Changing Course: Healing from Loss, Abandonment, and Fear
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About this ebook
Claudia Black
Claudia Black, PhD, is the clinical architect of and actively involved in the Claudia Black Young Adult Center at The Meadows. She works with the executive director and clinical director and their team assessing and enhancing the quality of the program. She is frequently on site speaking with clients and family members. She serves as a Senior Fellow and has been a clinical consultant at The Meadows Treatment Center in Arizona since 1998. Claudia Black’s seminal work with children impacted by substance abuse in the late 1970s created the foundation for the “adult child” movement. Today Claudia is a renowned author and trainer internationally recognized for her pioneering and contemporary work with family systems and addictive disorders. She sits on the Advisory Board for the National Association of Children of Addiction, and the Advisory Committee for Camp Mariposa, The Eluna Foundation’s national addiction prevention and mentoring program. Her work and her passion has been ageless and offers a foundation for those impacted by addiction to recover, and gives our professional field a library of both depth and breadth. Dr. Black is the author of It Will Never Happen to Me, Changing Course, and her most recent book, Unspoken Legacy. She has produced several audio CDs and over twenty DVDs. All of Dr. Black's materials are available through Central Recovery Press on her website www.claudiablack.com.
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Changing Course - Claudia Black
Chapter One
Changing Course
Turning Points to Recovery
I don’t know when my parents began their war against each other, but I do know the only prisoners they took were their children. When we needed to escape, we developed a ritual—we found a silent soothing world where there was no pain, a world without mothers and fathers. But that was a long time ago, before I chose not to have a memory.
—Pat Conroy
Forgiving is not forgetting. It is remembering and letting go.
—Claudia Black
I’ve spent my whole life trying to take the pain out of everyone else’s life! The whole time, the issue was my pain, not theirs. Today I don’t run scared. I know my fear, my hurt, my anger. I also know my joy. Today I don’t live in shame.
—Lynn
Fear and loneliness were all I ever knew—I think I came into this world scared. But now, at forty-two, it’s different. I have used most things—gambling, women, sex, alcohol—to medicate my fears and not feel so lonely. Today I no longer use people, activities, and substances to medicate or keep me separated from my feelings. I’ve slowed down to be able to meet myself. And I realize I am okay. I am more than okay! I actually look forward to each day.
—Joe
I wanted so badly to be loved, but for years all I felt was ignored and unwanted. I went to every length possible to make people love me, only to be repeatedly ignored and unwanted. Then, slowly, with the understanding of what had happened in my life and with the freedom to talk about it, things started to turn around. I learned to love myself. What a revelation!
—Sherie
These people endured decades of pain and then discovered a different way of being in this world, a different way of living their lives. Why did they have pain? How did it go away? What was their turning point? How did they change the course of their lives? These are some of the questions I will try to answer here.
When we grow up with fear and shame we become adults who live with fear and shame. Accompanying these intense feelings is a pervasive, chronic sense of loss, ranging anywhere from serious to profound. The sensation of this loss goes by various names: unhappiness, hopelessness, depression, emptiness, insecurity, anxiety, boredom. Whatever the words we use, these wounds have troubled our very spirit. We need to let go of the fear and shame. We need to change our course by putting the cause of our pain in its proper perspective.
What you might be feeling depends on what you felt when the original wounding began, compounded by your life experiences from that time on. It will be difficult to look back at those troubling times, but this is where your recovery begins.
For some of us, life in our early years was organized around our mother’s drinking and the subsequent embarrassment and shame. Or our brother’s death and the fear, stigma, and prevailing sadness we endured. Or our father’s rigid religious fervor and the shame, confusion, guilt, and anger we felt. Or our parents’ outright abandonment of their parenting roles and the ensuing abandonment of us, their children. Or our physical or sexual abuse by someone who was supposed to love us.
Early on, we were deprived of the very conditions necessary for us to thrive as children. We lost the opportunity to be ourselves. We lived as characters in someone else’s drama, a story of his or her war against pain. The family spotlight was nearly always on that other person, and we were merely bit players, lesser lights
whose characters were never developed in the family script. The lines we were supposed to speak and our range of emotions were limited so that we didn’t conflict with the main character who, in essence, stole the show.
Many of us accept the idea of chronic loss, but we can’t put our finger on any specific event that was the cause of that loss. Perhaps there was no identifiable abuse, addiction, or other blatant dysfunction in our lives. In our case, the loss was growing in the shadow of our parents’ pain. Factoring in what we know now, we would probably see that our parents had been character actors in someone else’s play. In many ways, the other play is still going on off-stage in the wings of our lives. As a result, what happened in our families was far less obvious, but we were affected nonetheless.
Regardless of how subtle or blatant the pain was in a family, we learned to push our concerns aside and stuff our feelings away.
Living by the Rules
Don’t Talk, Don’t Trust, Don’t Feel
I have this great job. I travel. I’m self-sufficient. Maybe I don’t need to be able to get closer to people.
I’m fifty-two years old. Why should I be angry with my dad for being a victim of his era? All dads hit their kids once in a while. So my dad made bruises! My life isn’t so bad.
