+MEMORY OF THE PAST AND MEMORY OF THE FUTURE – DOESN’T ALWAYS WORK RIGHT FOR EARLY TRAUMA SURVIVORS

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Maybe much trauma drama is a side effect of the need to run.

My need to run originated early in my life, probably even before I had the ability to sit up, crawl or walk.  This need to run is tied directly to the fight/flight/freeze response to threat.  My need to escape Mother’s abuse existed long before I had the ability to think about what was happening to me in words.

Once I left home at 18 my urge to flee found fulfillment although I had no words even then to think about what I continued to do all through my adult life.  Even today at 60 as I left my home to drive into town today to sit at a coffee shop outdoor plaza to write this, that is exactly what I did.  I ran.

More than a need for change or drama my urge to flee is tied to difficulties I have in processing information.  These difficulties exist deep in my trauma-altered physiology.  Changes that ongoing abuse trauma from birth created in the way my nervous system/brain formed in response to trauma means that I often lack the natural ability to process certain hardships and stresses in my life.  My active coping mechanisms frequently require that I continually and physically move forward in SPACE at the same simultaneously as I move forward in TIME.

I can clearly track this pattern in the first full-body age-22 1/2 month old beating memory that I so avoid writing right now.

Scientists know that sharks and migrating geese have no need to sleep because no new information is coming into their brain for processing.  When I run, I count on moving through time and space as they do.  It is not new information I am seeking or running toward most of the time.  I run FROM information in the past (often the immediate past) that I lack abilities to process and integrate.

My movements into a continual new future need to be AWAY from trauma rather than into it (if at all possible).  While my continual moving/changing locations was often hard on my children, I never met changes in this process that presented a challenge I could not meet one way or the other.  There were tough times and hardships to face but conquer them I could – and did — again, one way or the other.

It has always been the challenges on the inside of me that I have most found impossible to resolve.  Understanding is a high-priced item.

Even as I contemplate the work I have ahead of me to face the writing of my childhood memories, I have no hope of resolving anything.  I can do no more than travel backward into trauma experiences hoping that good will come out of this book in the future once it has been written.

It is not my nature to move backward in time.  It is in my nature to run into the future.  Any hope for relief I ever had as a child existed in some unknown moment in the future when a beating would finally end, or when I could go to the bathroom or eat or leave confinement in a corner or my bed.  Any hope for resolution of problems I continue to have resides in the infinite possibilities of the future.

These patterns have always been about survival.  Hope for survival is the same thing as survival itself.  No matter which way I turn this book writing task around in my thoughts, continued survival is all that I see.  Anything else that ever happens in my life is a mere ripple in that great ocean of “To be alive means only that I move into my future,” and I do not stop.

I would not sing a song backwards.  One doesn’t put a puzzle together backwards, either, or one would be taking it apart instead.  I have enjoyed ‘making things’ with my hands all of my life since my age two (that I know of), and these acts of creation are also about moving forward into the future, not backward into the past.

Even though this book I am working on is about my past I have to find a way to ‘move it into my future’ — one word at a time — or it will never be written at all.

NOTE:  My force-of-life was focused forward when I was growing up, not backward.   I moved forward in time AWAY from an attack — certainly never did I move forward in time TOWARD an attack — I was nearly ALWAYS surprised when I was attacked again out of nowhere — I could not predict, control, avoid or escape any of them.  Forward memory (future memory) in the brain is about anticipation and prediction — when traumatic chaos builds an infant-child’s brain these processes are changed.

Retrospect is meant to be an ability in the brain that allows us to take what we learn from the past that’s useful for the future.  Early severe infant-abuse trauma does not create the opportunity to learn a single thing from violent, unpredictable, insane chaos (something any sane growing brain-mind is going to run from as soon, as fast and as far as it can).

What I am talking about today is part of what it IS like and FEELS like to have one of the ‘evolutionarily altered brains’ described in this article:

The neurobiological consequences of early stress and childhood maltreatment.

Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews 27 (2003) 33-44

Martin H. Teicher, Susan L. Andersen, Ann Polcari, Carl M. Anderson, Carryl P. Navalta, Dennis M. Kim

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+SOFT-EYED PEOPLE IN THIS HARD-EYED CULTURE

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I refuse to be faced with what feels like a problem without at the same time searching for a solution.  I need this balance, and after writing my previous two posts – and as I work on my book – I am greatly in need of some new and deeper understandings.

