Monday, June 21, 2021

"There it is again." When trauma just keeps showing up at your door

I have a friend that I've been running with this past year-and-a-bit. Our pandemic ritual has been getting outside three or four times a week and, with each foot hitting the pavement, we sort through our lives. She is brutally honest with me and has incredible, rare insight.

I recently confided to her that I was struggling with my eldest, who had unleashed on me the day before. My daughter, as longtime readers know, struggles with mental health issues, although to the world she is beautiful and smart and a high achiever, although perhaps a bit moody. She is all those things to me too but she is also more than a bit moody and, far too often recently, suicidal. My mother, too, attempted suicide. A few times.

Despite plenty of therapy and trauma work, any mention of wishing to be dead remains terrifying to me. I’m not sure I can ever “therapize” myself out of the trauma it induces.

Which surprises me. I thought I was long past the trauma of my childhood, of my mother’s addiction, her suicidal ideation. 

And so, when my daughter stopped taking her medication for bipolar, when it was clear to everyone that she was spiralling despite declaring that she felt "great", when I felt myself tense whenever I didn't know where she was, or who she with, or what she was doing, I got angry with myself. Because there was nothing I could but wait for the inevitable crash. And doing nothing but wait is, for me, the worst feeling in the world. 

My urge is always to fix. 

To find the right  book. To find the right course. To find the right expert. To find the right words. If only I can do that, my distorted thinking goes, I can fix whatever is wrong.

My friend reminded me that I was acting out a trauma response. She pointed out that my daughter always always reaches out when she’s in crisis. Your job, she said to me, isn’t to fix your daughter, it’s to love her. And it’s to learn to manage your own emotions.

I’ve come to learn that we’re never “fixed”. We simply learn to acknowledge the boulder that lodges in our gut when we come across a trigger. “There it is again,” we learn to say. 

If we’re lucky. If we’ve done the work.

If we’re not so lucky, if, despite the work we’ve done, we still get blindsided by our response to a trigger, we’re more likely to react. To not recognize the boulder but rather to act out our trauma response. Each of us likely has our favorite. Fight. Flee. Freeze. Fix.

There it is. For me: Fix.

My daughter is struggling? I swing into fix-it mode. I call doctors. I Google. I buy books. I make suggestions.

My husband cheated? Fix it. Therapy for both of us. Google for online help. Buy books. Occasionally realize that I'm not actually fixing anything and collapse in grief. Rinse. Repeat.

You can imagine just how annoying I am. Cause despite my best intentions, I can't fix other people. Not my husband. Not my daughter. Each is responsible for themselves.

I am responsible for myself. And I need to learn how to manage my response to my daughter's health issues.

That includes stopping trying to fix it.

Or, more to the point, stopping trying to fix her. 

I can see just how awful my response is when I put it in print. Fix her. As if she’s a broken vase. A car in need of repairs. But she’s a human being. Not to be fixed.

My task is the exact same as it was when I first learned of my husband’s infidelity. To learn how to heal myself. To learn how to manage my own feelings so that I respond from a place of self-love and self-compassion, as well as compassion for those around me.

Don’t get me wrong. Responding with compassion for your partner is never to be confused with tolerating his hurtful or abusive behaviour. Responding with compassion is acknowledging his humanness. His flaws. And then taking steps to keep yourself emotionally and physically safe. The two responses are not mutually exclusive. They complement each other. Compassion. Boundaries.

I know this. And yet…I fix. Or I try to.

I’m learning. 

To take a breath before I react. To trust my daughter to ask for help from the experts when she needs it. To acknowledge that I am not, in fact, an expert.

It isn't easy for me. So much of my childhood wired me for the trauma-response to fix. Parents fighting? Step in and referee. Mom's drunk? Put her to bed. 

Husband cheated? Calmly tell the other woman to stay out of our lives then give my husband an ultimatum: Either get your act together or get out. 

Inside, of course, I was terrified. Terrified of being abandoned. Terrified that he would, in fact, take the option to leave. Terrified that I would wind up destitute, that my children would suffer. Terrified of so many vague things that basically amounted to the fear that had governed my life: That I was not worthy of being loved and loyal to. That I was not enough. That if I couldn't fix people, that I would lose them.

That continues to be my work. To push back against that belief. To stop myself when the impulse is to fix. To not act out the trauma but to learn to say, "There it is again. Hello."









7 comments:

  1. Wow. Just wow. Your message resonates deeply. I'm a "fixer" too. Always have been. It is an ongoing struggle to not try to fix everything. I often don't even realized that I'm in that mode. Nice that your friend could point that out to you. You are that friend to all of us. Thank you.

