Unraveling Coping Mechanisms From
Childhood
I take this
opportunity not to regurgitate debilitating pain, but to gently arrive at a new
understanding of the effects of pain from my childhood, that I realised I still
carried with me as an adult.
To work
through the layers, it is hugely important that I admit that my childhood
experiences negatively impacted how I have perceived myself as an adult. My aim
for this experience was to overcome the trauma that had dogged me throughout my
adulthood as an effect of the pain I endured in my childhood. The trauma drove
my authentic self into hiding so that I could survive and cope. I remember
distinct feelings as a child of hiding away (metaphorically) and that it was
very important for me to somehow not be a bother. But where did this belief
come from?
I think back
to the beginning. I picture myself as a helpless infant dependent upon my
emotionally suffering mother. By the age of four I was one of six children.
Instinctively I knew that my role in the family was to hide away and somehow
not be a bother. My mother was so busy with my five siblings that she needed me
to be quiet and not cause a fuss, and as the introduction in Peeling the Onion
states, ‘we came to realise that we were groomed to meet their needs’.
I was groomed
to be quiet and not make a fuss. So, I kept quiet…
My mother
seemed very unsatisfied in her role. Her frustration was expressed through
regular innuendos about herself not being good enough, where she would say
‘wrong again Charlie’ – and she was Charlie.
The subtle
innuendos were passed down to me.
She had
feelings of abandonment from her mother and would talk with me about this at
times when I had grown up. I believe she continued to feel abandoned as a wife.
I think that her unaddressed love and abandonment shaped my experiences as a
child. In my process of being groomed to be quiet and not make a fuss, I was to
experience ingrained feelings of loss – loss of her love.
The cycle of
abandonment continued.
Through years
of relationship addiction, I finally found my way to CoDA. Here I slowly
learned that due to my childhood experiences, the root of my codependent
behaviour was an absence of intimacy with myself. Ever so slowly, I picked
myself up and began to forgive myself for not knowing what I didn’t know. I
found a sponsor, worked through the First Fourteen Days, and then progressed
through the CoDA Steps.
I gradually
began to forgive my mother and in doing so, forgive myself.
Today, I know
I am in the right place, right now in my recovery as I approach experiences in
a gentle and loving way. As I keep coming back to my weekly CoDA meeting, I
pick myself up in a forgiving and supportive way. Through the support of CoDA,
I have become aware of coping mechanisms from childhood pain.
Today, I have
a desire to only be engaged in healthy and loving relationships.
Debbie R.
06/01/24
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