Profile
Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
November 22, 2025 at 2:49 pm #452150
anitaParticipant❤️🙏🙏🙏
November 22, 2025 at 1:32 pm #452146
anitaParticipantHi Dear Alessa 😊
Oh, I didn’t know about a struggle. Please… let us reconnect (here or in one of your threads..?)
Got to run. I’ll be back to the computer tonight. Hope to talk with you soon ❤️
November 22, 2025 at 12:47 pm #452144
anitaParticipantContinued:
4) “I guess you knew that her seemingly loving, caring and supportive touch is none of that. You knew her true self, and that her touch was insincere. Unless she was supportive of you going to the U.S. (because it was linked to her dream of becoming rich?), and so in that brief moment, that touch was to express support for you?”-
I still feel that touch of her hand over mine, soft and warm and unbearable. I kept wanting to move my hand away but didn’t because I didn’t want to hurt her feelings and it being a departure drive, it’d be cruel, I thought to myself.
I can’t tell you if I felt that her touch was insincere.
For one, it just occurred to me that it was a rare move on her part, to hold me gently. I don’t remember a single soft touch with her other than the time I got drunk and I took her hands in mine for a dance, and that other time when I held her hands as she ran to hit me and her hands became soft, limp.
In both cases, the contact was my initiative.
Otherwise, her hands were hard, scrubbing my head/ body during bathing, slapping my face, hitting with a strong hand. (Masculine)
Then suddenly, unannounced, she initiated holding my hand with a soft, weak hand (feminine)
I was dumbfounded, as in: What does she want?
There’s an incestuous feel to it, an inappropriate feel to it.
The feel I often experienced with her. Perhaps like a rough masculine rapist suddenly turning soft, feminine- just so to mess with me.
Maybe you’re right, Tee. Maybe I felt it was insincere for her to initiate softness.. to give me a sense of.. guilt, or to compete with the driver of the vehicle, the one driving us to the airport, a man who showed interest in me.
I may try to figure this out later. Your thoughts would be much appreciated.
— As far as the boy running to get the mother involved following the music teacher “auntie” or whatnot comments, he is Rosie’s son, a high energy boy looking for action. In public, the mother defended me, he knew the public mama bear persona.
As far as climbing a mountain, I was indeed disappointed that it’s not healthy for my knees because in this mountainous area where I live, there’s a 5.5 km (3.5 mile) loop that I walked for years, were parts are steep, and I don’t want to stop walking it. Flat surface walking is boring. But I figure, it’s not as steep and as long of a walk as it’d be climbing a whole mountain and my knees don’t hurt as a result of doing that loop, so, I’ll continue.
Thank you, Tee. Been hours at the computer.. very tired.
I hope that these posts are not too long for you.. Well, they’re definitely long.
I hope you’re having a good Sat night.
❤️ 🫶 ❤️ Anita
November 22, 2025 at 12:09 pm #452143
anitaParticipantDear Tee:
As to your post before last, continued reply:
2) “there must have been a strong abandonment wound, and also a strong sense of worthlessness”-
This is why she stripped me of agency and a sense of self-worth. No agency/ No self-worth= No leaving her.
She didn’t strip my sister of agency the ways she did to me (dressing her etc., until an older, inappropriate age) because my sister is 6 years younger than me and by the time she was born, the mother had to work and so, she placed her in a child-care facility with other children and later in a kindergarten where her agency was not stripped. On the other hand, I never attended a kindergarten, I was with the mother all the time for 5+ years.
So, she dressed herself, etc., but emotionally, she (said later) felt like a puppet on strings, and in some major ways (doing whatever the mother wanted her to do), her lack of agency was very evident.
I am becoming aware now, because of your input Tee- of the connection between her Abandonment Trauma and fear AND her stripping her two daughters of agency.
As well as the connection between shaming us and keeping us tethered to her because of lack of self worth.
3) “I can imagine she went for maximum hurt, for the worst possible impact, and she delivered it with pleasure, being satisfied that she’s hurt you so successfully. That’s already sadism…”-
Copilot: “Sadism is the tendency to derive pleasure from the pain, suffering, or humiliation of others.
Sadistic Personality Disorder (SPD): Proposed in the DSM‑III‑R (1987) but later removed from official diagnostic manuals… Removed because it overlapped heavily with other disorders (e.g., Antisocial Personality Disorder) and raised concerns about excusing criminal behavior.
