+INFANT-CHILD ABUSE: THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN HERO AND VICTIM

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Somehow I must think I would be pretentious or audacious to think of myself as a writer – but maybe I am anyway.  If so, words are the tools of a writer’s craft be one a poet or a songwriter or a writer of plays or stories true or imagined.  I am tracking a thought of mine today in between my writing for the book and this must MATTER to me because the use of one of the following words instead of the other makes – to me – a universe of difference.

Hero or victim?  Now, this must be coming from the writer-in-me (obviously, I’m writing this) who ‘says’ to me, “You were never a victim.  For all the terrible abuse your mother did to you, you were NOT a victim.  You were a hero.”

Next thought:  In order to have the LUXURY of being a victim rather than a hero one must be in a place of SAFETY rather than in one of threat, danger and harm.  The VICTIM part comes after-the-fact when there’s somebody there to CARE!  Being a victim does not happen while we are enduring alone.

That would mean that VICTIM is a word other people use to describe something from the OUTSIDE of the tragic-traumatic experience.  It is (probably) NOT a word the one who experiences the abuse ever thinks about – unless somehow someone OUTSIDE of the situation has given this hero the word and the thoughts and feelings that might go with it.

I am traveling back to before I was born in my book-writing process, and although I have made a deal with myself not to discuss what is happening with THAT writing, I wanted to let the writer-in-me have this say about these two words.

I will not be able to go back to any abuse memory from my early life, not even into the memory of a terrible beating and find myself in the midst of those traumas feeling, thinking or acting in ANY WAY like a so-called victim.  I bore what was done to me.  I endured.  I survived.  I was then and still am now A HERO!!

Now – I am safe.  I have people around me who love me and care.  But I have NO ONE, not one single person in my life who perceives me in any way as a ‘victim’.  I like that just fine!

Yet I also know that all infants and children who are being maltreated are being ‘victimized’ – but just as those actions against little ones are done by the big people, so does the word ‘victim’ belong to them.  The little ones who are suffering – and YES there is much suffering — their only choice is to a HERO.

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+MISSING: AN ARCHETYPE FOR THE HERO THAT IS A CHILD AS IT ENDURES ABUSE

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I have put some careful thought into deciding to write this post considering I might be breaking my own book-writing rule by doing so.  While I am in the process of answering the 19 questions my daughter is feeding to me one at a time I wanted to retain all my ‘inner information’ in reserve, in a reservoir, so that nothing that belongs in the book that is my story will be drained off into some other direction.  Now I have reached a point as I begin to write my response to Question #3 that leaves me unable to move until I DO drain something from that reservoir that I have decided does not belong to the book.

What I need to write about here is more like a log jam that is preventing me from clearing my thoughts enough to proceed with what the book needs.  So I am going to tear apart that log jam, let out what needs to go elsewhere, at the same time that I will then discover if there is anything about these thoughts that has a ‘deeper’ and relevant meaning for my truth that is going into this book.

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Yesterday as I worked in the mud to finish the east side of my adobe-project yard, and just as I finally located the exact spot where I am going to install my new umbrella clothesline so I can dismantle the long lines that are draped across my main walkways, and under which I have had to carefully duck my head each time I walk past their direction, my little just-turned-six year old neighbor girl came over to visit.

As I soaked this chosen spot with water to soften the earth enough that I could begin to dig a hole for the clothesline post this girl, I’ll call her Jay, fiddled around with the plastic sleeve that needs to be settled into the hole so the main pole can slip solidly into it.  Bright green in its pristine newness, the tubular plastic sleeve finally had to be placed into the muddy, slimy, soupy muck in the hole I was digging so I could see how much deeper I had to dig.

“Oh, no!”  Jay changed her voice, speaking for the new green sleeve-tube.  “I am all clean!  Please don’t put me in that hole and make me all dirty!  I will have to go take a shower!”

I explained to her the process I was going through to put up my new clothesline, but she remained completely immersed in her little girl world of what my mother would have called ‘make-believe’.  (A healthy child normally passes through this ‘make-believe’ stage by the age of seven.  My mother never did.  She remained in a twisted version of that stage for the rest of her life.)

“OK,” she finally spoke for the green sleeve.  “You can make me go into that dirty mud.  You can make me stay there.  But I’m never going to like it.”

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As she spoke these words another entirely different train of thought that had been working its way through my mind all day as I worked on my yard flitted again into my mind-sight.  In that image I saw Atlas holding up the world on his shoulders.  I had been thinking before my company arrived about what are called the archetypes that some believe lie underneath all that humanity can be conscious of, that govern behavior as they lie within the stream of ancient, ancient human experience and appear in our psychology.

