A Gift

Someone close to me who experienced a hard early in live, but has turned the old into a new life full of hope and promise, shared this poem with me.

ABUSE

I overstepped my bounds with abuse,

Simply, because I could, and simply, because it was offered to me,

I finally found a way to silence my “inner critic” and I finally saw a way out,

I abused substances, I abused others, and more importantly, I abused my own identity,

Finally realizing, I was slowly erasing myself.

Erasing myself from me and everyone that ever truly loved me.

I now see all the pretty people sipping drinks.

With a smile on my face…

Now fully understanding, I could never muster the strength to tolerate what they deem normal..

What struck me with the most force was the line “erasing myself.” Imagine what it feels like to make pieces of your self, your identity, your being disappear until drugs or alcohol is the entirety of your world.. I found it powerful.

Well, What Do You Expect? Part `

On the way to give a talk, I stopped by a store. I put my items on the counter and wait. The clerk scans and bags them. Now, I can pick up the bag and walk out. Right? Of course not. I have to pay. There is an expectation to how business works. I get a coke. I pay before I leave with it.

Expectations exist in all interactions. In the environment, we expect the sun to rise and set. In our biology, we get hungry, we eat, and we are full. But what about relationships?

Relationships involve two people who grew up differently, have different ideas about how relationships work, and live according to what they expect from relationships.

No one likes non-specifics. Non-specifics are stressful. The sun going up and going down, the abated hunger after we eat, and people to treat us a certain way that is what we expect, that is what we believe should happen. For the person who believes them, expectations are specific, even when the expectations don't match reality.

Let’s look at an example.

I am a parent. I have a child, Amy, whom I love very much. During adolescence, Amy begins abusing alcohol. No matter how hard I try, what I offer, the alcohol use continues. It feels like I’ve lost predictability in my life. I feel helpless. The harder I force my expectations on Amy, the worse the emotional beating I take.

Amy made a choice against my expectations, to do drugs. It is not my choice, but I hold onto the expectation that things will go back to the way they were. I pay no attention to the reality of the situation, who made the choice, and who owns the responsibility for it. I throw all my resources at the problem and nothing changes. Amy makes the choice but I shoulder the responsibility to fix it.

Amy is arrested and goes to jail. I pay no attention. I go and bail her out thinking, expecting, that the punishment of jail frightens Amy into quitting alcohol. Within weeks, she is drunk again. Riding away in my car to pick up a person I know is a bad influence.

Amy lies, cheats, steals, manipulates me and others, but I know she is good on the inside. When I get two days of pleasant behavior, I forget what I know. I forget what I see. I expect the good to continue. But does it? Rarely.

Amy is adjudicated to rehab. She gets a good facility. She begins to work on herself. She cries. She struggles. All her old feelings arise. With good help, she resolves past issues and builds new expectations for herself. Her pattern shifts. Old thoughts and actions are examined. What is needed is kept; what is unneeded is discarded.

Amy makes new decisions. She practices her new decisions in rehab, a safe place, with good boundaries, and supportive/confrontive people. Amy decides her emotions will not kill her and begins to expect life to change. It does.

Tonight, I am coming to visit Amy. What do I expect? I haven’t seen the work she’s done. I haven’t read her journal. I haven’t seen her tears. I expect the old Amy is still operating. I don’t trust the change because I am not living it with her.

When Amy sees my caution, it is demoralizing. She did the work, made the change, and doesn’t understand that my expectation remains the same. We haven’t synchronized our relationship to Amy’s new self. This is a dangerous time for Amy. She wants so badly to show me how she has changed but I can’t see it because of old expectations. What to do? If I persist in my old expectations, unless she is very strong, Amy says, “You expect me to be bad, why shouldn’t I?”

Connections In Patterns

Since patterns repeat, they cannot be singular. A pattern is not the event but the determined response generated by the person who experiences it. This response creates problem solutions about the feelings from the event. The greater the emotional impact, the greater the stress, the lower the problem solving ability, the higher the non-specific for the individual, and the more limited response.

In the moment, whatever is determined, becomes the basis for a pattern. Once set, behavioral tentacles reach to create variations on the theme. The original decision is not reexamined.

 This process is strengthened when a decision becomes delayed and the stress remains over time (PTSD for example). Under maximum stress, the first minimal working decision becomes the basis for action. This is how fight, flight, or freeze works.

 Child A plays in the corner. Child B takes their toy away. As instructed, A tells an adult. The adult ignores or minimizes the request for help. A goes to B and forcefully takes the toy away. B cries. The adult comes and punishes A. In the telling of this story, A describes the confusion and frustration of the situation.

 The question for A: How do I get what I want when others have the power to take it. And if I assert myself, my wants, I am punished for it. Solution: Never trust others. Do for myself secretly.

The connection: Live life as if others can take from you and you are helpless to stop it. Further, there is no protection from authorities. Remain isolated. Stay alone. Become manipulative and sneaky. Avoid questioning by appearing ignorant. Suffer stress of questioning about your actions, reveal little about them, and feel powerful when you escape without answering directly. Never lead, assert, or trust.

 A simple event produces a decision that connects all life’s behavior.