There were
a lot of things that I felt some concern about in the last two posts, and this
is a clean up post to address that and move forward.
One is a concern
that I was too repetitive. I may have been, but that came from a concern that
my words wouldn't make it come through how big this was. None of the parts were
wholly new, but the way they fit together this time was, and it was big.
All of the
little steps have been written about before. I have been a lot worse. One
result of that core shame years ago was that every now and then this sick
feeling of disgust would wash over me. I didn't know where it came from or what
it meant, or even that anyone else had similar issues until I read Sartre's Nausea.
That had
been gone for a while, but there were other aspects of feeling inadequate and
inferior and wrong, and I've been carrying them around for a long time. While I
have at times been healed by pure grace, my most common progress comes when I
can make sense of something. A missing piece fell into place, and I feel
lighter. That's big.
A random
question helped get me there, but it helped because of the work I have already
done, including some things that confused me at the time. Looking at chakras
and creating a vision board did not initially seem likely to be helpful, but I
have to acknowledge that they were now. That feels like a confirmation that I
am on the right track, so even though this process feels very long, I can
believe that it has merit and will continue to be worthwhile. That is a big
deal.
The other
thing that I worry can be taken wrong is the conclusion that the shame came
from my father, even though I tried to make it clear that emotionally it
doesn't feel like that. (I just needed to know that there wasn't actually something
essential wrong with me.)
I have
heard many times that you can't keep blaming your parents for everything,
especially after a certain age. I agree with that, but it feels like sometimes
that is used as a reason to shut someone down.
I have recently
had some thoughts about how taboos in talking about sex enforce sexism, and
taboos for talking about money enforce income inequality and economic
exploitation. Many people try and derail anti-racism by calling any mention of
racism racist. I may get to some of those later, but I think the lesson we
should take right now is that it's important to be able to talk about things.
That's how we get at the truth.
For me it
was important to understand where the primary emotional wound came from. It was
a breakthrough. It isn't the only thing that affected my life, but I needed to
name it to take away it's power.
This is
especially important to me because the next thing that went wrong was the
crying thing. There are a lot of reasons to want to stop a child from crying; I
took them personally because I believed there was something wrong with me and
so everything was personal judgment against me. It made it hard to share my
thoughts and feelings, because who would want to know? That was a barrier
between me and other people, and it meant that the darkest thoughts didn't get
chances for contradiction.
To some
extent I already knew that, and that's why I try to be a good listener. The
next step is getting over my concerns about whether I am worth being heard. The
blog has been progress, difficult conversations have been progress, but I
should be ready to advance to a new level.
Fortunately,
some upcoming items on my task list involve making my voice heard.
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