Skip to main content

PACEsConnectionCommunitiesChildhood Disrupted

Childhood Disrupted

Join in conversations inspired by Donna Jackson Nakazawa's book, Childhood Disrupted: How Your Biography Becomes Your Biology, and How You Can Heal. We'll chat about the latest research on how ACEs can affect our health, happiness, and relationships; vent a little; and brainstorm our best ideas for resiliency and healing.

Buying friendship

This week I was painfully reminded that I try to maintain my friendships through favors and gift giving. Let me set the stage for you. When I was young, I lived in a very rural area. I went to school in a community (technically a village) of less than 1000 people, and my home outside the community was separated from any neighbours by forest for miles all around. I could not call any of my classmates friends. They were entities on the school bus, in the classroom or in the schoolyard who might or might not make my life miserable if I drew their attention. I didn’t socialize outside of school because transportation to and from my home, if it wasn’t on the school bus, was challenging. My parents didn’t offer, and I didn’t want to burden them by asking. I didn’t participate in any after-school activities or programs. I grew up essentially unable to form friendships.

 

In the seventh grade, we were allowed to leave our school grounds at lunchtime and walk to get lunch “uptown”. This allowed students who lived nearby to go home for lunch. It also allowed a gaggle of students to descend on the corner store near the school to dump their quarters, nickels and dimes on the counter in exchange for candy and bubblegum. Many times I spent my lunch money on cellophane packages of gumballs and cartons of Junior Mints. I always bought in abundance. I would tromp back to school with my pockets bulging, knowing that for a few minutes, I would be the center of positive attention as classmates asked me to share my sweets. I remember one particular time, sitting in the stairwell near our homeroom classroom, when I was surrounded by reaching hands and purring requests. I remember realizing that as soon as the candy ran out, so would the friendliness. I remember the sad helplessness of that moment.

 

Today, 25 years or so later, I fear that my approach to friendship hasn’t evolved very much. I am the one to respond to requests on facebook for help moving. This summer I set up a garden in a friend’s back yard. I mowed another friend’s lawn. I bring food, make crafts, respond to calls for assistance and generally take on a caretaking role. I do this in the hope that my kindness and generosity will communicate my feelings of friendship or love and result in intimacy and connection. When people compliment me for my generosity, I feel good. When I am struck by the inspiration to create a gift or write a poem for somebody, I feel good. But when I’m not giving, I feel like I have nothing to offer, and I feel like the friendships will dry up and wither away. I am not used to people sticking around. I go to parties and feel like an interloper, a hanger-on.

 

It is worst when I become attached emotionally to somebody, when their opinion of me and whether or not they will give me love becomes a barometer of how I feel about myself. My mind fills with ideas of how I can creatively and generously ensure that they do not forget about me. They say thank you. We spend some time together. I feel good. And then I go home and the clock starts to tick as my tension rises. Did I say something wrong? Was my gift too much? Should I have offered to help them with groceries? Should I not have requested to accompany them walking their dog? Was I too intrusive? What if they stop talking to me?

 

All of this anxiety and gift-giving could not be a better proof, if I needed it, that deep down I do not feel like I’m worthy of love and belonging. I feel like I need to trade my effort for the experience of it, that I do not deserve it. This habit of transacting and bargaining means that my experiences of connection are washed out by the fear that people’s responses are not genuine, and this week I got clear feedback that the gift-giving can make people uncomfortable and even resentful. Being too generous can make people feel like they are in my debt. And I guess, in a way, I am inadvertently trying to make them feel that way. As you can imagine, this makes me feel pretty shitty.

 

I feel now the urge to paper over all the things I have just said, and argue that I am exaggerating, that I make do, that I don’t truly believe these things and that I am intellectually aware of the fallacy of my fears. I feel a bit like the wounded animal curling up in a hiding spot, or the police officer saying, “Move along. Nothing to see here.” Because somebody else always has it worse, because I don’t experience anxiety attacks, because I don’t have a mental health diagnosis, because I can maintain my composure in big crowds (I just feel like an alien). Because I don’t feel comfortable taking up space. I can put on a pretty great “I’m fine” mask. So good sometimes that I believe it myself. But it’s fragile.

 

I have, however, come a long way in the last six or seven years. Before then, my level of self knowledge amounted to the realization that I was miserable and that much of my life was ruled by fear. In the intervening years, I left my 10-year marriage, I started writing (poetry, free-writing and memoir), I began a regular meditation practice and I take part in a weekly peer support group. The fact that I can think about and express the ideas above, and look for ways to break out of my stuck patterns is a sign of major progress. Unfortunately, it’s really painful to recognize your stuck patterns and not know how to change them.

 

I have to admit that I feel significant frustration that it looks like this process is going to take a long time and that I am going to have to keep struggling with the same insecurities over and over again. As I said, one of my biggest insecurities is about taking up space, being seen and asking for help. I am using this blog to do just that (fearfully hoping that this kind of content is ok). I ask you please to comment and share your knowledge.

