Is there anyone who doesn't immediately roll out the litany of all the things that face is thinking?
- why isn't that child in clean clothes?
- who is that incompetent mother?
- doesn't anyone love the child enough to tie its shoes?
- let us hope that scraggly woman is the babysitter, although whose poor judgement hired her?
- is hair brushing out of style?
- parents should have to pass competency tests...
While it would be fun to list all the other potential things that face was actually thinking...
'my kid was such a brat at that age...'
'that mom sure has it good, she didn't have to listen to my mother criticizing everything about her... '
'I hate being reminded of my deceased child in malls... '
'I wonder if my daughter will ever let me see my grandchild... '
'I hated being a child, I was never allowed to be so free...'
Yeah, that's fun...
...but the problems parents face aren't just that they're no good at telepathy, and worse at predicting what anyone around them is likely to be thinking at any given moment --however good they are at accurately guessing the mood.
The problem is that the voices that give such snarky and vile tones to the words in those thoughts are supplied within the parent's head, not from outside.
...but the problems parents face aren't just that they're no good at telepathy, and worse at predicting what anyone around them is likely to be thinking at any given moment --however good they are at accurately guessing the mood.
The problem is that the voices that give such snarky and vile tones to the words in those thoughts are supplied within the parent's head, not from outside.
At some point in our lives, we have heard, half-heard and half-understood a great deal of emotionally-loaded criticism.
That we don't remember when we first heard them, or what the context was or even who it was who said it, or who repeated it, or who we didn't hear or notice contradicting it at the time is... interesting, but not really worth spending a lot of time exploring, in my opinion. The issue is right now, today, and the hit our self-esteem gets from our own minds when the litany is replayed, and replayed and replayed...
That we don't remember when we first heard them, or what the context was or even who it was who said it, or who repeated it, or who we didn't hear or notice contradicting it at the time is... interesting, but not really worth spending a lot of time exploring, in my opinion. The issue is right now, today, and the hit our self-esteem gets from our own minds when the litany is replayed, and replayed and replayed...
Terry Pratchett, in Monstrous Regiment, describes a deceased god, who is now nothing more than reflections and echoes of prayers and requests, 'nothing but a poisonous echo of all your ignorance and pettiness and maliciousness and stupidity.'
A quote which was rolling around in my head when my client described her personal litany of 'I'm a bad mom' that she expects to be going on in other's heads when they look at her.
"Those voices are just your Insanity Box," I quipped, completely out of the air.
"What's an Insanity Box?"
Echoes and reflections, interfering with each other, amplifying each other and recalling each other, voices of half-remembered, half-understood comments from almost anyone, often directed at someone else at the time... and a name gives a person power over it.
Once there is a name for the Insanity Box, the owner becomes aware of the ownership, and the power of the Witness is developed.
The Witness is the part of everyone that is the 'me' who says 'that sounds good to me', the 'I' who says 'I feel...'
Once the Witness is aware of the Insanity Box it can perceive the voices as 'over there' or,
even more powerfully, 'not me.'
The Witness is the part of everyone that is the 'me' who says 'that sounds good to me', the 'I' who says 'I feel...'
Once the Witness is aware of the Insanity Box it can perceive the voices as 'over there' or,
even more powerfully, 'not me.'
From that point on, there is a new way to deal with the litany of criticisms whether expected or imagined: 'oh, that's just my Insanity Box getting heated up again...'
Eventually, it even becomes possible to see that a lot of people's critical words and harsh tones are nothing but their Insanity Box speaking through their mouths, not what they really think and feel at all. Peace at last...
Eventually, it even becomes possible to see that a lot of people's critical words and harsh tones are nothing but their Insanity Box speaking through their mouths, not what they really think and feel at all. Peace at last...
I find the idea that the voices are actually a collection of criticisms not directed at me personally but things that I have overheard... Or at least, some of those voices are. Where did you come across this idea? I have always understood that these negative voices are part of my personal past.
ReplyDeleteAgnieszka
Good question, Agnieszka!
ReplyDeleteMostly, I tried to pay attention to what they said and trying to figure out where I'd have heard something like that. Most of the time, when I could even identify it, it was something said to, or even about, someone else. Sometimes it was a fragment of something I didn't hear enough of to even understand the context. I certainly heard them, but the vast majority weren't directed at me at all.
It's what explained how I 'heard' negativity about my parenting, when none was ever directed at me personally --certainly not as a young child.