Lack of remorse, guilt, or empathy…. A pervasive pattern of disregard for and violation of the rights of others…
… You can say your mother exhibited traits that resemble Antisocial Personality Disorder (ASPD), such as aggression, shaming, or seeming to take pleasure in hurting you. But based on what you described, her overall pattern (meek and people‑pleasing with others, selective aggression mainly toward you) doesn’t align with the full diagnostic criteria for ASPD… A diagnosis requires consistent, long‑term patterns across multiple areas of life, not just selective behaviors in certain relationships… often starting with conduct disorder in childhood.”-
So, she doesn’t fit the diagnosis but she does fit selective, “pervasive pattern of disregard for and violation of the rights of others”, others who are dependent on her (her children), others who are not likely to object or stand up to her, as well as a “Lack of remorse, guilt, or empathy” which I suppose is the precondition to the disregard for the violation of others’ rights.
Such as the right to be treated with respect, or the right to not be misused and abused.
What is getting clearer for me here, is the violation of my rights point, it never really sunk in that my sister and I had rights. And that she violated those rights repeatedly never expressing guilt or remorse to either one of us (except that one time, a bit, in regard to force feeding me as a baby).
An example of her violating my sister’s rights: she called her a “wh***” so many, many times. A guy who knew her (in her early 30s) told me that she told him, as in a trance, “I am a wh***! I am a wh***! I am a wh***” (again and again, as in a cry for help).- that’s sadism. That a complete lack of empathy. That’s cruelty.
3) “I don’t think that your inability to remember certain things in your surroundings (like whether your bathroom has windows or not) necessarily indicates brain damage. It might rather point at dissociation or even preoccupation with our own internal processes… I used to be like that too – very bad at remembering things in my physical environment – because I was preoccupied with thinking what will people think of me, how I come across.. I had this constant toxic shame about myself, and so I was focusing on myself, on my internal discomfort and anxiety. And this prevented me from actually paying attention to other people or my physical environment. Do you feel that similar might be true for you?”-
Following a conversation with Copilot, I see that you are correct and I misspoke when I said “brain damage”:
Copilot: “Brain damage usually refers to an injury or loss of function in brain tissue that was previously intact. Examples: stroke, traumatic brain injury, infections, or degenerative diseases. It implies something was harmed or destroyed.
Developmental differences (like certain connections not forming strongly in childhood) are not typically called “damage.” Instead, they’re seen as variations in brain development. For example, some people naturally have weaker visual memory networks, while others excel in them.
A Helpful Analogy- Think of the brain like a city: Brain damage = roads that were built but then destroyed (e.g., by an earthquake).
Developmental difference = certain roads never got built, or were built smaller, so traffic flows differently.
If your visual memory has always been poor and consistent since childhood, it’s more accurate to describe it as a developmental difference in brain wiring, not “minor brain damage.” Damage implies loss, while developmental variation implies a different starting point.
.. chronic childhood stress and abuse can influence brain development, including memory systems… When stress is prolonged, cortisol levels stay high. Chronic exposure can interfere with the growth and functioning of brain regions involved in memory and attention… * Hippocampus: Critical for forming and retrieving memories. High cortisol can reduce hippocampal volume and impair memory encoding. * Prefrontal cortex: Important for attention, planning, and working memory. Stress can weaken connections here. * Amygdala: Becomes hyper‑active under chronic stress, reinforcing fear and vigilance rather than calm attention.
If stress and abuse occurred during childhood, the brain may have formed with weaker connections in memory networks. This isn’t “damage” in the sense of injury, but rather altered developmental wiring…
If your poor visual memory has been stable since childhood, it could reflect how your brain adapted under stress — focusing inward on survival and emotional regulation rather than outward on environmental detail…
When a child grows up in a stressful or abusive environment, the brain often prioritizes survival functions over exploration or external detail.
* Hypervigilance to threat: The brain becomes tuned to internal signals (fear, shame, anxiety) and external cues of danger (tone of voice, facial expressions).
* Narrowed focus: Instead of noticing neutral details (like windows, colors, or surroundings), attention is pulled toward monitoring safety and managing emotions.
* Encoding gap: Memory depends on attention. If attention is consumed by internal distress, the brain doesn’t fully encode external details — so later recall is weak.