 

Thank you.

 

Add Comment

Comments (4)

Newest · Oldest · Popular

 

Hi, Randy,

 

This is very powerful. What strikes me is your depth of realization about your interior process as you re-live past feelings of worthlessness in the present. And that uber awareness in and of itself seems to be a major step in the healing process. But mindfulness can also be painful -- but I think it is a necessary step to healing. Kind of like ripping off a bandage, to clean it out, so a wound can heal.

 

One of the fallout factors of ACEs is the way in which we can struggle in relationships many years later -- second guessing what we have said or done, feeling a sense of bad-ness about ourselves and others. There are many changes that occur in the architecture of the developing brain when we are children, that can lead to changes in the interconnections between areas of the brain that should help us to respond in relationships in a calm and non-ruminating way. When these neurobiological interconnections are not as strong, we can have trouble reading what's going on in our relationship interactions. This is called the science of interpersonal neurobiology (see Chapter Five in Childhood Disrupted, "The Good Enough Family." Especially pages 134 - 146). Also check out pages 104 to 107.

 

Sometimes after an interaction in which we're feeling unsure about our own actions and those of others, it can help to stop and put your hand over your heart and engage in a little self-talk - even using your own name as you talk to yourself -- "Randy, it's okay, you're forgiven." Self talk has been shown to decrease anxiety.

 

Or, just put one hand on your heart and the other on your stomach, breathe into your stomach as you say the words "forgiven, forgiven, forgiven." 

 

Also, metta practices can be very helpful.  Eg, Loving kindness practices, in which you extend loving kindness to yourself, and then to others, well, it really can take the sting out of self-loathing. So can a few moments in nature. So can thinking of people you have loved who were your benefactor, people who you've known in your life with whom you felt secure attachment, and who you know had your best interest at heart.

 

These are all little tricks I use. I hope they are helpful.

 

Thanks for your wisdom and openness and courage.

 

Donna

Last edited by Donna Jackson Nakazawa

Thank you for your bravery and transparency Randy. I think as we establish community here, we are also establishing our boundaries, and that can be exciting and scary and tricky. I appreciate your willingness to share.

 

In reflecting on the challenge you describe I was thinking that there seem to be two extremes created by the absence of love or connection; one is generosity (to a fault?) and the other is withholding-yes? I was thinking that at the core of those two extremes is pain...I am hurting because I feel so unloved and so disconnected and so I will reach out and give to others excessively in the hopes of my giving being returned to me. Or, I will 'show them' by withdrawing and withholding anything I might be able to give since 'they' won't appreciate it, or it will never be enough. Yes? Either way, the giver and the withholder are equally hurting and acting from that place of deep pain as you so beautifully describe in your sharing of candy with classmates who would disappear once the candy had run out.

I wonder, as we resolve and heal our pain, if our giving naturally balances itself out? I found that by connecting to the love of a higher power I could always remain full (or at least, try very hard every day to stay connected to that source of love), so that then, my motivation for giving to others or retreating from others was determined by the love that I felt, as opposed to the pain or hurt that I felt. (ForGiving, For-Giving, forGiveness...there's a whole lot happening in that word all of sudden!)

Finding and connecting with an endless source of love and connection was, and is in my clinical work with others, the real trick. That need for love and acceptance within each of us is very real and vital to our wellbeing. When we are not able to fully experience that unconditional love as children, we may spend years of our adulthood expressing those unmet needs in all kinds of ways. As Jane said, acknowledging the need to be loved and accepted and wrapping our arms it is a great way to move forward.

Thank you for this insight!

Hi, Randy:

Thanks for being so courageous to post this, and so open about your experiences. I'm really glad that you've made such incredible progress....it is very painful to come to grips with past adversity and to clearly understand how it warped us in directions that we might not have gone had our circumstances been healthier.

 

I strongly relate to your frustration, and, in my best moments, grasp that it's another way to beat myself up, which just echoes the way I was beaten up as a child. So, being grateful for the opportunity to keep growing and not to stop is something I've learned to consciously wrap my arms around the way I wrap my arms around someone (friend, child, spouse, pet) I love.

Hi Randy:
That was brave of you and so I will respond.
 
I can relate to this - both the over-giving though I've improved on that and may verge right on into the selfishness and catching up on me category. But also to the frustration that this takes so long.

Another random thought I had reading your post is how the dance of intimacy can be wonderful AND anxiety provoking even if it's a friendship being courted.
 
Sometimes I feel the awareness of noticing my patterns is a beautiful and wonderful thing. Other times it seems cruel - a strange 'reward' for being more mindful.
 
Thanks for posting!
Cissy
 

 

Last edited by Jane Stevens
Copyright © 2023, PACEsConnection. All rights reserved.
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×