Thursday, December 5, 2019

Negligence

I've had enough servings of indifference.

Monday, December 2, 2019

What Emotional Neglect Does to a Relationship

(by Elliot D. Cohen, Ph.D., [What Would Aristotle Do?] in Psychology Today)

The support system in your relationship is one-sided.

Emotional neglect involves failing to provide emotional support that one should provide, given one's relationship to the other. Thus it is thought that a parent emotionally neglects a child when the parent fails to show the child the level of affection or attention that, as a parent, she should (even when she may be providing for the physical needs of the child such as food, health care, clothing, and shelter).

Emotional neglect is also distinct from emotional abuse. Emotional abuse (as distinct from physical abuse) involves abusive commissions—that is, doing things to another that can be emotionally hurtful or traumatizing (for example, name-calling, manipulating, gaslighting, etc.); whereas emotional neglect involves neglectful omissions, that is, omitting to do things that tend to promote emotional well-being. While there is helpful literature on the harmful repercussions of childhood emotional neglect in adulthood (see, for example, Jonice Webb’s guest blog in Psychology Today), less has been written about emotional neglect in adult relationships. In this blog I will investigate the conditions under which a life partner (married or unmarried) can be said to emotionally neglect the other—that is, the conditions under which one is justified in concluding that the life partner is not providing the emotional support that he or she should.

The determination of emotional neglect is open-textured; like other value judgments, the concept is inherently vague. There are, therefore, borderline cases, which are indeterminable or subject to rational disagreement. Nevertheless, there is logic to the justification of judgments about emotional neglect. Such justification is a function of the purpose of the relationship itself. For example, the purpose of parenting is to provide the conditions of flourishing for one's child. These conditions clearly include emotional support, such as providing affection and understanding as appropriate.

Similarly, the purpose of a marriage or life partnership also involves an emotional support system. The point of the latter relationships is to provide a framework for sharing one's life experiences, both positive and negative, and to receive mutual understanding, intimacy, and caring. True, there are marriages of convenience, which aim at specialized functions (for example, collecting benefits or attaining citizenship). However, these relationships are parasitic off of the primary relationship, which is one based on emotional support. Depending on the parties to the relationship, the level of emotional support and engagement requisite to making the relationship work may vary. For example, two rather unaffectionate partners may require less emotional support than on average. Thus the value judgment about how much emotional support a partner should be providing can be, to a significant extent, contextually relative.

Still, there are clear cases of emotional neglect. A persistent habit or disposition of complete or almost complete lack of physical contact would ordinarily fall below the minimum emotional support of what the life partner should be providing. So too would a consistent pattern of refusing to spend time with one's partner, preferring instead to engage in a solitary activity (for example, playing solitaire).

So, what things should a life partner do in order to provide the emotional support he should be providing? These would be forms of emotional support most people would agree on as reasons for constituting a marriage or life partnership. They would include physical, behavioral, as well as cognitive forms of emotional support. Physical forms include intimate exchanges of affection such as hugging, kissing, touching, and sexual contact. Behavioral forms include actions that show caring or being there for the other, such as spending time with the other, or helping the other out of a difficult situation. Cognitive forms involve such things as having patience, listening, providing feedback on problems of living, and empathizing.

Typically, emotional support involves a combination of physical, behavioral, and cognitive aspects, and the package of support may be greater than the sum of its parts. For example, putting one's arms around the other, gently providing feedback, and canceling an appointment at work to do so is to provide a form of emotional support that is more than its ingredient aspects. It is also true that there are "different strokes for different folks." Thus, for example, we may have different sexual preferences; however, most couples (but not all) would agree that they desire some form of sexual contact.

Further, being emotionally neglectful, considered as a personal attribute or character trait, involves a habit of failing to provide the emotional support that one should, given the purpose of the relationship. Thus, a life partner who occasionally acts in emotionally neglectful ways (for example, refuses to have sex or acts detached and unfriendly after a marital spat) is not necessarily emotionally neglectful, even though he or she may have acted as such on certain occasions. Only when such actions rise to the level of a disposition or habit can one properly be called emotionally neglectful.

Quite clearly, however, even those of us who are not emotionally neglectful can often stand to lessen the occasions on which we are emotionally neglectful. So, is your life partner emotionally neglectful? While answering this question may require discretion, you should now have some guidelines for rationally addressing it:

1. Is the emotional support system in your life partnership relatively one-sided (you provide, or attempt to provide, emotional support for your partner, but not conversely)?

2. Is your partner in a habit of failing to be emotionally supportive?

3. Can you clearly describe the particular way/s your partner is (habitually) failing to be (physically, behaviorally, or cognitively) emotionally supportive?

4. Does your partner’s omission/s, as described, make untenable the emotional support system needed to sustain a functional life partnership (that is, a relationship conducive to sharing one’s life experiences, mutual understanding, intimacy, and caring)?

5. Are your expectations regarding emotional support reasonable — that is, what most people would generally expect from a functional life partnership?

If your response to each of the above five questions is yes, then you have reasonable belief that you are in an emotionally neglectful relationship. This is obviously not a calculus to compute whether your life partner is emotionally neglectful. Given the value-laden and relative nature of the concept, this is not feasible.

Nevertheless, the level of emotional support in a life partnership may fall short of what one should reasonably expect in such a relationship. In such cases, it makes sense to speak of emotional neglect; in such cases, the goal of a life partnership, which is to promote mutual happiness of the partners, may be severely (if not irremediably) compromised.

This post has addressed the identification of emotional neglect, not the complex question of how to address it. For the latter, much depends on the etiology of the emotional neglect. For example, in some cases, a partner may be a workaholic and, as a result, neglect his or her relationship; some may have neural-psychological impairments, such as autistic spectrum disorder, which impedes the ability to express emotions; others may be narcissistic; while others may be preoccupied or obsessed with problems outside the relationship. In some cases, addressing the neglect may best be handled by couples counseling; in others (such as autism), conventional modes of couples counsel may be ineffective.

In any event, the identification of emotional neglect is always the first step in addressing it. This is no small feat because one can spend many years in a dysfunctional, unhappy relationship due to emotional neglect, and not know quite why he or she is so unhappy. Indeed, in abusive relationships, it may be significantly easier to identify the offending behavior because it is typically overt actions.

In contrast, as stated, emotional neglect involves omissions. For example, one’s spouse does not verbally assault, does not harass, and does not engage in other forms of aggressive, emotionally harmful activities. The emotionally neglectful partner, after all, does "nothing wrong"; so it’s harder to identify what is so wrong with the relationship.

Nevertheless, like emotional abuse, emotional neglect can be quite harmful, and can destroy the quality of a relationship. So, being aware that you are in an emotionally neglectful relationship can be an important first step toward addressing this pervasive and insidious cause of profound unhappiness.

