Chapter 3 ending - and my last free public excerpt - from
"Don’t Try This at Home-The Silent Epidemic of Attachment Disorder- How I accidentally regressed myself back to infancy and healed it all" at AttachmentDisorderHealing.com/book/
Last time, I was in the hospice with Mom in 2008 and Dr. Rita told me to “just disengage.” “I can’t disengage, she’s my Mom and she may be dying,” I said. “Besides, I couldn’t do that to my sister.”
But the real story was, self-protection literally never entered my mind. Since infancy, self-protection wasn’t in my biochemistry; my entire organism was all about trying to oblige Mom. I took Mom’s excommunication verdict when I was 25 the same way – the idea of protest or self-defense never remotely occurred to me. I didn’t even know I had self-preservation instincts. Whu Nhu?
Yet we all have survival instincts – strong ones. Trouble was, my instincts for self-preservation had been constantly being overwhelmed by events which seemed beyond my control.
I was beyond clueless in 2008, but here’s a fact I’ve learned since: “the overwhelm of our instincts for survival by events completely beyond our control” is the technical definition of trauma. And when our survival instincts are forced into trauma mode, “double-plus un-good things happen,” to quote George Orwell.
As I went into overwhelm in that 2008 hospice, it was like living in a nightmare during the day, all day, every day. I began to experience days when it felt as though Mom’s critical voice was screaming so loud in my head that her voice had become the inside of my head. I began to have waking and sleeping nightmares about Goya’s Los Caprichos, a series of 80 etchings heavily populated by just such images. All I wanted was for Mom to let go her claws from my brain. [FN1, Goya, above: "Can't anyone unleash us?"]
One day watching Mom nap, I was dimly conscious of a horrifying gut reaction from deep in some prehistoric part of my mental sub-basement, a place out of Dante’s “Inferno.” Up came a horrible idea: something which is inflicting so much pain upon my sister and me requires the raw animal response of fight, flight, or who-knows-what?
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