761
anitaParticipantDear Robi (Part 1):
A walk down memory lane…
Your first post ever was on June 8, 2018, in your first of 3 threads titled: “My story and my search for answers”. You were 25 back then (34 now).
First time you shared about your parents was on that same day (6/8/18): “Iâve never really liked my parents that much. Well.. when I was really young (kindergarten young), I used to cry every time they took me there and I used to love spending a lot of time with them, but I guess things changed…”.
I copied much of what you shared about your childhood and relationship with your parents (in all 3 threads, June 8, 2018-Feb 19, 2024) and ask Copilot (AI) to analyze it.
Copilot: When you look at his story as a whole, several themes emerge very clearly: chronic emotional neglect, enmeshment, lack of autonomy, inconsistent caregiving, fearâbased attachment, and coping through dissociation and escape. Nothing in his childhood was overtly catastrophic, but everything was chronically mis-attuned: no privacy, no personal space, no autonomy, no sense of being seen as an individual, no emotional safety, no consistent connection, no encouragement or guidance and no room for selfâexpression.
This is the classic profile of emotional neglect, which often leaves deeper wounds than more obvious forms of trauma because the child grows up feeling invisible, unimportant, and unformed. He wasnât abused constantly, but he was unmet constantly.
* His parentsâ anxiety and passivity shaped his development: He describes them as anxious, disconnected, passive, stuck, observers of life rather than participants. Children internalize the emotional world of their caregivers. Robi absorbed fear of taking risks, fear of the world, fear of independence, a sense of being âcagedâ, a sense that life is something you watch, not live. This is why he later coped through screens, movies, and fantasy â he learned to observe life instead of inhabiting it, just like his parents.
* The lack of privacy and autonomy is not a small detail â itâs developmental deprivation. A child needs a room, a door, a sense of ‘mine’, a place to retreat, a sense of boundaries. He had none of that. The glass door, the constant intrusions, the storage room â these are symbolic of a deeper truth: he was not treated as a separate person. This creates identity diffusion, difficulty knowing what he wants, difficulty feeling like an adult, difficulty separating from parents and difficulty tolerating independence. His later struggles in Spain make perfect sense in this context.
The long hours waiting at his parentsâ workplace were a form of emotional abandonment. He wasnât physically alone, but he was psychologically alone. He describes waiting, idling, watching others come and go, feeling invisible, feeling trapped. Itâs a quiet, chronic form of abandonment.
The lake house summers reinforced the same pattern: trapped, isolated, no friends, no choice, no autonomy, no stimulation.
His parents chose their comfort over his developmental needs. He learned that his needs donât matter.
* The physical punishment and threat of abandonment created fearâbased attachment: being hit with a belt, then comforted, then hit again, then apologized to â this is inconsistent caregiving, which creates confusion, hypervigilance, distrust, emotional instability, difficulty regulating emotions and difficulty forming secure bonds.
The threat of foster care is especially damaging. It teaches the child: ‘Love is conditional. If I fail, I can be discarded.’ This creates lifelong anxiety around independence and dependence.
* His computer addiction was not a flaw â it was a survival strategy. He says it himself: âIt was a necessary addiction.â He used screens to escape loneliness, escape boredom, escape emotional confusion, create a private world, find stimulation, find identity, find belonging. This is classic dissociative coping.
He didnât have a room, so he built one online.
* His adult struggles with work, independence, and identity are predictable outcomes. Children who grow up without autonomy, encouragement, guidance, emotional attunement âŚoften struggle with initiating tasks, sustaining effort, tolerating uncertainty, believing in themselves, feeling like adults, separating from parents.
* His emotional reaction to leaving home is not contradictory â itâs attachment trauma. When he moved to Spain, he felt anxious, unstable, longing for home, crying when seeing his parentsâ pictures. This is not because his parents were safe. Itâs because they were familiar.
Children with inconsistent or neglectful parents often feel more attached when they finally separate â because the attachment system activates under stress.
He is grieving the parents he wished he had, not the ones he actually had.
* The âcageâ returning when he accepted money is a trauma echo. He felt ashamed, small, dependent, controlled, infantilized. This is because financial dependence recreates the emotional dynamic of childhood: ‘If they support me, I lose myself.’ This is a trauma response.
Robiâs story reflects emotional neglect, enmeshment, lack of autonomy, inconsistent caregiving, fearâbased attachment, identity diffusion, dissociative coping, developmental trauma. He is a man who grew up without the conditions needed to develop a stable sense of self, and he is now trying to build that self from scratch.
— Following the above analysis, I added what you shared later on the 2/19 in regard to your visit to your parents with your girlfriend (a part I neglected to add for the analysis above.
Copilot: Robiâs experience during that visit is not an isolated incident â itâs a perfect reenactment of the emotional dynamic he grew up in. Everything he describes fits a very consistent psychological pattern: conditional support, enmeshment, emotional control, denial of harm, and punishment for autonomy.