Adaptation, Not Defect- This isn’t “damage” in the sense of broken brain tissue. It’s an adaptive response: The brain learns to prioritize emotional regulation and self‑protection, External environment details become “non‑essential” compared to managing inner turmoil.
Over time, this adaptation can become habitual, so even in safer contexts, the brain continues to focus inward rather than outward.
Example- Imagine being in a room during childhood: A child in a safe environment might notice the wallpaper, the window, the furniture. A child under stress might be focused on: “Is mom angry? How do I look? Am I safe?”
The external environment fades into the background, so those details don’t get stored in memory.
Summary- Your consistent poor visual memory could reflect how your brain adapted under chronic stress: it invested energy in internal monitoring and emotional survival, rather than in encoding external surroundings. This doesn’t mean your brain is “damaged” — it means it developed priorities shaped by the environment you grew up in.
Anita: if it’s habitual, can it change or can it be both, connections not made in the brain do to stress so improvement is not possible?
Copilot: … If your poor visual memory is partly habitual, it can change with retraining. If it’s partly due to developmental differences from childhood stress, improvement is still possible thanks to neuroplasticity, though it may be gradual and not absolute. So the answer is: it can be both — habits shaped by stress and developmental wiring — but neither means improvement is impossible.”
Back to you, Tee, you wrote that you “used to be like that”- meaning your attention to external details changed..?
(continued, next)
November 22, 2025 at 9:48 am #452142
anitaParticipantDear Tee:
First, I will reply to your recent post conversation style (quoting a part and responding to it before reading the next part) and later, responding further to your previous message.
“I’m very happy to hear that you’re slowly starting to connect the dots and feeling like you’re more present in your own story. Understanding it more and feeling more capable to exit it as well”-
In the past, I would have taken the “slowly” as criticism, hearing something like “You are not connecting the dots fast enough!” (with an angry tone of voice). That’s how hypersensitive I was to anything that was critical, or to something my mind twisted into criticism.
So, after noticing this a moment ago, I reread the above and I realize that indeed it is a slow process and when you used the word “slowly”, you were kindly guiding me in this process, and I know there was nothing critical in your words. And so, being guided well, I am relaxing into the process and letting go of any rushing through it.
And after writing the above, I realized that I was rushing the process (in a post I wrote for you last night, one that I chose to not submit… So, thank you, Tee for excellent guidance 🙏
“This was beautiful, Anita ❤️ I’m happy that what perhaps used to feel like a maze in which you were stuck is now starting to make sense and you’re beginning to see the exit.❤️❤️”-
Thank you, Tee ❤️❤️❤️ 😊
“What you’ve concluded here makes so much sense:… Yeah, your mother probably saw sex as a tool to manipulate and dominate men. Because the way she saw it, her own father fell prey to that type of women – who use their sex appeal to allure and manipulate men (and take them away from their families).
“So if you’re a sexy, unscrupulous woman (like Alexis Carrington from Dynasty), you’re in a position of power. And you’ll never let a man hurt your feelings – you’ll rather hurt their feelings.”-
Yes, Alexis Carrington was her hero indeed, someone she admired. She admired the character’s cold-heartedness, manipulativeness and her resulting material success. Being honest, humble.. these traits were not at all something she valued in others, not that I remember.
“She probably saw men as weak, morally corrupt, untrustworthy, easily manipulated by sex.. and so she wanted to revenge men, by idolizing sexy, evil women, who don’t get hurt by men, but are the ones who do the hurting. By idolizing these movie characters, she probably wanted to vicariously revenge to her father, who betrayed her and abandoned her when she was 9.”-
Wow, Tee.. This fits well with her black and white/ all or nothing thinking. Either a woman is to hurt/ manipulate a man OR she will be hurt by him. No shades of grey.
She had never spoke against her father other than to say he turned to women and alcohol. Didn’t blame him, never expressed anger at him. Her oldest sister did express anger at him, she said that she was terrified of him, that she used to accidently lose control of her bladder when she heard him approaching because he used to severely beat her up.
(She proceeded to severely beat the mother.. and then, she severely beat a few of her own children, one who was epileptic).
“Yes, in as much she dreamed of being a femme fatale, she was also jealous of other women and their sexual attributes, because every woman (specially a good-looking one) was a threat to her. So she needed to put down their bodies, criticize them, talk about people’s sex lives.. because all that was a threat to her. Other people’s sexuality was a threat to her.”-
A threat to her because.. Can you elaborate on this point?