Friday, November 1, 2019

Happy November 1

Happy first day of the month ... and happy upcoming 4 bears day: the day of the dead.
It's enrichening to think about those who came before us - at least on one of the days of a year? It gives a greater depth to our experience, to be able to see one's life as part of something larger, and stretching through much deeper time, like an elastic web with some "give" to it.
A remaining question: can the web of deep time, and incarnate experience, fold back in on itself and possibly contact another part of the web? Woo-woo! ;-)
[Maybe if the web can also act like visco-elastic bubble plastic - ?! Oldsters: Remember the toy Super Elastic Bubble plastic? I carefully saved and hoarded my birthday money, to make sure I could acquire me some of that stuff, in a timely fashion, deep in childhood. Certain things just capture the attention, currency and Ka-Ching of childhood, heh.] ;-)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Elastic_Bubble_Plastic

(Yesterday, which is a culturally distinctive day of the year, where I and my peoples are from - I felt nearly like I was on a direct communication pipeline with my grandmother Claudia, for a while, somehow. Anyway - no matter how my illusion or disillusion/delusion was: I imagined some kind and encouraging words that I might have reasonably expected to hear from her - and then it was almost as if she were right next to me, softly speaking those words, with a smile.) ;-)

Tuesday, October 29, 2019

A flattering personal supposition

One likes to flatter oneself with the moment-to-moment supposition that one is not blind, deaf, dumb in one or more areas.
This allows one to get through any moment at hand, and to get symbolically on top of the next moment.

Thursday, October 17, 2019

The Cure "Catch"

Porcupine Tree "Glass Arm Shattering"

Wednesday, October 16, 2019

Triumvirat Spartacus "School of Instant Pain"

Heh. [That song is riding my brain, so much, these days.]

I can't seem to stop playing "Don't Fear the Reaper" by BOC on any or many of my devices, this first half work week.
Well, that's that, for now. That's enough, in itself. It will be something else, after a while.

Monday, October 14, 2019

Lucky-to-Have-Such-Problems

[excerpt:] DEAR FESTIVE: Welcome to Lucky-to-Have-Such-Problems Day.
Warm, conscientious people trying to get the details right so others feel loved and respected. I’m just going to sit with this for a bit.

https://www.mercurynews.com/2019/10/11/carolyn-hax-can-i-tv-cheat-on-my-wife/

Sunday, October 6, 2019

"Don't Fear the Reaper" with More Cowbell (SNL, Christopher Walken et al.)

Blue Oyster Cult "Don't Fear The Reaper" (+ lyrics)

Justice "D.A.N.C.E" with lyrics

Saturday, October 5, 2019

Steve Forbert "Wait"



Steve Forbert "Complications"


Steve Forbert - Thinkin'

Thursday, October 3, 2019

Something to believe in - how about these 5 words?

I find that I could really use something (good) to believe in.
(Perhaps to transport beyond Self? [I hope with lead weights off symbolic wings?])
So, I distilled this wish into 5 words:
"Tell me more about yourself."
[This same so-called logic, stretched, applies to corporations and to other entities, too - not just to individual animals.] ;-)

Saturday, September 28, 2019

Tom Waits "Step Right Up"

Swiss Army (die beste Armee vor der Welt)

U2 "White As Snow" (Official-Unofficial)


"White as Snow"
Where I grew up there were no hills at all
The land was flat, the highway straight and wide
My brother and I, we'd drive for hours, like we'd years instead of days
Our faces as pale as the dirty snow

Once I knew there was a love divine
Then came a time I thought it knew me not
Who can forgive forgiveness when forgiveness is not?
Only the land as white as snow

And the water it was icy
As it washed over me
And the moon shined above me

Now this dry ground it bears no fruit at all
Only poppies laugh under a crescent moon

The road refuses strangers
The land, the seeds we sow
Where might we find a land as white as snow?

As boys we would go hunting in the wood
To sleep, the night shun out the stars
Now the wolves are every passing stranger
Every face we cannot know
If only a heart could be as white as snow
If only a heart could be as white as snow

R.E.M. "World Leader Pretend" + lyrics




U2 "The Moment of Surrender" (Official-Unofficial)
 I tied myself with wire
To let the horses run free
Playing with the fire
'Til the fire played with me
The stone was semi-precious
We were barely conscious
Two souls too smart to be
In the realm of certainty
Even on our wedding day
We set ourselves on fire
Oh God, do not deny her
It's not if I believe in love
But if love believes in me
Oh, believe in me
At the moment of surrender
I folded to my knees
I did not notice the passers-by
And they did not notice me
I've been in every black hole
At the altar of the dark star
My body's now a begging bowl
That's begging to get back
Begging to get back to my heart
To the rhythm of my soul
To the rhythm of my unconsciousness
To the rhythm that yearns
To be released from control
I was punching in the numbers
At the ATM machine
I could see in the reflection
A face staring back at me
At the moment of surrender
Of vision over visibility
I did not notice the passers-by
And they did not notice me
I was speeding on the subway
Through the stations of the cross
Every eye looking every other way
Counting down 'til the pain will stop
At the moment of surrender
Of vision of over visibility
I did not notice the passers-by
And they did not notice me
Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh

["Here is another character, a war veteran. In my head he was part of some Somali adventure that went so wrong. We think about him as someone who has not been able to reintegrate or re-enter earth's atmosphere yet. He hasn't managed to return to himself. I believe insanity is the sane response of sane individuals to insane situations. In 'Moment Of Surrender,' he has dragged his wife into drugs and booze, he can't live with what he has done to her and so he breaks down beside an ATM machine and begs God to deliver them." - Bono, No Line On The Horizon 2009]

Tuesday, September 24, 2019

How do narcissists feel about the people who love them?

(Answered by Elinor Greenberg on quora.com)

Love and Narcissism
When they are being honest about the “L” word, most of my clients with Narcissistic Personality Disorder express some doubt that they actually are capable of what other people mean by “love.”
As Jeff said during his session: “I don’t think I really know what it means to love someone. There are people that I like being with more than others, there are women who I lust after, and there are people whose acceptance and admiration I crave. But love like in the movies, that’s not something I ever feel.”
So how do they feel about the people who love them?
This is a complicated question. Many of my married Narcissistic clients care about their mates and want the relationship to work. But…their lack of emotional empathy and their lack of object constancy limit the ways that they can experience and express positive feelings.
You might compare these Narcissistic clients to people who lack musical talent, but are trying to sing anyway.
Practicality vs. Love
Many of my Narcissistic clients have substituted practicality for love. Instead of asking themselves “Do I love this person who loves me?”, they ask themselves something much less romantic and more self-serving:
Do I need this person for anything?
  • Am I lonely or bored?
  • Would I like to have sex with this person?
  • What is their status relative to mine?
  • Are they a “catch”?
  • Can they help me to rise in the hierarchy that I care about?
  • Do they admire me?
  • Will other people admire me more if I am with them?
  • Are they wealthy and generous?
  • Is it time to get married and start a family of my own?
  • Should I get married so that I have someone to take care of me when I am old?
Hunting the Unicorn
Then there are some people with NPD who refuse to believe that it is their problem that they cannot deeply and consistently love someone who loves them. They convince themselves that if they do not love someone, it is because it is the other person’s fault.
They believe that there is a perfect person out there that they will find it easy to love. Each time they become infatuated with someone new, they idealize this person. Then as they inevitably discover the person’s flaws, they become disillusioned, and devalue, and discard them.
Punchline: If you love a Narcissist, you can save yourself some grief and disappointment by accepting that they are unlikely to be able to love you in the way you have always dreamed of being loved. You need to think a bit more practically and try and see this person accurately.
If they are hunting Unicorns, you are likely to get hurt when they discover you are a real person, not some mythical perfect beast. If they are simply seeing a relationship with you as the practical answer to some life issue, can you accept that? The one thing that you do need to understand is that just because you love them, this does not alter their limited capacity to love you back.