I was blessed about seven years ago with having a very special horse woman show up temporarily in my life.  She is long gone from this area and I doubt I will ever encounter her again in this lifetime.  Yet today her words came to me clearly, “We must not be afraid to look at the world with SOFT EYES, like horses do.”

In remembering her words this morning I searched online and was gifted immediately with the perfect source of the information I am looking for.  I highly recommend readers take a look here:

The website is titled ‘Shift – Journal of Alternatives:  Neurodiversity and social change’

The article that concerns me is titled, ‘Horse-Assisted Therapy and Eye Contact ’, written by Rachel Cohen-Rottenberg.  This article first appeared at ‘Journeys with Autism’.  Cohen-Rottenberg has also published a book titled, ‘The Uncharted Path:  My Journey with Late-Diagnosed Autism’.  She also published in 2011, ‘

Blazing My Trail: Living and Thriving with Autism ‘.

In the article — Horse-Assisted Therapy and Eye Contact — about her experiences in equine therapy Cohen-Rottenberg writes:

A few weeks back, I had an interesting conversation with my instructors, Victoria and Frank, about how to make eye contact with horses.  Victoria began by telling me that predators tend to have eyes in the front of their faces and that they stare at their prey in a very focused way.  Prey animals, however, tend to have eyes on the sides of their faces, allowing for a great deal of peripheral vision that increases their safety.  She encouraged me to try and look at the world like a horse by relaxing my focus and having “soft eyes” that could take in all the information in my peripheral vision.  She then told me that I have to use soft eyes when looking at a horse, because if you make very focused eye contact with a horse, the horse will think you’re a predator, break eye contact, and try to get away from you.  I had already noticed that making direct eye contact with a horse made the horse very uncomfortable, but I hadn’t understood why.”  Read entire article by clicking on its title/link

NOTE:  I am so SOFT EYED and correspondingly SOFT HEARTED right now when I looked at the horse’s eye posted with the above article I cried.  My tears are not veiled from me right now…..  By the way, survivors of early severe infant-child abuse ARE a neurodiverse group of people due to the changes traumatic stress caused in our physiological body-brain development!

++

Humans are by nature and by design both predator and prey.  Those of us whose body-brain was forced to change in development due to extreme traumatic stress exposure during our earliest months and years of life are too familiar with being prey.

The interactions between an abusive mother and her infant do not allow the process to unfold correctly as our right emotional-social brain is forming that includes this same pattern described in this article.  When infants are overly stimulated they will look away from the face of their caregiver.  This movement accomplishes two main physiologically necessary objectives:  (1) looking away diminishes incoming stimulation, and (2) during the time the infant is looking away it is not only down-regulating stimulation to prevent being overwhelmed, it is also processing and integrating the information it has just received into its rapidly developing right brain.

As I have stated numerous times before on this blog, adults do exactly the same thing with a ‘double twist’.  When an adult breaks eye contact with someone in conversation and turns their head to the RIGHT, they are attempting to downplay stimulation at the same time they are accessing the OPPOSITE side of their brain to process the information – LEFT brain being predominately ordered and logical.  If they turn their head to the LEFT they are exercising this same process but are using the RIGHT social-emotional hemisphere of their brain for this purpose.

++

Personally, as I work on this second draft of my book I am choosing to relax what could be or might be a more toughened, hardened, closed, defensive inner way of working that would be more likely to protect me from the emotional experience of my past and of my past as I write it NOW.

I am choosing to write with my SOFT EYES which creates an open, vulnerable, sensitive and risky position of exposure to an entirely different – and deeper – level of my truth.  Because I am working to write an honest book based on my own truth and integrity, I have to write with these SOFT EYES.

I also mention that as I wrote in my previous post, +BLAMING MYSELF THAT I AM NOT ‘ALL BETTER NOW’, I can clearly see children’s SOFT EYES with my own SOFT EYES.  I call this innocence in children that I believe is rarely seen in adult eyes in our culture, as Cohen-Rottenberg mentions in her article about the ‘nature’ of our HARD EYED culture.

