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I did get one good thing out of therapy....or, partly it was therapy.
I do think that I would have been better off, having gotten the information out of books. But I don't know, that's water under the bridge. Everyone who knows me, knows I feel therapy did me a great deal of harm.
But anyway. The one thing it did give me, was the notion that *just maybe* my memories were of things that had really happened, and not just a lot of evil sinfulness that I was making up because the devil had ahold of me....and yadda yadda, I'm sure you've heard the rest of *that* evangelical bullsh******t.
Later, when my stepdad was elderly and diabetic and in my mom's care, I saw some things re-enacted, and I knew for absolutely sure that no, I hadn't made it up or exaggerated it.
Meanwhile, though, I do think that the thought of 'maybe I'm not lying', kept me from suicide long enough to get to that point.
I know this sounds rather along the 'disordered' rather than 'empowered' line of thought....and what I would say to that, is that I think trauma-multis have every bit as much right to empower ourselves, as....well, anyone else. I would compare it to losing one's hearing in adulthood, and joining the deaf community as a fully empowered and whole person. (And I do know there are some rifts in the deaf community, just like there are in the multiple community. I'm just sayin', I feel like those rifts are pretty useless.)
I do think that I would have been better off, having gotten the information out of books. But I don't know, that's water under the bridge. Everyone who knows me, knows I feel therapy did me a great deal of harm.
But anyway. The one thing it did give me, was the notion that *just maybe* my memories were of things that had really happened, and not just a lot of evil sinfulness that I was making up because the devil had ahold of me....and yadda yadda, I'm sure you've heard the rest of *that* evangelical bullsh******t.
Later, when my stepdad was elderly and diabetic and in my mom's care, I saw some things re-enacted, and I knew for absolutely sure that no, I hadn't made it up or exaggerated it.
Meanwhile, though, I do think that the thought of 'maybe I'm not lying', kept me from suicide long enough to get to that point.
I know this sounds rather along the 'disordered' rather than 'empowered' line of thought....and what I would say to that, is that I think trauma-multis have every bit as much right to empower ourselves, as....well, anyone else. I would compare it to losing one's hearing in adulthood, and joining the deaf community as a fully empowered and whole person. (And I do know there are some rifts in the deaf community, just like there are in the multiple community. I'm just sayin', I feel like those rifts are pretty useless.)
no subject
Date: 2010-08-03 12:36 am (UTC)To be able to define one's own reality on one's own terms is to me what empowerment truly is.
-Tamar Silverberg-
no subject
Date: 2010-08-03 01:51 am (UTC)And saying.... (http://www.astraeasweb.net/plural/faq.html#empowered)
A lot of the misconception happened because of this essay (not written by us) (http://www.astraeasweb.net/plural/armyemp.html), that circulated online starting around early 2000. It was supposed to describe online multiples who were liberating themselves from the endless spoiler warnings, trigger warnings, and splats that typified most MPD/DID websites and forums in the 1990s. The kind of learned helplessness that was encouraged by too many psychs in the MPD overdiagnosis of the 80s and 90s, and exemplified as "survivors" online at that time.
The essay has been misinterpreted to mean you should never ask for help at all, or that this is something that's only for multiples who were born that way, or who were never abused at all. Arg.
The word "survivor" is what threw many people off. They assumed that if you were an (actual) survivor (that is, of childhood abuse) you were not and could not be empowered. That was not what the authors intended. "Survivor" was a buzzword at that time, a brand name, a code word that had very little to do with individuals' actual experiences of childhood abuse. "Survivor" was a behavior model which you were expected to follow if you joined any of the various MPD newsgroups, forums or communities on line at that time. The concept of empowerment was originally supposed to be an alternative to the "survivor" behavior model. It had nothing to do with natural or non-trauma multiplicity. I am sorry to say that we played a part in the actions that caused that confusion, and we want to do whatever we can to clear it up.
We removed the original essay anyway. Just put it back up for you guys to look at.
Essay (Stef)
From:Essay by Sharon. (Stef)
From:Re: Essay by Sharon. (Stef)
From:Re: Essay by Sharon. (Stef)
From:Re: Essay by Sharon. (Freddie & crew)
From:no subject
Date: 2010-08-03 11:19 am (UTC)As it is still building an identity around what *happened* to you, what others did to you, not what you really are.
It is all a pile of shite, and I am glad you are finding your own helpful insights. Poeple seem to get all worked up about multiplicity but really, trauma multiples have almost all the same issues as traumatised singlets, but because they are multiple people (ie psychiatrists etc) go silly *rolls eyes*
Incidentally we had a similar incident with our father. Had a LOT of trouble understanding that the memories weren't just terrible nightmares till we had a nice break of about 4 yrs from him, then got thrust into his company unwillingly again ugh ugh. Then we saw the behaviour and it was like *click* "You really are the barstard of my nightmares, aren't you? You really did do those things to me."
8 yrs of constant high-quality therapy and we are starting to feel a whole lot better about this Living Gig :-)
Trauma (Stef)
From:Re: Trauma (Stef)
From:Re: Trauma (Stef)
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