Ed Sheeran "Shape of You" (Official Video)

U2 "The Hands that Built America" lyrics

Oh my love
It's a long way we've come
From the freckled hills
To the steel and glass canyons
From the stony fields
To hanging steel from skies
From digging in our pockets
For a reason not to say goodbye
These are the hands that built America
Ah, ah, ah, America
Last saw your face
In a water colored sky
As sea birds argue a long goodbye
I took your kiss
On the spray of a new lined star
You gotta live in your dreams
Don't make them so hard
And these are the hands that built America
Ah, ah, ah, America
Of all of the promises
Is this one we can keep
Of all

U2 "Trip through your wires" lyrics

In the distance
She saw me coming 'round
I was calling out
I was calling out
Still shaking
Still in pain
You put me back together again
I was cold and you clothed me honey
I was down and you lifted me honey
Angel
Angel or devil
I was thirsty
And you wet my lips
You, I'm waiting for you
You, you set my desire
I trip through your wires
I was broken, bent out of shape
I was naked in the clothes you made
Lips were dry, throat like rust
You gave me shelter from the heat and the dust
No more water in the well
No more water, water
Angel
Angel or devil
I was thirsty
And you wet my lips
You, I'm waiting for you
You, you 

Can one discern and fix "rot" or "malicious code" in oneself? - asks Anna

Q: Does the narcissist know they are a narcissist?
(Answered by Mary Jane Underwood on quora.com.)
I believe I was a narcissist. I use the word was since I no longer feel the need to; manipulate others into getting what I want, blame others for my downfalls, feel the need to be special & believe the world revolves around me, & I realize that my actions do affect those around me. Four years ago on the other hand, it was the complete opposite & I prioritized my self image & what others thought of me. I managed to fabricate my reality (with a lot of help from social media) by only exhibiting the good parts about me & locking away all my vulnerabilities. There was no way I was going to show anyone who I really was because deep down I wanted to be sought as the opposite of how I felt- broken. When my husband (who was my boyfriend at the time) would shed light on my abusive behavior & explained how I could easily make him feel worthless, I denied any responsibility & faulted him for having low self esteem. This is commonly known as gas lighting. I was never professionally diagnosed with NPD, however these tendencies I described above hindered me from growing meaningful relationships, as I would only truly care for myself & was inconsiderate of the feelings towards others.
Ironically, I always felt there was something off with me & I’m not quite sure if it was due to the fact that my parents conducted this absurd “exorcist ceremony” (they believed I was the devil because I was a 6 year old who cried specifically at 6 AM & 6 PM) & possibly conditioned my 6 year old brain that I was innately evil. There wasn’t a time in high school where I wasn’t constantly trying to self diagnose myself on Google, “why do I keep changing myself and beliefs depending on the person?” “Why do I not like showing people who I really am?” Despite the answers I’d come across, I was reluctant to change & was in denial with all of them.
It wasn’t until I was kicked out by 3 different family members’ homes in a span of 3 months at the age of 19 that I started shifting perspective. Two of those times I was nearly homeless, but I was fortunate that my boyfriend of whom I knew for only two months (who is now my husband) at the time was more than happy to take me in. As I was living with my boyfriend, I kept going back to my family members’ & yearned for their acceptance for almost a year. My social life, school life, & romantic life came to a halt as I was determined to win their affection & ultimately, prove to myself that I was lovable. This was the lowest point in my life as I felt betrayed by the people whom I trusted & loved the most, & there I was trying to please each & every one of them, slowly withering away what little integrity I had left. No matter how much I compromised myself in order to please them & to show them how sorry I was, I was still the black sheep & I ended up feeling drained & more empty inside with each interaction. The anxiety advanced as I constantly ruminated over past interactions & what I should have said or done, & theorizing why my actions were never justified while other family members’ same actions were.
Eventually, I absorbed myself in school to distract myself from the pain (I initially indulged myself in cigarettes & alcohol, but the pain worsened). There was one assignment where I had such a peculiar interest in & devoted all my time into making it perfect. I was always a perfectionist, but this distinct paper felt near & dear to me & held more value that at the time, I didn’t understand. The assignment was about Mental Illnesses & I chose to write about Narcissistic Personality Disorders. My knowledge on NPD was entirely basic, but I was captivated by the topic & genuinely wanted to know more. In hindsight, my body was trying to tell me something that I was in denial to my whole life. As I accumulated pertinent information, I finally began to feel different. Things seemed clearer & I felt like I had my answer. However, I didn’t initially see myself as the perpetrator; I saw myself as the victim. My emotions were on a roller coaster as I felt liberated by the truth & simultaneously shattered by the idea that the love I was receiving by my family all along was conditional. Knowing that this disorder plagued my entire family, I sought to eradicate it by discreetly illuminating them of NPD. I wanted to be heard & I knew that if I presented it outright, I would be ridiculed & shrugged off. Luckily, the assignment required conducting interviews with professionals & peers in order to get a consensus of how knowledgeable society was with the topic. I decided to interview random classmates & every family member in hopes that my abusers would resonate with it & eventually change. Almost all were just as uneducated with NPD as I was. The two that were capable of going in depth with the questions however, seemed to be uncomfortable & I perceived it as progress. Unfortunately, my naivety led me back into their abusive ways & their constant gaslighting, crippled me even more. I isolated & was consumed with anger.
Delirious, I became physically & emotionally abusive to my husband (boyfriend at the time) who not only supported me throughout the turmoil, but provided more love than I ever received by my family. To justify my abuse, I faulted him for not trying hard enough & that we were in a rut due to his lack of ambition & poor decision making skills(we were living with my family at the time). Many of his clothes were torn, watches, & any materials he was attached to I tried to destroy. This continued for almost a year… & without even realizing it, I was the epitome of who I hated. Retrospectively, I hated myself & everything. I hated how my parents physically & emotionally abused me, how my family members made me question my sanity, & how I couldn’t trust or depend on any of them. I constantly played the victim card & in the process I was creating another victim.
The physical abuse ceased to continue after less than a year, but the emotional abuse remained & heightened. Nonetheless, my boyfriend proposed to me. I was reluctant to say yes at first, but not because I didn’t love him but because I was unsure if he deserved me. As cheesy as this may sound, my heart wanted to say yes, but my body & mind knew that I wasn’t ready to give him the love he deserved, especially with everything I did to him. Five months after getting married, my husband experienced migraines & flu-like symptoms, resulting him to call in sick constantly for a month. We were both concerned & while he blamed his 50 hour work week, I had a feeling it was me. “Babe, did you ever feel like this before you met me?” “No, don’t worry too much. It’s just my work schedule,” he would answer. Finally, his primary doctor recommended him to a psychiatrist (we were fortunate that his company paid for our health insurance at the time) & he still felt uneasy & anxious. During his session, he said the psychiatrist primarily focused on the abuse that I inflicted, but felt it was unnecessary because it was more than a year since the last incident & still, he blamed his work schedule for his symptoms (we now recognize that he was experiencing Stockholm syndrome). At that moment, I knew I was a narcissist considering that I treated him like how my family collectively treated me & there he was experiencing the same symptoms I similarly experienced in the past. I was exactly like my family.
I understand why its so commonplace for people to believe that narcissists are reluctant to change & can never acknowledge their shortcomings because I was too far up my own ass to comprehend what kind of monster I really was. There were a lot of humbling experiences, but I do give significant amount of credit to my husband who provided me that unconditional love I never had growing up (seemingly enough, the narcissists in my family lacked that as well) which I believed allowed me to admit that I was a narcissist. The unconditional love, taking responsibility for my own actions, & not playing the victim card has definitely helped me leer away from my narcissistic tendencies. I know I still have a LOT of work to do, but I promised myself I will never hurt anyone like how I used to by inflicting that same pain my family did & to always act with integrity.
*NOTE: This is my own personal experience. Not saying all narcissists can admit they are one, but it is possible. If dealing with a narcissist & hoping for some change, be vigilant. The process of helping a narcissist has left me & my husband more drained than anything .