I need to give myself permission to be MY OWN SELF, and this self I am right now is a SOFT EYED person.  I was my abusive mother’s PREY for the first 18 years of my life – and she was one helluva predator.  But the other side to this picture is that I am in my soul essence a SOFT EYED, sensitive, creative, gentle person.  I suppose by nature I was at double risk as Mother’s prey.  But I am not about to change who I am, although I often wish I had the flexible adativeness to have HARD EYES when I need them ‘out in the world’.

If I had the money I would love to participate in equine therapy.  I NEED IT!  Maybe someday… In the meantime it is helpful for me to understand that I live in a culture that is not matched to my personality or gifts, and that I would experience conflicts related to this mismatch even if I had not been so abused.  Without the abuse, however, I would not have to deal with the very difficult-to-deal-with consequences in my body that complicate every single thing I feel, know and do in this lifetime.

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+BLAMING MYSELF THAT I AM NOT ‘ALL BETTER NOW’

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What people do not seem to understand, and by people I mean myself also, is that a child being raised by an abusive Borderline mother is NEVER safe.  Although I was the ‘special’ child of our family singled out for the severe abuse, every time Mother attacked me in any way including verbally, all my siblings received witness abuse at the same time.

I hate to say this, I hate to know this, I hate to live with this — but at 60 years old I am finally coming to realize that the wounds I have from the 18 years of abuse I went through ARE NOT GOING TO HEAL IN THIS LIFETIME.

I don’t choose to feel anxious during my days, or choose to be overwhelmed by the madness I see in most human contact, or choose to wake up as I did before dawn today crying with tears soaking my pillow — for NO GOOD REASON — except that these 18 years of unhealed wounds make me SAD!

So why do I feel guilty that I am sad and anxious?  Why do I feel I made that choice to wake in the dark of predawn crying?  Why do I burden myself with feeling so responsible for not being 100% OK if I ‘chose to be’?

++

Last night I was happy to accept the invitation of a friend who lives in town on the boulevard that surrounds this small town’s only real park to help her distribute the $150 worth of Halloween candy she bought to the crowds out wandering the streets last evening.  I sat beside my friend on the brick bench on her well-lit wide porch as friend divided the candy ‘donations’ into equal-sized piles while I handed them out as fast as I could to streaming hundreds of people.

I felt as if I were parched nearly to death for the light of pure joy in people’s eyes.  Not only were the joy-filled costumed little people such a great delight to me to see, but also even the teens, and also the parents and older siblings and grandparents that accompanied these little people.

I was very sad not to be with my daughter and 20-month grandson last night as they trailed out to collect the treats where they live nearly 2000 miles away from me.  Some of my inner tears are from that loss.  Yet it was all I could do last night to keep my tears from streaming down my face as I looked into the eyes especially of the children under age 7 that came up to me on that porch with such a bright light shining in their eyes.

If anyone doubts the love of God that created we humans in this world let them donate their time, and maybe some candy, too, and offer to go help someone in one of those ‘fancier’ houses where the hoards like to swarm on Halloween eve.  That is a job, that candy-giving!!  Three hours, non-stop children/families, and what I needed to see for myself last night was that perfection in children that I can so seldom see in grownups.

In that perfection, in the eyes of nearly all of those children (I did see its opposite in the eyes of one boy), is absolute trust.  In that perfection is an innocence that is born by NOT being a continual punching bag for one or more hate-filled parents.  There is, unfortunately, no reason to believe that all of those children I watched last night are safe all of the time from harm done to them by big people.  But at least I could see last night they were safe THEN.

An abusive Borderline’s children are prey.  Prey are never safe if they cannot escape the presence and threat of their own personal predator.  A never-ending viscous circle of never being safe.  If I had been out with my mother like those children were last night I would have had to ALWAYS be alert to where she was, what she was expressing, hyper alert to everything about me in the world!

I was never safe as a child.  If I had been one of those children who forgot to say Trick-or-Treat, or forgot to say thank you, or tripped on the hem of my costume or slipped on a step or stood in the wrong place or walked in the wrong place or looked up when I should have looked down??   An infraction such as that could, with my mother, have nearly cost me my life in violent and complicated punishments that ALWAYS included the evils of verbal abuse.