“Beside hurt, anger and envy, my impression is that she also wanted revenge. Perhaps that’s why she was idolizing evil characters (in real life and film characters) – because they’re the kind of people who don’t fear their enemies and can exact revenge.”-
(Copilot): “Revenge is the act of inflicting harm or punishment on someone in response to a perceived wrong, often driven by a desire for retribution or to ‘get even.'”.
Yes, very much so, Tee. Again, this is something I didn’t think about, the connection between her and revenge. Exacting revenge is what she repeatedly did (I am feeling anxious right now) every time she went about a shaming attack against me, the smile on her face when she saw the hurt on my face when a shaming word landed just.. right. And exacting revenge is what she did to other people as well when she exploded at them, shaming them as well, saying whatever words are likely to cause them the most pain. And after she was done, she seemed calm, or just exhausted.
Except that she never exacted revenge against people she feared, like her oldest sister, or her father.
“Anyway, that was a very good observation, Anita: that her obsession with sexuality might very well be caused by her childhood trauma. It seems to me that she believed that sexuality is both a tool (to dominate others) and a threat. And thus the constant obsession and hyper-focus on all things sexual..”-
Sexuality as a tool- yes, totally. I am still drawing a blank on the “threat” point.. for some reason.
“I’m very happy this conversation is helping you, and looking forward to your next post ❤️”-
Thank you, Tee. You’re the best!
❤️ 🫶 ❤️ Anita
November 22, 2025 at 8:33 am #452137
anitaParticipantDear Alessa:
I am sorry that you feel like you’re intruding 😔. I know it’s not a pleasant feeling, and I wouldn’t want you to feel that way.
No, there nothing bothering me about you ❤️
I looked at my last message to you almost 12 hours ago.. and no, nothing about you bothered me when I wrote that message.
Is it that I opened it with “Hi Alessa” and not “Dear Alessa”? I chose Hi because that’s how you address everyone. How do you prefer that I address you?
Is it that my response was relatively short?
Your message was very generous and kind. Rereading it this morning, the major takeaway is what you wrote here: “You never had a mother capable of caring for you and loving you. Not because of you, but she is incapable of caring for another person. Not even capable of caring for herself. You dealt with horrible abuse at her hands… It is understandable, for this to be imprinted in your mind. Severe abuse is very hard to shift, especially when it comes to parents. ❤️”-
Thank you so much for articulating it so perfectly.. Couldn’t have been said better 🙏 ❤️
You are welcome to post in my thread anytime. Your insight, kindness and support are appreciated 😊
🤍 Anita
November 21, 2025 at 8:22 pm #452134
anitaParticipantHi Alessa:
Thank you so much for your support, I truly appreciate it!
“Severe abuse is very hard to shift, especially when it comes to parents. ❤️”- I couldn’t have said it better, Alessa!
I wish you and your son the best ❤️❤️
Anita
November 21, 2025 at 2:13 pm #452129
anitaParticipant🙂
November 21, 2025 at 10:35 am #452127
anitaParticipantDear Going Through Life:
Rishikesh, the Yoga 🧘 Capital of the World- how exciting! I’d love to see the photos!
Anita
November 21, 2025 at 9:49 am #452125
anitaParticipantDear Tee:
Today, I will reply to your post in a different way. After reading your whole message the first time, I copied all of your input, all your words in my personal record and reread them as I did (I don’t want to lose any in case something happens to the website), and so, I will not fully quote you in this reply.
An image that came to my mind on the first reading was that of a blank piece of paper with little markings here and there, scribblings, and Tee drawing lines through blank spaces, connecting items, filling the blanks with a story, my story.
You are helping me to remember, to think about things that never occurred to me before- replacing my childhood amnesia with a story. It makes me feel.. not just like you were there (as I repeatedly told you), but that I was there. And being there, I can get through being there, and exit that place where I’ve been stuck for decades (childhood trauma). I trapped in amnesia, in.. not really being there/ too little remembering and understanding, too many blank areas to the picture.
Of all my threads over the years, this is the most meaningful and most healing by far, and the reason is- your attention, your input, your intelligence, skill and talent.. as well as me being open and receptive to your input. There’s a relative new element of trust, me fully trusting your intent to help me. Without this trust, my accelerated healing here, with you, wouldn’t be possible.