Monday, September 16, 2019

Why can't narcissists remember anything?

[From quora.com, answered by Todd Skyler, Research regarding how NPD impacts legal issues.]

I think, at times, it may appear that narcissists do not remember anything.
I believe that once a narcissist is triggered, he or she may very well have an emotional memory blackout which is discussed in more detail below.
During the devaluation phase of a Narcissist/NT relationship, a narcissist may be triggered due to his or her perception that someone had made a real or imagined criticism.
If a significant other (SO) had made such an alleged criticism shortly after the SO and the narcissist embarked on a relationship, the narcissist may very well have ignored the slight.
The narcissist is apt to refrain from being hyper sensitive and/or hyper critical while the euphoria buzz of new found love is "coursing through the narcissist's veins."
However, as the euphoria high of new love begins to wane, the narcissist will be hyper-vigilantly looking for evidence of any potential…
••abandonment
••betrayals
••bad intentions afoot
The narcissist may inaccurately perceive an offense has been committed due to an SO's "suspicious behavior."
As the the relationship's new love euphoric buzz diminishes, the narcissist's alarm bells may sound if the SO..,,,
yawns
•appears tired
•appears aloof
•sighs
•appears sad
•perceives that a lie has been told
•any physical signal that could possibly telegraph “dissatisfaction” with the status quo
I believe that once a narcissist is triggered, he or she will prone to become emotionally dysregulated, and in turn, he or she may very well experience an emotional memory blackout.
The narcissist may have a memory blackout for additional reasons other than emotional dysregulation such as...
dissociative amnesia
•narrative reconstruction
•revisionist history
•possible selective amnesia
•lack of object constancy
•lack of whole object relations
pre devaluation enabler
placement (enabler may have vested interest in the “role maintenance”)
•potential shame from post fight emotional dysregulation commentary
The Narcissist's Warnings about having a Bad Memory could be a Ruse
There is one other potential issue that the SO must keep in mind. If the narcissist continually harps on the fact that he or she has a bad memory that could be a tip off that trickery and deceit may be around the corner.
For example, if the narcissist commits some kind of relationship transgression, and the SO tries to confront the narcissist regarding same, the narcissist will assert he or she is in no position to discuss the matter. The narcissist will be quick to point out that he had previously mentioned that his memory is shot.

Sunday, September 1, 2019

What are some steps to avoid raising a narcissist?

[answered by Danielle Hall on quora.com]

  1. Never tell your kid they are a burden to you. Example, you kids are like a ball and chain around my leg keeping me from focusing on my happiness, my success, etc.
  2. Never tell your kids that they are ungrateful to have all they have, yet neglect them emotionally. Example, narcissistic mother provides food shelter and clothing, but never spends time with her kids, doesn't know their hopes and dreams aspirations, just wants them to turn 18 so they can leave the house.
  3. Don't use your kids for emotional support. Don’t vent your problems to them. Example, narcissistic mom thinks her kids should support her by helping her achieve her dreams. They are the cheerleaders in her life, they are there to spur her on.
  4. Don't displace anger and frustration on kids. Example, narcissistic mom comes home to find apartment has been broken into and everything stolen. In blind rage she grabs her ten year old by the hair and starts pounding her head against the refrigerator door.
  5. Don't shit on your kids dreams. Example, daughter tells narcissistic mother she is thinking if becoming a lawyer. Mother responds, I can't see you as a lawyer.
  6. Don't make love and affection conditional. I love you when you succeed and make me proud, but I'm ashamed of you when you fail. This creates a person who is terrified to fail, to be a loser, and the kid may become a narcissist to protect self from insecurities.
  7. Don't pour all of your fears and negativity into your kids heads. Example, mother is terrified of living and being stuck in poverty, instills that fear in her child, which later creates a self-fulfilling prophecy. The child had a life long dread of poverty and finds her worst fears come to life in adulthood--joblessness, homelessnes, drug addictions, alcoholism.
  8. Don't shame and guilt-trip. Don’t tell kid you are a loser, just like your father. Don’t say why can't you be a good boy, good girl like so-and-so?Why can't you be pretty, smart, hard- working like, so-and-so? You want a kid that never feels like they're good enough, this is the way to do it.
  9. Don't break promises to your kids. Example, Narcissistic mom tells kids they will be taken to the beach that day but never comes home. Kids grow up with trust issues, and feel its normal for people to disregard them.
  10. Don't gaslight your kids. Mother tells 17 year old daughter she is kicking her out of the house the day she turns 18. Kid drops out of school to take a factory job to support herself. Years later mother shames daughter by asking why she didn't go to college and make something of herself. Daughter reminds her she kicked her out of the house. Mother gaslights: I did no such thing!
If you neglect, shame, project, gaslight, withhold affection, discourage and blame, as listed above, you will get:
A) a child with low self esteem too afraid to even have dreams, who will be unable to love themselves, and be victims of other controlling, manipulative, predatory people later in life. In short, a dog shit covered doormat.
B) a child who is terrified to fail, who is afraid, that if they are poor, fat, ugly they will be judged and scorned. They will cover up all the anxiety and fears they had growing up under a narcissistic parent by creating false armour, because they are terrified to ever feel that out of control again. As an ego defense, they will become over-controlling assholes who are arrogant, entitled, and manipulative. But also they will focus so much on their own pain and needs that they won't have any empathy for anyone else. They won't ever love, because they learned that love was conditional and rejection too painful. They will lash out because they are full of rage at their narcissistic parent, and by extension, the world. They will demean and degrade because other people's success diminishes their own.
And thus another narcissistic asshole has been created to shatter other people's lives.
Thanks, narc mom.
Hush now baby, baby, don't you cry.
Mamma's gonna make all of your nightmares come true.
Mamma's gonna put all of her fears into you.
Mamma's gonna keep you right here under her wing,
She won't let you fly but she might let you sing.
Mamma's gonna keep baby cosy and warm.
Oooh babe
Mother, Pink Floyd.