And certainly Mother cost me my happiness.  It is probably my biggest problem in my life that I hold myself responsible for these unhealed wounds from her that I never asked for, never deserved, could not avoid — these wounds that woke me crying from my sleep this morning.  I DID NOT ASK for this — not THEN — not NOW.

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+DREAM OF THE GREAT TREE FALLING

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I so seldom remember my dreams any more, yet I woke this morning with a dream from last night clearly in my mind.  “What,” I wonder to myself, “is the meaning in this dream that it would bring itself into my memory this morning?”

I don’t know what meaning there might be in this dream, so I will write it now to see if something about it makes special sense to me…..

I am looking out a window at a night sky so black there is no light to be seen anywhere.  I watch the darkness.  I see a faint glimmer of light growing behind a massive shape I take at first to be a gigantic thunderhead cloud.  “What a storm must be coming!”  I think to myself, but as I continue to watch, and as the light behind this shape begins to grow I see the shape is that of a pine tree so big I could never have imagined one so tall.

The sky continued to lighten until the wide branches were visible to me of this tree nearly all the way to the ground.  But then fear seized me as I realized this massive tree was tipping, tipping, tipping toward me until it crashed to the earth with its topmost branches brushing up against the window I was behind, though the glass did not break.  I realized I was not crushed to death as I stood there unharmed.

I felt great sorrow for this great tree’s death as I left the window frantically trying to find someone to tell, someone to care that the tallest, oldest tree on earth had fallen over this night — and had fallen right here on this spot.

I could find no one to listen to me.  Time passed in the dream.  Later I happened by another window in this house I was inside and through this window I could see the tree from a different perspective.  That tree was just an ordinary tree!  There was nothing especially huge about it.  Now I could see its whole body laying there on the ground, being maybe 40 feet long from root to tip.

I woke up hearing the Beatles’ song, ‘Let it Be’ repeating in my mind.  All very puzzling to me.

++

I traveled to a meeting out of town yesterday with some friends.  I met a woman there for the first time and rode home with her as we each talked about our histories of extreme child abuse.  This woman knows with no doubt and with great faith that she was not killed in her infancy by abuse from her schizophrenic mother and bipolar father because she was saved by the grace of God.  (She was eventually removed from her parents and raised by other loving family members, but her entire childhood was still chaotic and very difficult.)

This woman and I both know what it felt like to be abused when we were little.  And yet this woman’s other clear statement about her childhood was this:  “Pain is pain.  Hurt is hurt.  It is all the same.  Anyone who ever feels pain and hurt is feeling the same thing.”

++

As I left my house yesterday to attend this meeting I walked away from my book writing at the point I need to pick up at today.  I am working on my final draft of a chapter about the first beating I remember that happened when I was 22 1/2 months old.

No doubt at that time I did feel like a tiny person with a monster tree falling on top of me to crush me to death.  What is my perspective today at 60 years old as I return to my memory of being so little?  Do I stop my own writing with questions like this:  “Why do I bother to write about something from so long ago when I had no other perspective about something that matters so little to anyone else?”

My problem is that my body still remembers NOW exactly what it felt like to have that abuse happen to me.  I did NOT remember the abuse for much of my adulthood because I could manage to never THINK about it.  It seemed I could outrun my own history.  I had simply walked away from it when I was 18 without any perspective or understanding of what had happened to me.

I got away with this ‘not remembering’ for the years I raised my children, but I am finding that as I age it has become impossible for me to ‘not remember’ anymore, though I wish that I could.   All I can do now is to continue to move forward each moment of my life the best that I can, trying to keep a perspective as I write for this book that basically lets me know both the big tree and the little tree, the little me and the big me, coexist now together in a unique way especially until this book writing is done.