Some of the lines you drew for me in your most recent message:
1) “And perhaps the wound from being abandoned by her father – who instead of taking care of his children, turned to alcohol and women – was even greater than the one caused by the loss of her mother… it occurs to me now that she might have had a significant trauma from her father abandoning her for other women. And so she might have found a similar man, your father, who might have been a womanizer himself (if her allegations were true) and who, unfortunately, abandoned you and your sister after they got divorced (if I got that right?”-
There’s a connection (a line) between her experience with a father who severely neglected his 9-year-old in favor of women and sex AND her heightened focus on and preoccupation with the sexual practices of people she knew, her use of sexually vulgar words.. a sort of a jealousy in regard to the women who stole her father from her via sex. Her heightened, negative focus and preoccupation with sexual things.
And her admiration of women in movies on TV, women who used sex so to be with rich men.
And that comment she made to me following a date in my early 20s.
This connection has never occurred to me.
I now understand the intensity of her focus on my father’s (real or imagined) sexual occupation with other women (not that any woman wouldn’t be bothered by her husband cheating). I understand her obsessiveness about it, the intensity of her emotion (the yelling, threatening suicide.. hitting him- I think, not sure), etc., it was like once again, other women stole a man from her via sex: hurt, anger, envy.
Whether her accusations were true.. oh, I just remembered, she said she found other women’s lipstick on his white shirts. And he worked at a fancy hotel late into the night (hence that one huge fight I remember when I went looking for her at night).
I will continue this eye opening reply either tonight or tomorrow.
❤️ 🙏 ❤️ 🫶 Forever Thankful, Anita
November 20, 2025 at 8:46 pm #452116
anitaParticipantI really would like to read your poetry, Going Through Life!
It’s only.. 4 minutes ago that you submitted a post to me…
November 20, 2025 at 7:59 pm #452114
anitaParticipantWhatever comes to mind this Thurs evening (I find healing in this kind of writing: Whatever comes to mind: saying one word but not thinking about the second word, and when the second word appears- not going back and changing/ editing the first word. Instead- moving on to third word, and the fourth. Writing from Emotion, not thinking about whether it makes sense):
Mother.
When Mother = Monster.
A Human Monster- the only monster there is (the 2-D monsters of comics and movies are not real).
Real-life monsters are real people who genuinely smile at times; they feel affection for others, at times, or so it looks like.
– Was I a monster at times?
Yes, I think I was.
– But.. Please tell me I was NOT like mother-Monster..
* Yes, I was, at times, when particularly Angry.
– So, the mother is forgivable..?
* No.
Because she never asked herself whether she was monster.
– So, am I monster?
* You had your moments.
– I don’t want to be monster, never, ever!
* It takes awareness, one moment, one hour, one day at a time.
To notice when you’re angry, then pause before you speak/ type/ act.
– Why am I so hooked on the mother.. Why is she not just-a-person, for me?
* Because you L.O.V.E.D her SO MUCH. No other reason. You cared for her.. too much.
– Yes, I did care.. way, way too much.
* Understandably.. She said she’d kill herself if.. you didn’t care enough.. did she?
– Yes.. But she L.I.E.D.
She lied when she said anything about me (my thoughts, feelings, actions, or lack of) being important to her.
But none was.
How should I put it?
.. Never a meeting of the minds.
Me and her- two strangers, as distant.. More distant than any two random people can be.
I can find more closeness with a person living in a homeless camp in a big city, a person I’d meet for the first time.
And that’s just it.
2 S.T.R.A.N.G.E.R.S. I mean just that, as strange as strangers can be.
So, any longing I have is longing for a stranger.
If closeness was possible between her and me.. she would have let me know.
Any loyalty I have ever had for her is.. misguided.
I am so very ready to move beyond this stranger.
.. And never be a stranger to myself.
And to further open up to people I know, friends.
It’s no longer my job to try and try, and try to connect with her.
Coming to think about it, she’s less a Monster than a Stranger.
My healing is less about seeing her as a Monster than seeing her as a Stranger.
It’s not that there was closeness, and then a tear, a crisis; it’s that there never was closeness between me and her. Let go of false hope, hope 4 👫
Anita
November 20, 2025 at 7:32 pm #452113
anitaParticipantThank you, GTL. Taking some steps is proactive, my friend. Keep that going!