Monday, August 12, 2019

The forgotten or hidden part about nagging

When someone nags, what's also true is that this person has asked multiple times for resolution in an area - without receiving it.

Tuesday, August 6, 2019

Scheduled for completion on August 12

Payment will be made.
Thank you for the privilege of serving you and your family.
Thank you for kicking me out* of your family.
*In all things, give thanks.

Monday, August 5, 2019

Auvoirdupois

I have lost weight.
I have travelled down, through 2 (?) clothes sizes,  to ... (?)
I haven't bought any new clothes lately, so I am not sure what size I currently am.
It's interesting to see my smallest clothes swimming on me, now - and I must cinch fabric tight, around my waist - or else.
(Another time this happened, I was nursing a rapidly growing baby, and the weight just seemed to melt off me. At that time, various people volunteered that I could have some of Their excess weight, to carry for them, since I seemed to have less of my own to carry around.)

Sunday, July 28, 2019

Leo Tolstoy on Kindness and the Measure of Love

[copied from brainpickings.org, by Maria Popova]

“Nothing can make our life, or the lives of other people, more beautiful than perpetual kindness.”

“Practice kindness all day to everybody and you will realize you’re already in heaven now,” Jack Kerouac wrote in a beautiful letter to his first wife and lifelong friend. Somehow, despite our sincerest intentions, we repeatedly fall short of this earthly divinity, so readily available yet so easily elusive. And yet in our culture, it has been aptly observed, “we are never as kind as we want to be, but nothing outrages us more than people being unkind to us.” In his stirring Syracuse commencement address, George Saunders confessed with unsentimental ruefulness: “What I regret most in my life are failures of kindness.” I doubt any decent person, upon candid reflection, would rank any other species of regret higher. To be human is to leap toward our highest moral potentialities, only to trip over the foibled actualities of our reflexive patterns. To be a good human is to keep leaping anyway. 

In the middle of his fifty-fifth year, Leo Tolstoy (September 9, 1828–November 20, 1910) set out to construct a reliable springboard for these moral leaps by compiling “a wise thought for every day of the year, from the greatest philosophers of all times and all people,” whose wisdom “gives one great inner force, calmness, and happiness” — thinkers and spiritual leaders who have shed light on what is most important in living a rewarding and meaningful life. Such a book, Tolstoy envisioned, would tell a person “about the Good Way of Life.” He spent the next seventeen years on the project.

In 1902, by then seriously ill and facing his own mortality, Tolstoy finally completed the manuscript under the working title A Wise Thought for Every Day. It was published two years later, in Russian, but it took nearly a century for the first English translation, by Peter Sekirin, to appear: A Calendar of Wisdom: Daily Thoughts to Nourish the Soul, Written and Selected from the World’s Sacred Texts (public library). For each day of the year, Tolstoy had selected several quotes by great thinkers around a particular theme, then contributed his own thoughts on the subject, with kindness as the pillar of the book’s moral sensibility.

Perhaps prompted by the creaturely severity and the clenching of heart induced by winter’s coldest, darkest days, or perhaps by the renewed resolve for moral betterment with which we face each new year, he writes in the entry for January 7:

The kinder and the more thoughtful a person is, the more kindness he can find in other people.

Kindness enriches our life; with kindness mysterious things become clear, difficult things become easy, and dull things become cheerful.

At the end of the month, in a sentiment Carl Sagan would come to echo in his lovely invitation to meet ignorance with kindness, Tolstoy writes:

You should respond with kindness toward evil done to you, and you will destroy in an evil person that pleasure which he derives from evil.

In the entry for February 3, he revisits the subject:

Kindness is for your soul as health is for your body: you do not notice it when you have it.

After copying out two kindness-related quotations from Jeremy Bentham (“A person becomes happy to the same extent to which he or she gives happiness to other people.”) and John Ruskin (“The will of God for us is to live in happiness and to take an interest in the lives of others.”), Tolstoy adds:

Love is real only when a person can sacrifice himself for another person. Only when a person forgets himself for the sake of another, and lives for another creature, only this kind of love can be called true love, and only in this love do we see the blessing and reward of life. This is the foundation of the world.

Nothing can make our life, or the lives of other people, more beautiful than perpetual kindness.





Friday, July 26, 2019

I know how much you care about me, and trust me

You have done me the discourtesy and dishonesty of leaving my jointly-held home inaccessible to me - at a time I could really make use of its fine, first-world comforts.

"Not even the undying love and loyalty of a tender, loving woman could cause him to self-reflect, and losing that love has no impact, either." - seen online

Tuesday, July 9, 2019

Stevie Wonder "As" (2008)

2:47-3:03: I find these spoken words highly relevant to getting though life respectfully, graciously, beautifully - while in fellowship with others - not true?

[I share this clip every year, usually around late July. I can't see any reason why Today shouldn't be that day - eh?]

Saturday, July 6, 2019

Midnight Oil "One Country"

Who'd like to change the world, who wants to shoot the curl.
Who gets to work for bread, who wants to get ahead
Who hands out equal rights, who starts and ends that fight
And not rant and rave, or end up a slave
Who can make hard won gains, fall like the summer rain
Now every man must be, what his life can be
So don't call me the tune - I will walk away
Who wants to please everyone, who says it all can be done
Still sit up on that fence, no one I've heard of yet
Don't call me baby, don't talk in maybes
Don't talk like has-beans, sing it like it should be
Who laughs at the nagging doubt, lying on a neon shroud [running around]
Just gotta touch someone, hey, I want to be [someone?]
So don't call me the tune - I will walk away
Don't call me the tune - I will walk away
Don't call me the tune - I will walk away
(One Country) Who wants to sit around, turn it up turn it down
Only a man can be, what his life can be
One vision, one people, one landmass
We are defenseless, we have a lifeline
One ocean, one policy, seabed lies
One passion, one movement, one instant
One difference, one lifetime, one understanding
(One country)
Transgression, redemption, one island blue
Our place (magic?), one firmament
One element, one moment, one fusion
Yes, and: one time.