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+LINK TO IMPORTANT LINK ON BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER (bpd)

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For those readers who suffered infant-child abuse at the hands of a Borderline mother, please take a scan through the information at this link.  There is a synopsis of research along with my commentary:

*MENTALIZATION

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+IMPORTANT INFORMATION ON THE PHYSIOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTAL CHANGES CAUSED BY INFANT-CHILD ABUSE

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I would like to encourage readers to take a look through the research on the effects of child abuse on physiological development included in my earlier post at this link:

+EARLY CHILDHOOD ADVERSE EXPERIENCES

SEE ALSO:  ++IMMUNE RESPONSE TO MATERNAL SEPARATION

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+WRITING A BOOK ‘FOR ALL REASONS’ OR FOR NONE AT ALL?

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What is this book going to be?  Is it possible to address its main text to a very wide audience?  This has not been defined in my mind yet, or in my daughter’s either.  How many men would read a book on my topic compared to women?  Mothers and fathers, daughters and sons, people of all reading levels, many levels of education, some with their own trauma and child abuse histories, some with no trauma or child abuse history, some with ‘recovery’, some with none at all?

I was thinking today how the ‘me’ that has this story to tell is not the ‘me’ that lives in my day-to-day world.  The ‘me’ that has this story to tell lives behind a veil.  It is I today with the words, not that other ‘me’.

The ‘me’ that I am today, the ‘me’ that I have gradually become since the day I left home at 18, practiced to fit into other people’s world, those that I have encountered along my way, at any rate.  The ‘me’ with the story never fit in anywhere.  I share that with ‘her’ — the not fitting in.  I STILL don’t fit in anywhere.  I don’t belong.  My history of 18 years of severe abuse did that to me — that I have not ever really been able to change.

So I am not sure I can write to any audience, really.  I can guess.  I can try to tell a story that has interest and meaning to other people.  But I wonder, “Why would my story mean anything more to anyone than the girl did that I was while I lived through that hell?”

How does a single, singular story stop being exactly that?  Where and how does a story cross that veil, cross that barrier between self and other?  How do our stories achieve meaning to anyone else besides our own self?

What is significant about my story?  There are so many other things I would rather be doing right now.  The kind of things I used to do without thought or question — just meandering down the road of my life.  Why now do I believe I have this JOB to do?  Why do I believe that it matters to anyone else if I write my story from behind the veil or not?

There is no glitz or glamor in my story.  There will be nothing spectacular in this story.  Only truth.

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Worth a look:  Combating child abuse and its effects

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+BOOK WRITING AND BEING NICE TO THE FROGS IN THE WATER

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I am obviously breaking my own vow of silence not to write on this blog until I have finished the second rough draft of my book.  Oh well, as some say, vows are made to be broken.  I am paying attention to the sentence related to yesterday’s post that must have something to teach me in this process or it would never have appeared in the first place, and certainly would not have stuck around.

What, I ask myself, do I need to know that is contained in this statement?   I tell myself I want readers of my book to close its covers afterward and think, “My!  My!  That was the nicest book about child abuse I have ever read.”

I sent my chapter four I worked hard on yesterday via email to someone last night.  This guinea pig messaged back to me that it needs to be rewritten because the wording is redundant and makes the brain tired in its reading.  They next messaged that they immediately went to find their snippers to trim their nose hair, a task that had been long overdue.

OK.  THAT worked!

Hum……..

Better I have this information now — than later.

Now what?

“Frogs in pots of boiling water,” I think to myself.  I doubt it’s true that if one throws a frog into a pot of lukewarm water and turns the heat up under it slowly that the frog won’t ever notice it was boiled to death.  Is it true that if one instead drops a frog into an already boiling pot of water it will be able to immediately leap out to safety?

But I do understand by my guinea pig’s response to my chapter four that I can make some very real efforts in my book writing about horrendous infant-child abuse to not only make a reader’s experience NICE, but to make their reading of the story possible at all.

++

Next I think about losing something important that we need to find.  Do we need to dump a purse out and rummage through its contents?  Do we need to dump out our tool box and do the same?  Our kitchen junk drawer?  (I realize as I write this that I have lived in this house for five years, and for the first time in my adult life I have NO kitchen junk drawer!)  What are we looking for?  We will never know until we first ask a question.

Then I next think about something therapists call ‘transference’ and ‘counter transference”.  All abused children experience transference when the big people in their life dump their junk onto their children — brutally.