My mother created a lot of pain in my life, being so critical and acting like a jealous girlfriend, but she was also all I had. It could have been worse.
There are always other people who have had greater difficulty, more pain in their lives; the fact that others had it worse doesn’t take away your loss. There will always be a greater horror story. Your loss is not negated by someone else’s. Your loss is your own pain.
How do you go from living according to the rules—Don’t Talk, Don’t Trust, Don’t Feel—to a life where you are free to talk and trust and feel?
You do this through a process that teaches you to go to the source of those old, transgenerational rules, to question them and to recreate new rules of your own. You will also have to grieve what is now in the past but is still painful. You will discover that your life will change course as a result of this process of renewal.
Going Back to the Past
My friends have given me all the books, but I don’t want to touch those issues.
I’m twenty-three. I want to move on in my life. I don’t want to go back to it.
Why would I want to talk about that now? It was a long time ago.
People who resist going back to face difficult childhood issues are not fully acknowledging the pain of the loss or trauma that occurred in their lives. For many people it has become easier to develop defenses to avoid facing their pain—process or substance addictions, disordered eating, perfectionism or extreme caretaking, for instance. These behaviors are often culturally supported. They anesthetize pain and possibly offer esteem. All of this causes people to question why they should want to change.
While you can’t relive those early years, you can recover from the pain of the past—gradually. Little by little, you can let down those defenses that once helped you survive but are actually hurting you now. You can learn new life skills so you can begin to accept and internalize that it is truly possible for you
to be imperfect and still be lovable;
make mistakes and still be accepting of yourself; and
feel and express your feelings openly, honestly, safely.
No more secret shame. No more need to make a superhuman effort to stay in control so you can keep up appearances. No more need to protect your vulnerability and hide your true self from others. No more need to put up barriers that keep people at a distance.
This new way of living is possible for those who choose it—whenever they choose it. Young, middle-aged, or older, recovery is there if you want it. Recovery starts with recognizing that you would like at least part of your life to be different than it is now.
The turning point in your life comes with a new awareness:
There is another reality than the one I live. I want it."
Then a new willingness:
I am willing to take some risks to have it."
This book offers a framework for understanding the recovery/healing process from childhood family pain that has been carried forward in your life. It will help you to understand the beliefs and behaviors that have perpetuated your pain. It will identify specific steps in recovery, examine the core issues you will face, and offer guidelines regarding expectations for yourself and others you care about.
All of our lives can be viewed on a continuum from No Pain
to All Pain,
and the combined effect of our experiences, past and present, falls somewhere between these extremes. There is no amount you must have suffered in order to have permission to heal.
If you have pain, you deserve to heal.
If you have anger or guilt from the past, you deserve to heal.
If you are protecting yourself from past pain in ways that are causing you even more pain in the present, you deserve to heal.
At birth, a child has a bill of human rights.
Children have the right
• to be loved for who they are rather than for being what others wish them to become;
• to be nurtured and parented rather than to make up for their parents’ losses;
• to have consistency, security, warmth, and understanding;
• to have unconditional love; and
• to be protected from traumatic situations.
Yet, for children raised in troubled families, these basic rights are lost. Instead, they must struggle for the right merely to survive. As a consequence of their loss, these adult-age individuals have difficulty experiencing a healthy life until the child within each of them is able to speak the truth about childhood and get free from the bondage of the past. Until this recognition and healing occurs, people are subject to live a life without choice, reliving old pain and controlling the pain in hurtful ways. Unless something changes, they are characters trapped in their old life dramas, destined to live out old scripts.
Reflect on the statement: At birth a child has a bill of rights.
How strongly do you agree or disagree with this statement?
Chronic Loss and Abandonment
A family’s life together is troubled when the conditions that foster physical and emotional growth and well-being are continuously absent over time. The absence of these nurturing conditions has the cumulative effect of creating a childhood experience of chronic loss and abandonment. Within a family, the dynamics that create a sense of loss are denial, rigidity, emotional isolation, and shame. Everyone will experience these things occasionally, but when children experience any of these four factors to a severe degree they carry forward an overriding sense of chronic loss.
Some Loss Is Necessary; Some Is Not
We all experience loss in life. From birth we embark on a journey of separation from our fathers and mothers. The losses we experience are natural or necessary losses and are balanced by gains that build our strength and health.
Children naturally experience loss of some level of security as they enter school. There is a sense of loss when children move to a new area and a new home. They experience another kind of natural loss through the death of a loved one, most apt at that age to be a grandparent. Another common natural loss is that of a pet. This is a painful time and often a child’s first experience with death. As painful as that can be, it is less so in our father’s or mother’s arms.
In a troubled family, children are often not supported in their pain or are told not to show what they feel. Sometimes they’re also told not to feel what they feel—to keep a stiff upper lip, to stop crying, to stop acting like a child. In a severely dysfunctional family, the scenario might be that one parent intentionally causes the loss—for example, by giving away the child’s cat—and the other parent denies the significance of what happened, maybe even denies that it happened at all. When we experience a natural loss and are supported by our parents we feel sad but loved and secure. When we are not supported we feel sad, unloved, abandoned. This lack of support or help with our pain is an abandonment experience.