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    1. It's always easier to see in other what we struggle to see in ourselves. But...when we know better, we do better, right? I'm learning to recognize that, the minute I begin to feel anxious about something, I start reaching for solutions. There's a certain liberation in letting people solve their own problems but it takes getting comfortable with the discomfort, if that makes sense. I have to sit with the "Ugh...this feels horrible" squirminess while I watch those around me make, what I think, are stupid response to fix their own problems. But, and here's something else I'm learning, just because I think I'm right, doesn't mean I am. ;)

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  2. Ditto what BG said!

    Although, my counselor recently told me that sometimes trauma resurfaced is there to remind me, in particular, that he is still very dangerous. And how right she is. It is still serving a purpose. Someday I won't need that gut wrenching reminder. Soon.

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  3. I’m not sure where the best place to post this is, but I am seeking advice. I originally posted months ago, my husband and I are 5 months post DDay and trying hard to make it work. We have 4 children together and are expecting a 5th. I will say since I found out about my husband’s 3 day affair, my husband has been incredibly transparent and has tried hard to prove he is in this relationship 110% . My issue is the trauma. It has literally tainted everything. Everything we have had over the last 10 years, everything we wanted. How can I retain our history without his infidelity ruining everything? Because it feels like it has devastated everything we have worked on together. I try not to think about how easy our relationship “was” or how much I did love and respect him before all of this because it’s too hard. We had a very classic mushy love story, 10 years, 4 kids and a happy life. Then his dad suddenly passed away and he was working a lot and felt very depressed and isolated and this OW pushed her way in. I’ve lost everything we had and were working towards and it’s excruciating. Advice please because “letting go of the past relationship we had” is not really ideal when it includes memories of kids and births and life.

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    1. Anonymous, Are you in any sort of therapy? Betrayal, for many many of us, is trauma and needs to be addressed as such. Which means therapy that recognizes that you are experiencing post-trauma symptoms. EMDR can be extremely effective.
      Time helps too, but it sounds as though you need a bit more than to let time work its magic. See if you can find someone who does EMDR and/or post-trauma work to help you process this in a way that doesn't interfere with your current life and the work you and your husband are doing within your marriage. This is tough, Anonymous. I know how hard it is. And I'm so sorry you're dealing with this. Fight for yourself and your happiness.

      Delete
  4. I’m 6 months past d day. 40 year marriage. 3 great kids. Successful business together. The OW was a best friend of mine. My husband fell in love with her. All 3 of us are high profile in the community. Since the affair got out (my doing) she immediately dumped him. He has mental health issues, is extremely depressed, has high anxiety. he came back to me immediately. I didn’t realize until a few weeks that he was grieving the loss of her and not so much what he had done to me and our family. He told me he needs to see me again and wants to work to come back to me. However, he is unable to be there for me in any real way. He still has pictures of her on his phone and I see he searches for her on social media even though she has blocked both of us since the affair. There are community ramifications as well because now that they know about the affair they are being sidelined. my husband blames me for this which adds to the drama. I am a fixer. I want the marriage. But I’m constantly suffering. I will be able to make it on my own, but I’m fighting for something and I’m not sure I should be.

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    1. Susan Rising,
      I'm so sorry for all the pain you're in. I want you to try and get clear on what is your responsibility and what isn't. It is your responsible to be honest and treat those around you with respect. You've done that. It is others' job to do the same with you. They have NOT done that. So, to be clear, that others know about the affair is not your responsibility. It is not your responsibility to protect others from the consequences of their choices. It is not your responsibility to lie for them, shelter them, or otherwise compromise yourself.
      My second question for you is: Do you have a good therapist. If you do, this is a question for your to work through with him/her: Is your husband capable of being the man you want? How long are you wiling to give him to show if he can?
      If you don't have a good therapist, please please get one.
      You need someone to help you process the pain of this betrayal (double betrayal!) and to help you get clear on what, exactly, you're fighting for. I'm all for giving people second chances but ONLY if they are willing to do the incredibly hard work of deserving that second chance. Which means...therapy for him, support/medication for his mental health issues, and a willingness to support YOU as you heal from his.
      You note that he is unable to be there for you. Has he EVER been able to be there for you? I am surrounded by people with mental health issues and that doesn't let them off the hook for showing up for me sometimes, too. A relationship has to go both ways.
      Your job, Susan, is to take care of you and surround yourself with those who have your interests at heart. Does he fit that bill?

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