Friday, July 5, 2019

Emotional Toolbox

I, Anna (for I do have a name, and a real entity), am rereading Elinor Greenberg’s book, “Borderline, Narcissistic and Schizoid Adaptations” and I have arrived at page 61, which suggests the idea of an emotional toolbox.
I have heard of this idea before - that of a helpful toolbox that is there for the person to make use of, to improve their experience of a moment.
I don’t know how much I have integrated and developed this concept, YET, for myself and those who interface with me. (Not much, I have to assume - as I don’t seem to be receiving the benefits from having turned to something useful that works.)
But: I can nevertheless output as is, or reformulate, what I take in from this book - and the useful works of others. To start with. I can grasp onto, derive meaning and value from, integrate and synthesize helpful ideas and approaches, which can help me travel from despair to greater competency.
So: right now, I will type out some perspective-enhancing comments that immediately resonate. Constructing a note card is suggested for the idea of a “real” object going into an actual, physical toolbox that a person can turn to for help - a note card with a helpful idea on it, to look at and hold.
I laughed heartily at the mentions of these two particular possibly helpful note cards: “You are taking this too seriously. This is not a cure for cancer.” and “Stop being so passive. You can complain or leave. This is not Auschwitz.”
d'Oh wow - ha ha ha ha ha! Some of my issues - well captured! I feel somewhat of a greater sense of perspective (mastery of scary situation?) already! Yay yay yay, and oyez oyez! :-) Coolio. I’m not in concentration camp, the outcome of the world is not hinging solely on my good output, and I am actually at least somewhat free to self-activate? What a freeing AND scary cognition, all in one. Heh. Let's see what comes next, in this helpful book that I am hoping can influence and guide some of my next phases of personal growth and recovery.

Monday, July 1, 2019

I can become able to do this thing


I can become able to be a better person - yes?
Do I want this - for Self and family, friends, contacts?
Will I become progressively able to do this - with a commitment, followed by real effort, to taking/making this so-called righteous path?
[And now I turn this around and ask YOU the same questions - for: that last bit was written by self, for self and others. ;-) ]

Monday, June 24, 2019

Nine Inch Nails "Down In It"


Kinda like a cloud, I was up, way up in the sky
And I was feeling some feelings you wouldn't believe
Sometimes I don't believe them myself
And I decided I was never coming down
Just then a tiny little dot caught my eye
It was just about too small to see
But I watched it way too long
That dot was pulling me down
I was up above it
I was up above it
I was up above it
I was up above it
Now I'm down in it
Shut up
So what what does it matter now
I was swimming in the hate now I crawl on the ground
And everything I never liked about you
Is kind of seeping into me
I try to laugh about it now but isn't it funny how everything works out
I guess the jokes on me, she said
I was up above it
I was up above it
I was up above it
I was up above it
I used to be so big and strong
I used to know my right from wrong
I used to never be afraid
I used to be somebody
I used to have something inside
Now just this hole it's open wide
Used to want it all
I used to be somebody
I'll cross my heart and hope to die
But the needle's already in my eye
And all the world's weight is on my back and I don't even know why.
And what I used to think was me is just a fading memory
I looked him right in the eye and said goodbye
I was up above it
I was up above it
I was up above it
I was up above it
Now I'm down in it
I was up above it
I was up above it
Now I'm down in it
Rain rain go away
Come again some other day
Rain rain go away
Come again some other day
Rain rain go away
Come again some other day
Rain rain go away
Come again some other day
I was up above it
I was up above it
I was up above it
I was up above it
Now I'm down in it

the Future of Applied Neuroscience in Education


to Behold, if one chooses that: an article that is really waking up my brain, today.
-> A call to action?

"The Future of Applied Neuroscience in Education: Transitioning from Leading with the Left to Leading with the Right"

by Thedy Veliz, June 24, 2019

Education is not about learning to make a living, but rather about learning to live a life. In neuroscience terms this means that we need to transition from the left-brain qualities of rigidity and control to the right-brain qualities of flexibility and attending to the uniqueness of each individual student. Here are three ways in which this can be accomplished:

From knowing about the brain (left brain) to operationalizing such knowledge through the way we manage our relationship as a caregiver (e.g., teacher, counselor, administrator, sports coach) with a student.

It does not help a student for caregivers to be able to know about the brain if “when the rubber meets the road” the information is not operationalized through “right-brain-to-right-brain” (Schore, 2002, p. 7) communications within a “two-person psychology” (Schore, 2012, p. 436). Thus, we are at a point where caregivers need the tools to transition from “knowing” about the brain to “being” a different type of person based on this information. This requires an embodied way of attending (McGilchrist, 2019) that shields oneself from the societal dynamics that might be working against us being able to do just that (Courtwright, 2019).

From expecting the child to fit “the road” to helping the child create his own “unique road”.

Traditional education appears to not fit the needs of children that are deemed highly reactive (15-20% of the population) (Boyce, 2019); and who are smarter, more creative, and sensitive. These children require a different learning style that requires hands on applications (e.g., design learning), working with the hands for an adequate balance of “here and now” neurochemicals and dopamine (Lieberman and Long, 2018), and going at the child’s own individual pace of knowledge acquisition reflective of the new field of educational genomics (Gaysina, 2016) – the equivalent of individualized medicine. Pioneers in this area include Boston College’s professor of Education Peter Gray (Gray, 2015) author of Free to Learn; and Scott Barry Kaufman, author of Ungifted: Intelligence Redefined. These highly reactive children due to their sensitivity are highly creative, and we know from a creativity resident study conducted at The University of California Berkeley in the 1960s by Frank X. Barron that “the average creative writer was in the top 15% of the general population on all measures of psychopathology”, but also “scored extremely high on all measures of psychological health (Kaufman, 2015, p. xxiii).

From expecting children to self-regulate to accepting that many may need to be co-regulated by consistent and reliable caregivers as part of their educational experience.

In 2010, Jelena Obradovic from Stanford’s Graduate School of Education and her colleagues published a study suggesting that how teachers engage with and relate to classroom dynamics influences the effect of social hierarchy on social inequality (e.g., health disparities) (Obradovic et al., 2010). Based on an observational study of 29 kindergarten classrooms in the San Francisco Bay Area, a social hierarchy was developed for each classroom based on social dominance resulting on the more highly reactive (i.e., orchid) children being placed at the bottom of the hierarchy.

The study found a correlation between the place on the hierarchy and depression-like symptoms (e.g., lower grades, more depression, more problems paying attention, lower positive peer relations). However, this relationship did not exist in all classrooms. Children at the bottom of the hierarchy only showed measures of lower outcomes if teachers ignored and/or fostered social dominant relationships. In classrooms in which teachers used more child-centered egalitarian practices (a measure developed at Stanford), the students’ place in the hierarchy did not have an effect on their socioemotional, behavioral, and academic health.

In other words, the association between social position and health starts to disappear as the classroom becomes more egalitarian through the leadership of the teacher. What this study is suggesting is that people (in order to have a fair chance towards personal and professional development) are not necessarily bound by their social standing so long as their emotional wellness is attended to. Thus, we might not be able to quickly upgrade people’s social standing, but by attending to their unique sensitivities at a very early age we might be able to provide them with a chance towards optimal development.

In his recently published book, The Orchid and the Dandelion, Thomas Boyce states that “Orchids subjected to the exigencies of steep competition for dominance positions may also be substantially more jeopardized and undone by the difficulties that accompany such competition. Thus orchids relegated to low-ranking roles, where marginalization and social isolation prevail, may more often experience subjugation, stress, and symptoms of despair, leading to psychological and physical duress. On the other hand, orchids achieving high social ranks may be more visibly rewarded with the strong mental health and developmental achievements that such ranks engender” (Boyce, 2019, p. 148).

Adapted from IAAN’s 1st International Conference of Applied Neuroscience Round Table Discussion: Applied Neuroscience in clinical practice and education. What difference does it make? on May 23, 2019, Sydney, Australia.