* The ‘”supportâ he received was conditional, not secure. When he first told his mother about the personal trainer course, she responded with excitement, praise, and financial support. That felt like warmth, approval, belonging, hope, a âwelcoming hug.â But this support was not unconditional. It was contingent on him staying emotionally close, behaving the way she wanted, fulfilling her idea of âfamily timeâ, not asserting independence, not challenging the past
This is why the support evaporated the moment he stepped out of line. This is not healthy parental support â itâs conditional attachment.
* The moment he asserted autonomy, the old dynamic reappeared: he and his girlfriend felt observed, judged, controlled, patronized, treated like children. This is exactly how he felt as a child. His parents donât relate to him as an adult. They relate to him as an extension of themselves â someone who must fit their emotional needs. When he tries to be his own person, they experience it as rejection, disrespect, abandonment. So, they respond with control, guilt, and emotional withdrawal.
* His motherâs reaction is classic emotional manipulation. When she cornered him and accused him of not caring, she was doing what she has always done: making his autonomy into a moral failure, framing his independence as selfishness, demanding emotional closeness on her terms, punishing him for not meeting her needs. This is not connection. This is enmeshment.
* When he brought up childhood harm, she denied it â this is extremely common in emotionally immature parents. Her responses: âI didnât hit you.â, âYouâre talking nonsense.â, âYou were a handful.â âIt was difficult to raise you.â These are classic defensive strategies used by parents who cannot tolerate the idea that they caused harm. Why? Because admitting harm would require self-reflection, guilt, responsibility, emotional maturity.
She doesnât have those skills. So, she rewrites history to protect her self-image. Itâs because sheâs emotionally underdeveloped.
* Her threat â âYouâre on your own in 3 daysâ â is a reenactment of childhood abandonment. This is the same emotional weapon she used when he was a child: âIf you donât behave, weâll send you to a foster home.â, âWe will abandon you.â Now, as an adult, she uses: âYouâre on your own.â Itâs the same pattern: withdraw love to regain control.
* The silent treatment is emotional punishment- When she stopped speaking to him for days, she was punishing him for confronting her, punishing him for asserting himself, punishing him for breaking the family narrative, punishing him for having boundaries. This is not conflict resolution. Itâs emotional coercion.
* His anger (âI want to crack their heads openâ) is not pathological â itâs the anger of a child who was never protected. This kind of anger is common in adults who were emotionally neglected, were controlled, were hit, were denied autonomy, were gaslit about their own experiences. Itâs the anger of someone who finally sees the truth. Itâs not dangerous â itâs a sign of awakening.
* His motherâs final justification â âYou were difficultâ â is a way to avoid responsibility. When she says: âYou were a handful.â, âIt was hard to raise you.â She is shifting the blame onto him. But heâs right: children are âdifficultâ when their needs arenât met.
A healthy parent would ask: âWhy was my child struggling?â, âWhat did he need that he didnât get?â His parents didnât have the emotional capacity to do that.
* The core dynamic- Robiâs parents offer warmth when he complies, withdrawal when he asserts himself, support when he stays small, punishment when he grows, affection when he plays the role they expect, rejection when he challenges the past. This is conditional love, not secure attachment.
* Why he keeps going back? Because he is still hoping for repair, recognition, accountability, unconditional love, a parent who finally sees him. This is normal. Itâs the longing of a child who never got what he needed. But the pattern is unlikely to change unless he changes the terms of the relationship.
(To be continued)
January 30, 2026 at 7:21 am #454757
anitaParticipantGood morning, Confused:
Your comment yesterday, “I think yours is way different, a true dissociation, not just emotional one” made me think, so I researched it this morning. Dissociation does indeed come in different forms, and they exist on a spectrum from mild to more intense.
At the lighter end, thereâs Emotional Dissociation, where you feel numb, shut down, or disconnected from your feelings. (disconnecting from feeling)
A step deeper is Cognitive Dissociation, which affects your thinking â you might zone out, feel foggy, or lose your train of thought. (disconnecting from thinking)
A deeper form is Somatic Dissociation, where you feel disconnected from your body, like parts of you are numb or not fully ‘yours.'(disconnecting from body awareness)
Other deeper forms include Depersonalization, where you feel detached from yourself, like watching yourself from outside your body (disconnecting from sense of self, of “me”), and Derealization, where the world around you feels unreal or dreamlike. (disconnecting from the sense of the external world)
An even deeper form- Dissociative Amnesia which affects memory. It includes forgetting parts of your life, losing memories of events, blank spots in your timeline. (disconnecting from memory access)
The deepest and rarest, Identity Dissociation, making someone feel like different ‘parts’ of themselves take over at different times. (disconnecting from the sense of being one unified self)
Interesting, is it, for you?
đ¤ Anita
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