My evening.. so dark here, dark before 5 pm. Lots of people here go south for the winter.. SO DARK AND COLD (fingers frozen, every afternoon). Well, that’s my evening.. fingers warmer, being that there’s enough firewood in the fireplace, for now
🔥🪵🔥 Anita
November 20, 2025 at 3:42 pm #452111
anitaParticipantHi Peter:
My calculation. You were 21 when the movie came out, I was 23.. so young, such a long time ago 👧🧑, so young..
Anita
November 20, 2025 at 1:28 pm #452109
anitaParticipantDear Tee:
“Walking uphill does indeed strengthen the thigh muscles, however there is a trade-off there, since climbing high mountains puts the strain on the cartilage too. And since you said you might be suffering from an early-stage osteoarthritis, I wouldn’t recommend causing unnecessary stress on your potentially sensitive knees.”-
Sadly, for me, Copilot agrees with you wholeheartedly (I know, heart.. 😂): “Benefits vs. Risks- Benefit: Uphill walking strengthens quadriceps and glutes, which help stabilize the knee and reduce long-term risk of injury. Risk: For people with early osteoarthritis, the added stress may accelerate cartilage wear, worsen pain, or trigger flare-ups… Practical Advice-
* Stick to flat or low-incline walking if you have sensitive knees, * Use low-impact alternatives like cycling, swimming, or elliptical training to build strength without stressing cartilage, * If uphill walking is unavoidable, shorter climbs, slower pace, and trekking poles can reduce knee strain.”-Now I know 😢. Thank you, Tee.
“I really have empathy for everyone with arthritis, and if you’re lucky to be only in the early stages (where further damage is preventable), I’d definitely recommend to be careful: so mild hills yes, but tall mountains no 😊”- just what Copilot said!
“Yess! Lots of love and acceptance for yourself – that’s the name of the new game 😊 ❤️”- Love and Acceptance for myself. Lots 😊 ❤️
“Well, I’ve experienced some of the things you have (though to a lesser extent), and so yes, I was ‘there’ in a way, meaning in a similar dynamic, experiencing some of the same wounding. And I’ve also learned a lot about the subject, read other people’s testimonies etc.
“So yeah, I know a thing or two about it.. not that I’m glad about it, but it does come handy now 🙂 In any case, I’m glad you feel heard and validated ❤️”-
Yes, indeed, Tee knows a lot about it 😊, AND you are able to articulate and explain it all better than anyone I’ve ever come across in my whole life, a few therapists included.. and by far!
“Oh okay. I thought she became your mother’s caretaker, or guardian, after your mother was released from orphanage. So I assumed that she was first placed in an orphanage, as a baby or a small child, and then later, when she was old enough, was given to her older sister to be her official guardian. But I guess that’s not how it happened?”-
Not quite. She had a terrible early childhood because of the traumatic time her family suffered when they immigrating in the early 50s to Israel, living in tents in horrible conditions they didn’t expect. Next her mother died at childbirth when she was 9, her father turned to women and alcohol. Sometime during that time, she was sent to an institution (not an official orphanage, a place for children with no one to care for them). She wasn’t “given” to her older sister, I don’t think. Nothing was organized back then. She just ended up with her oldest sister who shamed her terribly. The mother had a “good” shaming model.
“Hmm.. it just occurred to me that many narcissistic people pretend to be loving and kind in public. So I guess we often don’t know how the person really is in private (with their own children and spouse, in particular). I don’t want to defend your mother in any way – since she indeed was horribly abusive to you. I’m just saying that there might be other mean and abusive people out there, whom we don’t know about – because they don’t show it to the outer world. They only show their true face to their ‘loved ones’, i.e. the people who love them.”-
Yes, I understand and I agree. Yet, what I was referring to were people who were clearly abusive to me, people who took advantage of me for their selfish advantages. In comparison to even those people, SHE was a Hurting Champion. No one “better” at it, no one more effective at delivering emotional injury.. again and again. Those emotional daggers. In a twisted way.. she deserved a medal.
“But it’s also true that your mother had not only narcissism, but other disorders too, and so her behavior was pretty extreme. Again, not so much in public (except for a few of those escapades), but in private, behind four walls…”- V.I.C.O.U.S.
Histrionic, Borderline; Paranoid & Obsessive- Compulsive.