References:

Obradović, J., Bush, N. R., Stamperdahl, J., Adler, N. E., & Boyce, W. T. (2010). Biological sensitivity to context: The interactive effects of stress reactivity and family adversity on socioemotional behavior and school readiness. Child Development, 81(1), 270-289.

Schore, A. N. (2002). Advances in neuropsychoanalysis, attachment theory, and trauma research: Implications for self psychology. Psychoanalytic Inquiry, 22(3), 433-484.

Schore, A. N. (2012). The Science of the Art of Psychotherapy (Norton Series on Interpersonal Neurobiology). New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company.

Boyce, W. T. (2019). The orchid and the dandelion: Why some children struggle and how all can thrive. New York, NY: Alfred A. Knopf.

McGilchrist, I. (2019). Ways of attending: How our divided brain constructs the world. London, England: Routledge.

Lieberman, D. Z., & Long, M. E. (2018). The Molecule of More: How a single chemical in your brain drives love, sex, and creativity – and will determine the fate of the human race. Dallas, TX: BenBella Books, Inc.

Gaysina, D. (2016). Educational genomics: Tailoring teaching to our individual DNA. Retrieved from: https://geneticliteracyproject.org/2016/11/17/educational-genomics-tailoring-teaching-individual-dna/

Gray, P. (2015). Free to Learn: Why Unleashing the Instinct to Play Will Make Our Children Happier, More Self-Reliant, and Better Students for Life. New York, NY: Basic Books.

Kaufman, S. B. (2013). Ungifted: Intelligence redefined. New York, NY: Basic Books. Courtwright, D. T. (2019). The age of addiction: How bad habits become big business. Cambridge, MA: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.

Thedy Veliz, MBA, MA is a Relational & Developmental Neuro-Therapeutic Consulting CoachSM, a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist (LMFT), and Certified Applied Clinical Neuroscience Professional. He is a resident expert and regular contributor for The Science of Psychotherapy, and has a private practice in Los Gatos, California, USA. He can be reached at people-systems.net.

https://www.thescienceofpsychotherapy.com/the-future-of-applied-neuroscience-in-education/?fbclid=IwAR1AEbQjRVa7_Ana3E8TbM1tEajT_CdByfU-_6CArYUZNL8eF2TVvlnC1uA

Sunday, June 16, 2019

Personality disorders common to children of narcissistic parents

What personality disorders are common in children of narcissistic parents? [Answered by Elinor Greenberg.]

The children of Narcissistic parents who develop personality disorders (and not all do) generally become either Narcissistic or Schizoid. A few develop Borderline Personality Disorder. A lot depends on how abusive the parents are and whether they share their Narcissistic supplies with their children or only devalue and abuse them.

In my clinical experience of 40 + years, here are the most common pairings of Narcissistic parents and the children their style of parenting produces. I will go from least damaging to most damaging.

High Functioning Achievement Oriented Narcissistic Parents

Family Motto: We are special.

These Narcissistic parents are focused on everyone in the family looking good and becoming high achievers. Although they have little empathy and insist that their children conform to their expectations, they will praise their children whenever they do well in school, win awards, or otherwise fulfill their assigned role in the family.

Many children from these families grow up to be high functioning Narcissists themselves and the family pattern gets perpetuated.

Exhibitionist Narcissist Parents

Family Motto: I am special, you are not.

In this scenario one or both parents are Exhibitionisis Narcissists who insist that their children (and everyone else) continually admire and respect them. They want to be the center of attention in every situation.

The children’s role is to uncritically admire and obey them and treat them as Gods. Their every whim is law and their opinions are sacred. When the children do not go along with this program, they are devalued. They get rewarded with gifts, privileges, and attention when they do exactly as the parents say. Any individual initiative on the part of the children that is perceived as threatening the parents’ leadership is likely to be ruthlessly squashed. In essence the children are expected to believe and do whatever the parents tell them to. Anything else is seen as a rebellion.

Children from these homes grow up to have lower self esteem than those from the “High Functioning Achievement Oriented Narcissists’” homes. They have been devalued more frequently and almost never allowed to be the center of admiring attention at home.

As adults, they become wounded Narcissists who either seek to prove their parents wrong by focusing on getting the status that they were denied access to at home, or else they accept their role as perpetually second class. Even when they manage to achieve, their internal doubts about their own self worth will continually create problems for them unless they get a lot of psychotherapy.

Closet (Covert) Narcissist Parents

Family Motto: You are special, your siblings are not.

These Narcissistic parents are often too insecure about their own self-worth to openly seek the admiration that they crave. If they happen to have a talented child, they are likely to use the child to get Narcissistic supplies for themselves.

The Golden Child: This “Golden Child” will be groomed by the parents to be the type of Exhibitionist Narcissist the parents always admired, but never dared emulate themselves. This child is usually uncritically praised by the parents for any and all achievements.

In some cases these children do quite well in life as they are prepared to see themselves as special and they are not conflicted about being in the spotlight.

In other cases, they are disappointed when they realize that there are other equally talented people in the world and they are no longer automatically acknowledged as “best.”

The Siblings: If the “Golden Child” has less obviously talented siblings, they are likely to grow up without getting very much attention from their parents. This lack of Narcissistic supplies is likely to leave them feeling ignored, devalued, and second-rate.

The “Golden Child” may experience the parents as extremely intrusive and blame them for any later disillusionment (that he or she is not really so unique and special). As adults, they may be perpetually dissatisfied by their level of achievement because they never again feel the degree of specialness that their parents convinced them was their birthright.

In some cases, these children when they reach adulthood move far away from their families because they want to try to live their own lives without the pressure to fulfill their parents’ dreams.

Exhibitionist Devaluing Narcissist Parents

Family Motto: You will not get any help from us until you are good enough, and you will never be good enough.

These parents insist on being admired and give their offspring conflicting signals. They hold out the possibility of approval and respect as a way to control their children. They make many promises that they never keep.

According to them, it is always the children’s own fault that they were disappointed in the end. If only the children were smarter or better behaved, of course they would have gotten (a, b, or c ... fill in the blank).

Many of these children believe their parents’ version of the story and feel tortured by their inability to live up to their parents’ expectations. Self-esteem is always just out of reach.

When the constant devaluation and disappointment is combined with indifference, intrusiveness, and actual physical neglect, many of these children make a Schizoid adaptation.

The Schizoid Child: At an early age they realize that they are on their own and will have to take care of themselves. They cannot count on their parents for anything.

Independent: Those who have the intelligence and resilience, become fiercely independent. They comfort themselves with the idea that once they are old enough to leave home, they will get the real life that they long for and dream about. In reality, once grown, they find out that their disturbing childhood left them mistrustful and fearful around other people and they may find it difficult to make meaningful connections.

Mistreated Bodies: They also tend to treat their bodies the way their parents treated them: as things without feelings that are there simply to be useful. This generally translates into them becoming dissociated from their feelings and bodily sensations and often working till they are literally exhausted and ill.

Malignant or Toxic Narcissist Parents

Family Motto: You live to serve me.