There is acceptable transference between a client and a therapist as a client begins to rummage around in the accumulated, pain-filled junk in their life.  It is common for clients to temporarily dump parts of their junk onto their therapist’s desktop.  The therapist needs to know how to handle this transference for the betterment of their client’s well-being.

Then there is counter transference that happens as a therapist ‘picks up’ information from their client that comes through as feelings, thoughts, ideas and attitudes in the therapist that invisibly belong to the client.  This can also happen dangerously when a therapist dumps their own junk back onto a poor client!

The important thing is that counter transference contains vital information needed in a therapy process.  Therapists are trained to recognize and to handle this entire process on both sides skillfully and well.  How much of this process will go on between what I say in my book and how readers experience my story?  How do I be responsible for this process when I will not be able to see it happening?

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My book is a story about horrendous piles of junk.  The junk is mine.  And yet I would be stupid not to recognize that there will be readers with abusive and traumatic histories of their own who get their own junk mixed up with what they are reading about mine.  I need to be as NICE as I can to my readers by choosing carefully how this process unfolds.

Many readers will have trauma histories of their own that have not been resolved.  They therefore probably have questions about what happened to them, either consciously or not.  As my story unfolds before their eyes these questions will awaken.  Some of them might clamor loudly for answers.  Some questions might whisper.  Some questions might silently sneak around in the corners of readers’ mind as uncomfortable feelings that can lead readers to abandon the story I am trying to tell them.

But I do know from froggie reader #1 that no reader will tolerate being given answers for questions before the reader has had the questions awakened within them.

Nor will readers be able to tolerate the reading of my book about child abuse until they have gained some comfort in the boiling waters of hell this story is about.  If readers have traumatic abuse histories of their own they need to be able to recognize gradually that what they are thinking and feeling as they read my book is not about me.  Their reactions will have a whole lot to do with what lies unhealed in their self.  I do not want my readers to abandon ship before the ship has even been unmoored or left port.

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+BOOK WRITING: GOTTA COMPLAIN ABOUT COMPLAINING

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It does seem like a rather unlikely fact that I had to learn in my adulthood how to complain.  I didn’t know it was possible to complain when I was a child.  I wonder when my first episode of complaining hit me?  I have to admit, though not compliment myself (I don’t think) that I know so well how to complain today!

Yup, I am complaining today that the story I am working on isn’t coming out easily, and is not an easy read!  Go figure!  I find myself continually wondering how I can make my story more pleasant and more attractive to read – one word at a time.

Now, let me see…..  Gee!  In the next chapter or two I am going to describe the first terrible beating I received from my mother, with my father watching, when I was 20 months old.  Gee…..  Now, how can I write that easily OR make it an easy read?

I think I have a paradox here.  Or is it an oxymoron?  Maybe we can market this book when it’s done:  “COME AND GET IT!  COME AND GET IT!  A child abuse story that’s easy to read and was sure a snap for the author to write!”

OK.  I admit it.  I am whining.  I am complaining.  Nope, I never had one thought of complaint for all those years of suffering I went through.  I guess if complaining had come easy to me nobody would have had to teach me to do it.  Nobody would have been able to prevent me from complaining, either.

Definition of COMPLAIN

1: to express grief, pain, or discontent <complaining about the weather>

2: to make a formal accusation or charge

The word comes from a Latin derivative of ‘lament’ – ‘to mourn or deplore’

I guess as a child I could not mourn what I didn’t know I had.  I had no IDEA that I was being maltreated, tormented, abused.  Where was I going to get THAT idea?  Of course I saw that what happened to me didn’t happen to my siblings.  But I also had been heartily informed from the moment of my birth that I was different from them.  I was BAD.  They were GOOD.

I got what I served.  There was nothing to mourn or lament or complain about when it came to facts.  It was a FACT I was bad.  After all, what good child tries to kill its mother while it’s being born?

Oh, well.  I suppose today it’s a very natural consequence that I complain NOW about what I am writing about what happened to me THEN.  I WANT to be able to write a different story.  A NICE story.  So some part of me is probably angry at God right now.  Angry at accident?  Angry at chance?  Angry at destiny?

NO!  I am angry that nobody HELPED ME!