Abandonment Is Not a Necessary Loss
Oh sure, I remember the first day of school. Don’t we all? My seven-year-old sister woke me up yelling. She dressed me while Mom was sleeping. Dad was away. She held my hand, took me to her school, and told me to stay away from the older kids and not to fall asleep.
Two different times growing up my father actually gave our dogs away—they were my best friends. My parents told us both times that they were killed by cars, but I overheard Mom telling Grandma the real story.
I remember my graduation. My dad was too busy to get there until it was over.
These are examples of children who were emotionally abandoned. They were not offered solace, direction, or support at significant times in their lives. They were not offered protection at times of natural loss; many of them may even have been in families that created losses for children. What is most damaging is that these losses take place at the time in life when children are developing their self-worth.
The losses are most often due to emotional abandonment, physical abandonment, or a combination of the two.
Emotional abandonment occurs when the parent or primary caretaker is not emotionally available to the child on a consistent basis. While physical needs are possibly being met, there is little or no nurturing, hugging, or emotional intimacy developing between the parent and the child. The unnecessary losses a child experiences may range from loss of quality and quantity of time with a parent, loss of childhood as a result of unrealistic expectations placed on the child, loss of hope, loss of opportunity, to loss of innocence.
By the time I was seven, I was the little adult at home. I had to be perfect. There was no laughter, no fun, no tenderness.
After my third foster home, I knew no one was coming for me.
My dad didn’t care about me. He clearly liked being away from home better than he liked us kids. By the time I was eleven, I didn’t care much about things either. No one had time for me, so what did it matter if I was a screw up?
Loss is not always a result of what does happen; sometimes, loss is the result of what does not happen. Maybe you had a need that went unnoticed. Maybe you did not hear a parent say, I love you
or You are special.
The loss could also be a result of what you didn’t get to say because your parents weren’t available, or what you didn’t get to do with them, such as play or work on projects. Words and time are important to all children as they grow up. They convey to us that we are valued.
Physical abandonment occurs when a child has repetitively missed meals, has been left alone for hours or days unsupervised, or has been left without adequate supervision. Due to our ability to deny, we sometimes negate our abandonment. I was always supervised. Maybe Mom and Dad weren’t home, but my older brother was.
Although being left with older siblings for lengthy periods of time may illustrate one child’s valiant effort to protect another child, it still constitutes abandonment by parents. In spite of the maturity of our nine-, twelve-, or fifteen-year-old siblings, they are still nine, twelve, or fifteen. We needed adult supervision and protection. Not being properly clothed or not having physical protection are forms of abandonment. Any acts of physical and sexual abuse are forms of physical abandonment. It is an act of physical abandonment when the child is treated as an object and not as a person. Those who are responsible for you owe it to you to see that you are not violated. You deserve protection. Not feeling secure, protected, safe—both psychologically and physically—creates the greatest loss for children. The messages heard by the child experiencing emotional abandonment and physical abandonment are very similar: You are not of value; you are not wanted; you are in the way.
Being in a family where there is chronic loss is traumatic; it gravely interferes with our ability to feel good about ourselves and the world. It can interfere with developing skills that lead to connecting and bonding. It will be significant in the creation of internalized fear and shame.
Denial
Denial is a defense mechanism, a natural response to protect against pain. When we feel helpless to impact our situation or ashamed of what is occurring, we often resort to denial. Denial can be identified when individuals discount, minimize, or rationalize their feelings. As a nine-year-old put it, Denial is pretending things are different than how they really are.
While the word denial is most often associated with the addictive family, it is the central dynamic of any dysfunctional system.
To be raised with denial is to know the Rule of Silence. As children, we learned that it was not okay to speak our truth and, instead, we should pretend things were different than they were. It may be that our perceptions were not validated, or we felt threatened about speaking up for fear of the consequences or punishment. We may have felt hopeless, believing that nothing good would come from talking. As children raised with the Rule of Silence, we became confused about loyalty. Often we didn’t speak up because we were afraid we wouldn’t be believed. As upset, frightened, or concerned as we were, we believed that we would jeopardize our well-being and betray those we loved if we spoke our truth.
If we were raised with others close to us also subscribing to the Rule of Silence, we had no practice trusting that those we spoke to would hear us. Many of us just didn’t know what to say. We couldn’t make sense of people’s behavior. We didn’t understand or know what was really happening, and we had no language to describe it. What we knew most were our feelings, and it was made clear to us that we weren’t supposed to talk about them.
Growing up with denial makes it easy to be in denial today—and not know it. We discount our feelings and perceptions. We rationalize hurtful behaviors. Today, we may say we aren’t angry, disappointed, or hurt when we are. We tell ourselves something isn’t important when it is. We even tell ourselves certain things don’t happen much when they occur frequently. We don’t speak our truth. When we spend years learning to minimize, discount, or rationalize, it’s only normal to continue to do so as adults. We are so skilled in denying that we do it without conscious thought.
Consider reflecting on the family in which you were raised and make a list of the things you could easily talk about. Make a list of