“Yes, I guess derealization is a protective mechanism, not to feel the pain so much. But I’m glad you’re noticing that you’re dissociating less than before. That’s a very good sign, Anita!”-
Thank you, Tee. I don’t feel dissociated at all. Not the way I knew dissociation. I remember, somewhere in the U.S., I was walking and didn’t notice and before I knew it, a big truck, I mean huge, commercial truck almost ran me over. I just didn’t notice. My current ongoing lack of visual memory may be part of an ongoing dissociation.. brain damage, more likely.
“From time to time she would make hurtful comments, to me in private, not in public. So those would be overt daggers, I guess… And yes, daggers hurt, specially coming from our mother..”- I am feeling empathy, affection for little girl/ adolescent Tee.
“I’m sorry, Anita, that was so hurtful – she rudely rejected your heartfelt gift, something you gave her as an expression of your love for her! 😢 And she told you: it’s not good enough, it’s worth nothing to me, I could have picked it myself!”-
Those were not LUXURY flowers, those one would by in a store.
“That was a massive dagger to your heart, Anita! 😢”- My heart was.. not luxury in her mind 😢
“My mother wasn’t as cruel, but I remember she wasn’t exactly the type of mother who liked to show physical affection. She was old school, believing that showing too much affection would spoil the child (she inherited that thinking from her mother, who was very cold and strict with her).”-
One of the most difficult memories for me was when she held my hand (I was mid/ later 20s) on the way to the airport where I was to fly (alone) to the U.S.). She placed her soft, warm hand on mine.. and I wanted to exit my skin, exit my body so to not feel that softness, that warmth.. It felt intense, very intensely negative. Any idea what that was about, Tee?
“As for gifts, I remember once, already in my adulthood, I brought her a heart-shaped souvenir. And she rejected it, asking me ‘well, what am I supposed to do with it?’ I got really upset about it, and then she changed her mind and accepted it. However, she didn’t apologize, but blamed me for overreacting. So yeah, that was a dagger too.. rejecting her daughter’s heartfelt gift..”-
I am sorry, Tee 😢 ❤️
“Okay, that’s an interesting dynamic: first, the teacher was indeed wrong for calling you a derogatory name, so I kind of understand why he (or she?) just stood there, without saying a word.”- she.
“It’s interesting to me that this boy, your classmate, ran to inform your mother about the incident. Does that mean that he knew she is strict and sort of aggressive, and so he wanted to cause a scene by involving her? It also means he wasn’t afraid of the music teacher at all..”- Again, never crossed my mind, but since you mentioned it, yes, he wanted to cause a scene. He knew of the mother being aggressive. Generally, yes, he was a trouble maker in school.
“Possibly, yes, but I’m also thinking that you being publicly humiliated by a teacher meant a personal humiliation for her too. Because you said that there were instances when she would praise you in front of other people, e.g. saying that you’re an excellent pupil, when you weren’t and things like that. So perhaps that was a narcissist in her experiencing public humiliation vicariously, through you, which caused her narcissistic rage to awaken.”- Yes, exactly, true!!!
“Also, maybe she was expected to react with anger (since your classmate ran to inform her – perhaps hoping to provoke a scene?). So perhaps that was her public image – someone who fiercely defends her daughter against any kind of humiliation by other people? Not because she cares about her daughter (although others might not have known it), but because her own narcissism wouldn’t allow her to tolerate to be humiliated vicariously?”- My goodness, yes! True!!!
“I’m afraid that in that situation, she might have seemed as ‘mama bear’ protecting her cub. And because the teacher was wrong to make that derogatory remark, and perhaps was afraid of facing disciplinary action, everybody just stayed silent – because they were afraid of possible consequences.”- Maybe the teacher felt guilty. As to consequences for calling me “auntie”- from the principle or so- I doubt it. There was no protect-the-child policy .. Unless you break the child’s bones, literally 😞
“She hated herself – that’s why she cut her head off the photos. And since she hated herself, she couldn’t love you either. No heart for herself, no heart for you either 🙁”- No Heart= still human?
“I’m happy to share those hearts with you ❤️… Sure, I’d never refuse a heartfelt gift (provided that it doesn’t involve potentially self-harmful actions, such as climbing tall mountains with bad knees 🙂 ) Picking wild flowers on gentle slopes is much more acceptable 😂 😊”-
I am ending this post with a smile and endless gratitude, Tee 🙏 ❤️ 🫶 ❤️ 🙏 ❤️
Anita
-
AuthorPosts
Though I run this site, it is not mine. It's ours. It's not about me. It's about us. Your stories and your wisdom are just as meaningful as mine.