Home→Forums→Relationships→How do i protect myself?
- This topic has 6 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 5 years, 9 months ago by Anonymous.
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February 20, 2019 at 8:59 pm #281107AnonymousInactive
I’m trying to get off my feet. Whenever I get close, and feel like things are picking up, I notice my mom comes in to sabotage me. She can somehow sense it, and I notice her energy – even when I say no to a conversation, the interaction leaves me feeling sad, negative, and like she’s laid the hammer down. To stop me.
I realize that it’s not good for me. I live at home. What do I do when she does this? It’s difficult for me to shake the feeling or protect myself from her hacking away at me. I notice my energy shift, and these feelings of destruction and sabotage get in me – and I can tell that when I start taking action on my goals I’ll get getting this negative energy out – sabotaging. It’s like she puts this energy in me, and I can tell I’ll be behaving in a destructive way as a result. Unable to focus and bring my full self to what I’m doing. This happens when there’s important things on the table. This happens when I’m getting close to breakthrough. She usually successfully hacks me down, and I’m not sure if it gets worse every time. I need to have some kind of way to protect
February 21, 2019 at 5:29 am #281143AnonymousGuestDear Miss:
“my mom comes in to sabotage me… the interaction leaves me feeling sad, negative, and like she’s laid the hammer down. To stop me…. hacking away at me… It’s like she puts this energy in me, and I can tell I’ll be behaving in a destructive way as a result”-
– “How do I protect myself?”- same way you protect yourself from any person who rains on your parade of life, remove that cloud from its position above you by moving out and no longer living with her, and then, stay away from her, do not volunteer to be in her presence.
A mother is too much of a powerful figure in her child’s mind and life because a child is being formed during those formative years of childhood with the interactions with her mother integrated into the child’s brain. In other words, however your mother is “hacking away at” you, you are likely to be hacking away at yourself when you are not longer living with her or being in her presence.
So two things are needed: to stop the damage by not being in her presence and then if you find yourself doing her job against yourself, attend quality psychotherapy so to function better and better in life.
anita
February 21, 2019 at 2:07 pm #281267MarkParticipantMiss,
How old are you?
I feel for you. I agree with anita’s suggestion about leaving. In the meantime, setting firm boundaries with your mother will help. Whenever your mother starts in with her negative energy, declare that you cannot be in her presence for it drains you/upsets you/etc. and then leave the room. Either go into a room where you can close the door to keep her from being with you or leave the house.
Keep doing that every time she does that. Be persistent. Be consistent. Don’t stay to argue, justify, plead. Make that simple statement and leave.
Mark
February 21, 2019 at 4:53 pm #281279AnonymousInactivethe problem is it affects me after i leave
also, the problem is how it’s effecting me now, obviously moving would solve the issue but the issue is where I am.
February 21, 2019 at 5:28 pm #281293AnonymousGuestDear Miss:
“My mom comes in to sabotage me”- it may help me to understand better and maybe give you better input if you explain specifically how she sabotages you, give an example or two. Would you like to do that?
If you do I will read your next post or posts and reply when I am back to the computer in about eleven hours from now.
anita
February 24, 2019 at 2:29 pm #281601Sad humanParticipantMy problem comes from anxious thoughts. I have this “friend” although I don’t consider him a friend, I consider him someone I’m nice to because I’m scared of him. He intimidates me. I graduate in 4 months and I feel like I’ve spent parts of my senior year scared of what this boy could do to me. He always has drama, some might consider him a sociopath because he starts random problems and thinks he’s always right. It’s clear that he finds enjoyment out of hurting others emotionally (not physically as far as I know). Basically because I’ve talked to my therapist about this, I want to know what I can do to avoid him for example: starting a rumor about me, making lies about me or twisting stories like he’s done to others. When I graduate I want to block him on everything but I’m scared I could run into him. I wish it was as easy as getting a restraining order but I know that I’d need to prove my reasonings and being that he has not threatened me (yet) there’s nothing I can do. Some example of why I think he will lash out on me some day is, he used to get mad when I wouldn’t hang out with him. I found ways around it through saying I hang out with no one and I’m focusing on school. I just want to know what I can do to get away. He knows something about me that isn’t really that serious and the only reason he knows is because he did this thing and I said that I had a similar situation (I wish I could go back and say that I couldn’t relate). Another friend I had also had the same situation and he knows and he no longer talks to her because she doesn’t like him as a person and he never used this incident against her, but still I worry he might you my situation against me. It’s all really stupid but it’s all he has that he could use against me and he could really twist the story around if he wanted to. So what do I do? Do I stay friends with the person who makes me uncomfortable forever Until I finally move away? Or do I cut him off and face the consequences that could drive my mental health down to a spirally black hole and panic to the point where I’m hospitalized? This is something I think about a lot. Any advice would be great during this time. Thank you.
February 25, 2019 at 5:22 am #281635AnonymousGuest* Dear Sad human:
If you want to start your own thread, you can do so, copy and paste the above there. For now I suggest you talk more to your therapist about what seems to me an unreasonable fear you have of this particular person.
anita
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