These Narcissistic parents treat their children as slaves. The children have no rights and get no respect. Their parents treat them as inhuman tools without feelings who exist mainly to serve the parents’ needs. These parents often have a sadistic streak and may actively abuse their children. Sometimes the abuse takes physical form and the children are regularly beaten for disobedience of any kind.

The Rebel Son: One young man reported that his family had a particularly ritualized way of physically abusing him. When he displeased his Narcissistic mother during the day, she would tell his step father when he came home from work that the boy needed to be punished. After dinner, the boy would have to choose the item with which he would be beaten from a wall of implements: various sized sticks and short whips.

This boy’s spirit was never broken. He did not grow up to have a Narcissistic or a Schizoid adaptation. Instead he became extremely rebellious and resisted any and all forms of authority. His family was upper class and extremely status conscious and pretentious. One of his forms of rebellion and revenge consisted of him becoming a petty criminal and pretending to be working class. He saw this as the ultimate rejection of his family and as a perpetual source of embarrassment for them.

The Broken Son: Another young man never managed to fully leave his abusive family. Despite being quite good-looking, he saw himself as fat, unattractive, and unappealing to women. He had body-dysmorphic disorder and extremely low self-esteem from being continually told that he was ugly and useless.

He was what I think of as a “failed Narcissist.” He had internalized his family’s Narcissistic values, but was convinced that he was too inferior to ever achieve anything significant. Instead he focused his insecurities on his appearance. He comforted himself with the fantasy that he would date someday and get a better job when he was thinner and had worked out at the gym enough to get a better physique.

The Schizoid Child: Some children internalize being treated as a slave without feelings as a model of all relationships. They see most forms of contact with other people as potentially dangerous. In their experience, there are only two possible relationship roles: either you are the “Master” and call all the shots or you are the “Slave” and have to do whatever the Master wants in order to keep the relationship. No negotiation is possible. Relationships are a take it or leave it proposition. The only alternative is to isolate yourself completely.

Punchline: There are many different ways to be a Narcissistic family and some are much harder on children. Children tend to adapt to the family that they find themselves in and adopt that family's value system. This makes it likely that the children will grow up with a Narcissistic disorder of some kind or, at the very least, many Narcissistic traits. In more abusive and neglectful Narcissistic families, many children make a Schizoid adaptation to survive.

Elinor Greenberg, PhD, CGP, In private practice in NYC and the author of the book: "Borderline, Narcissistic, and Schizoid Adaptations: The Pursuit of Love, Admiration, and Safety."

www.elinorgreenberg.com

[https://www.quora.com/What-personality-disorders-are-common-in-children-of-narcissistic-parents/answer/Elinor-Greenberg?ch=10&share=f6221e53&srid=BipZ]

Friday, May 31, 2019

How to improve relations with self-absorbed

[https://www.mercurynews.com/2019/05/31/how-do-i-improve-relations-with-my-self-absorbed-mom] DEAR CAROLYN: I need guidance on how to improve relations with my mother. While she is loving with me and my siblings, she tends to be extremely self-absorbed and unaware during conversation. She has the uncanny ability to flip even the most mundane conversation into something about her; she will interrupt, speak over, and redirect conversation in her favor. She almost never asks questions about me, my work, life, or partner — much less about his life. When I do open up to her about events in my life, she is uninterested and distracted, only to (again) turn the conversation toward her. Not only is this frustrating, but it hurts. I have previously confronted her about feeling invalidated, and it resulted with her in tears and acting victimized. Carolyn, how can I help my mother actually listen and understand how I am feeling? I love and respect my mother and want nothing more than to have a better relationship with her. Unintentionally Distant Daughter DEAR DISTANT: You can’t build a better relationship on hopes that she’ll become someone else. Your mother is self-absorbed, unaware, uninterested, incurious, distracted; doesn’t listen, interrupts, talks over, turns all conversations back to herself; and, the killer of all rational hopes, she is defensive. Defensiveness says, “I am not psychologically ready or willing to see myself as the person at fault and who therefore needs to change.” In casting herself as the victim, refusing to examine either your feelings about her or your requests of her, your mother shows a clear lack of interest in changing. You also can’t build a better relationship upon an emotional misconception — in this case, taking personally what isn’t personal. I do understand and gladly validate your frustration with her. Talking to your mom sounds deeply unsatisfying. But when you say this “hurts,” that also says you take your mother’s limited attention personally, as a negative assessment of your worthiness of her full attention. Yet I don’t see any evidence to support this interpretation. If she is distracted and self-centered not just with you, but with everyone in general — which is not only the impression your letter gives, but also how self-absorption tends to work — then how can it reflect how she feels about you specifically? As you’ve described them, the behaviors reflect only on her. Is she, in fact, as badly disengaged from your siblings as she is from you? Does she turn conversations with everyone back to herself? If her failure to engage is reserved just for you, then being hurt would make sense. Of course. Acutely. Either way, though, if you think of those as two paths on a flow chart — 1. “She does this to everybody”; 2. “She does this only to me” — then they both still end up pointing to the same square: Accept her limitations. Showing an interest in your life/others’ lives is not how your mother shows love. Period. You do say she’s “loving with me and my siblings” — which says she has some other way of showing she cares about you. To have a better relationship with your mom, I suggest you identify exactly which of her actions lead you to describe her that way and focus on those. Meet her there, at that one clear, emotional place where you know she is able to be. Email Carolyn at tellme@washpost.com, follow her on Facebook at www.facebook.com/carolyn.hax or chat with her online at noon Eastern time each Friday at www.washingtonpost.com.

Friday, April 19, 2019

Housing needed

I need immediate housing. Please contact if you think you can help.

Linkin Park "Valentine's Day" + lyrics

"I used to be my own protection, but not now - 'cause my PERP has lost direction - Somehow."

Hutchinson River Parkway U2 "Breathe"


16th of June, 9:05, doorbell rings, man at the door says
"if I want to stay alive a bit longer,
there's 3 things I need you to know: 3!"
Coming from a long line of travelling sales people on my mother's side
I wasn't gonna buy just anyone's cockatoo.
So why would I invite a complete stranger into my home? - Would you?
These days are better than that
These days are better than that
Every day I die again and again I'm reborn
Every day I have to find the courage
To walk out into the street
With arms out, got a love you can't defeat
Neither down or out
There's nothing you have that I need,
I can breathe, breathe now
16th of June, Chinese stocks are going up
And I'm coming down with some Malaysian virus
Ju Ju man, Ju Ju man
Doc says you're fine or dying
Please: 9:09, St John divine on the line, my pulse is fine,
but I'm running down the road like loose electricity,
while the band in my head plays a striptease.
The roar that lies, on the other side of silence,
The forest fire that is fear so deny it
Walk out into the street,
Sing your heart out
The people we meet
will not be drowned out
There's nothing you have that I need
I can breathe, breathe now
We are people born of sound
the songs are in our eyes
Born to wear them like a crown, oh
Walk out into the sunburst street
Sing your heart out
Sing my heart out
I found grace inside the sound
I found grace, it's all I found.
And I can breathe, breathe now.