"If you are serenely willing to bear the trial of being displeasing to yourself, you will be for Jesus a pleasant place of shelter" Saint Theresa of Lisieux, as quoted by M. Scott Peck in People of the Lie
Who goes on to say: “The evil do not serenely bear the trial of being displeasing to themselves. In fact, they don’t bear it at all.”
The content of the
story is not important here. There
is a deeper Story from which the particulars of my story spring which is that there are people around who cannot bear their own failings. So they outsource the burden to the
people around them—turning others into mirrors who’d better only reflect back
the images of themselves they want to see. If these people become parents, their child never knows anything different. All s/he knows is
that s/he is punished if something reflected back is an unflattering
truth. They learn quickly what is
acceptable. What does a child do
when it realizes that its perception of the Truth is at odds with the 'truth' that
more powerful people want it to believe?
Some exceptional
people are able to stay with their Truth, and can swim against the current of belief which would also have them believe that they are bad people.
And some accept without question that good people do whatever it is that pleases the people
who have power over them. They are
good people to the
extent that they can deny anything they encounter that contradicts what they
are supposed to be reflecting, and behave as if.
Self-doubt is the
most potent of methods for tolerating giving to others what feels false to
give. If I’m not liking something
someone is asking of me it must be because I’m selfish, or mean. If my experience tells me different
from a received truth, then I must be mistaken. If my gut calls “pudding” shit, then it must be because
something’s wrong at my very core.
Maybe it’s because there’s shit inside of me and I’m projecting it
outward onto innocents. Maybe I’m
not accepting enough, too judgemental.
Maybe I’m not enlightened enough. These people would rather I believe these things about myself, than face the truth about themselves.
I don’t know if
everyone lives some version of this, or if it’s just an obscure psychic
corner of the universe I was born into.
I’m not entirely sure what to do with this, or to what extent it
continues to be invested in my life.
It does pose a puzzle about what to do about
the people who continue to insist that only the image that flatters them is
reflected back to them. I can't avoid them forever.
3 comments:
Outsourcing -- what an apt way to put it. And a child shouldn't have such outsourcing thrust on her.
I can't begin to figure out how to extract from such a dynamic. Don't you just want to yell, "THAT'S NOT PUDDING!"
I don't know how to disconnect from the stale old outsourcing agreement without disconnecting from the person who conscripted one into it.
Nice new look.
No, it isn't just you. It's anyone born into a family with personality disordered members. I read a bit recently about codependency in families and the descriptions that I read of the dynamics were really validating. If you haven't explored that topic ... or haven't looked into it out recently, check it out:
http://www.wikihow.com/Deal-With-a-Codependent-Family-Member
http://drirene.com/cofam.htm
Sometimes codependency involves addiction in one or more family members, but sometimes it just a "maladaptive" way of relating to others. I'm no expert, but as I say, it was validating to read about it. I had a bff that came from an alcoholic family that first mentioned it to me years ago (I suspect she recognized the patterns in my family as well). I appreciated it then, but now well into adulthood, I see it much, much more clearly.
People of the lie, eh? That's a heavy one. I've dipped into the first couple of pages, but am sort of daunted by the topic ... for various reasons.
So glad to see you here!! (more! more!)
Thanks, Pale, and Luz, for stopping by.
Luz, in regards to disconnecting from the 'outsourcing agreement', I suppose it's not an accident that I live at a distance from my family-of-origin members.
Thanks for the links, Pale. I went over and read them. I'd forgotten about the concept of Codependency--funny considering once that word was everywhere. But, it seems apt. Who knows, maybe the pattern originated with a great-grand parent's alcoholism and the adaptation behaviors were what was passed down. If codependency is what results from the need to adapt to someone's intractability, then I guess I fit that shoe.
I think the part that I'm absorbing, slowly, is the fact that people important to me loved their internal equilibrium, however illusory or even delusional, more than they loved me. And so they made me a servant of their ego's stability. They didn't mean to, it was done to them, they would have no idea of what I'm speaking.
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