Well, at least I expect myself to be able to write a story about hell that is NICE to read!!  That makes me chuckle, I must admit!  What will be nice about this story is to be done writing it!!  Making this story not only palatable to readers but ATTRACTIVE to them very well might be far, far, far outside the range of what I have control over accomplishing.

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Answers to many questions – found at this post: 

+HOP! HOP! THE BLOG FROG’S PICK OF PAST POSTS

I need to return to the book writing!!  Lots to read at this link above in the meantime!!!!  Please also click through the months’ of posts connected to the archive links on the right side of this blog.  This blog’s top search bar can also be used to locate posts with topic related to child abuse and the Trauma Altered Development it causes in its survivors.

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+READING HUMAN EXPRESSION IN FACE AND BODY – THE DETRIMENT CAUSED BY INFANT ABUSE

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Sometimes it is very difficult for me to explain to readers much of the critically important information that exists about how early relationship trauma changes the way the brain develops.  The most important relationship an infant has from birth is WITH ITS MOTHER.  The most important brain region’s development being determined by the quality of a mother-infant face-to-face, body-to-body happens in the right social-emotional brain hemisphere before the infant reaches its first birthday.

I know that I did not have an adequate relationship with my abusive Borderline Personality Disorder mother so that I could develop my right brain correctly.  ALL insecurely attached infants suffer changes in this brain region’s ability to process social emotional information because their mother could not do it properly for the INFANT.  Mother’s literally DOWNLOAD their own brain into the growing brain of their infant.  This is a horrific thought for those of us who had troubled mothers.

A friend of mine on Facebook posted a video I watched last night that is a great one for those of us who suffered right brain developmental changes due to traumas before we were one year old.  This is about an hour long but can be paused and returned to over time.

PLEASE CHECK THIS VIDEO OUT!!

ESPECIALLY because this video DOES NOT INCLUDE WORDS it provides an excellent healing opportunity for infant abuse and neglect survivors to watch the body language and ESPECIALLY the facial expressions of the participants in these funny scenarios.  Normally people can READ these signals accurately.  Infant abuse and neglect survivors CANNOT do this normally.  Be aware as you watch it that what you are seeing is what NORMAL people know BECAUSE those communication abilities were built into their brain during the first year of their life by SAFE and SECURE interactions with healthy mothers.

In watching the movie, Temple Grandin, last week I had yet another opportunity to apply what I now know about myself as an abuse survivor.  Autistic people’s right social-emotional brain does not process information normally, either.  My brain is more like THIS than it is like normal.  I have learned to understand body language and facial expressions, as well as expressive intonations in speech by WATCHING other people – just as Temple Grandin has.

This means that BEING HUMAN in all its wide range of communication abilities is NOT our first language!!  We are ALWAYS at a disadvantage when it come to understanding what being a communicative, expressive human being is truly about.

Watching this video at the link above presents a wonderful opportunity to study what I am talking about.  I wish I could slow the video down.  The actual MUSCLE responses in the face humans use for expression are sending singles at the rate of one every tiny fraction of a millisecond.  In fact, it has only been in the past decade that researchers have had sophisticated enough photographic abilities to be able FINALLY to stop-action the stages involved in mother-infant facial communications accurately.

Again I refer to Dr. Allan Schore’s important (yes, and obtuse) article that describes how all humans either acquire or DO NOT acquire necessary brain-based abilities to follow and to participate in these human communication strategies in a normal way.

EFFECTS OF A SECURE ATTACHMENT RELATIONSHIP ON RIGHT BRAIN DEVELOPMENT, AFFECT REGULATION, AND INFANT MENTAL HEALTH by Dr. Allan N. Score – IMPORTANT ARTICLE

ARTICLE BY DR. ALLAN SCHORE:  ATTACHMENT AND THE REGULATION OF THE RIGHT BRAIN

Google search Allan Schore along with ‘infant mother attachment’ for further reading

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Answers to many questions – found at this post: 

+HOP! HOP! THE BLOG FROG’S PICK OF PAST POSTS

I need to return to the book writing!!  Lots to read at this link above in the meantime!!!!  Please also click through the months’ of posts connected to the archive links on the right side of this blog.  This blog’s top search bar can also be used to locate posts with topic related to child abuse and the Trauma Altered Development it causes in its survivors.

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