I had been thinking earlier about the ‘hero’ archetypes in relationship to my childhood with my Borderline abusive mother.  I thought about the first book I ever encountered that finally helped me to ‘name’ what had been so wrong with my mother:

Understanding the Borderline Mother: Helping Her Children Transcend the Intense, Unpredictable, and Volatile Relationship – Paperback (July 1, 2002) by Christine Ann Lawson

This morning I pulled that same volume from my bookshelf and noticed the many sticky-note tags I placed on so many of its pages seven years ago when I read it.  I flipped through its pages and saw all the underlining I had done then, all the stars I had drawn beside certain passages, the notes I had written in the margin.  Yes, this book had been a milestone marker along my latest journey of healing, but I also know I will never bother to read that book again.

And, yes, that book does write about Borderline mothers by defining various archetypal patterns they can act out in their lives.

Yet what I was thinking yesterday about Atlas being an unnamed hero who was left to carry the weight of the world upon his shoulders – and what combined with hearing how Jay was processing from her child’s point of view what I was processing in my adult view of putting in a clothesline pole – was that I have never seen anyone write about how the archetypes that might govern the experience of the mind of a young child are probably (they have to be!) so much different than the ones that govern adult ones.

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My mother didn’t wake up suddenly one morning in adulthood and simply ‘become’ a Borderline.  The malaise that swallowed up my mother didn’t simply one day cast its shadow over her and stay there following her around for the rest of her life.  What became of my mother long past her childhood was directly a result of malevolent experiences she had had long before she was even Jay’s age.

And here was Jay before me yesterday living out a life stage that I know is the same one in which the final throes of trying to make sense out of the universe she had been born into pushed her into what might be called a ‘pre-Borderline’ condition that was destined to eventually destroy her.

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Here I begin to reach the point in my own thoughts were the book information is intersecting the thoughts I am writing here.  I searched Google for ‘archetype women hero’ and found a page that lists what are considered to be these images especially as they are presented in ‘literature’.

From the Desk of Tami Cowden:  The Women We Want to Be – The Eight Female Archetypes

There I was yesterday arguing in my thoughts, down on my knees in the mud shoving cement into the hole to hold up the now-filthy sleeve that will hold up my new clothesline, as I concluded, “There is something WRONG with this picture.  I know there is.  There is nothing in these existing descriptions about women and archetypes that accurately describes the experience of abused children – who survive.”

There IS another kind of hero (be it female or male).  This hero does not fight battles, does not have any but one single motive:  To endure.

In more ordinary circumstances endurance is no big deal, but in the midst of horrific overwhelming traumatic circumstances ANYONE of ANY age can (hopefully) do this one main thing:  Endure.

The image I had come to me of Atlas holding up the world FELT to me to describe both what my mother did and what I did.  Only as severe early abuse and trauma survivors (ANY unresolved trauma survivors) we hold the burden of the world of trauma INSIDE our body, not on our shoulder.  The trauma builds our body-brain at the same time it builds itself into us.  We cannot put this burden down.

I found an interesting website last night in which the author describes what the name, Atlas, means:

The name of Atlas indeed derives from the Greek radix tla meaning “to bear”, preceded by the negative affix a, meaning “not”. Hence, the name of Atlas literally means “the one unable to bear [the skies]”. Such is the reason why Atlas (and other Titans like himself) are often portrayed with weak, serpentine legs.” – Copyright ©1997-2005 Arysio Nunes dos Santos. All Rights reserved. Please click here for more information about the copyright of this page and website. – “The true history of Atlantis” by Prof Arysio Nunes dos Santos online

And from the website answers.com:

  • An “Atlas” or “atlas” is an incredibly strong person or one who carries an enormous burden.

Now THIS feels accurate.  Thinking about how Jay processed her experience and about how I was processing my experience of putting in a clothesline pole in mud and cement, and thinking about how my mother processed her life of trauma that happened to her as a child, and thinking about my own self (as the book is describing) as I went through my own early traumas of abuse, I recognized that VICTIM – as a word and as an archetype – IS NOT THE RIGHT IMAGE.

‘Victim’ is a grown-up word.  It has no place in the world or vocabulary or thoughts of a child.  What infants do, what young children do is ENDURE while they bear a burden of trauma that is NOT their own.  The little ones HAVE NO CHOICE but to endure.  ‘Victim’ then becomes (to me) an arrogant, assaultive and insultive word that is a completely inaccurate word to apply to the reality of very young abuse survivors.

Early caregivers of infants and young children are supposed to buffer their offspring from adult trauma.  When this does not happen, and when those same adults are in fact harming and hurting these little ones, the young one is left in a place where nothing can change what happens to them – and they know it.  Certainly I knew it as I took my first breath.

These little ones – myself and my mother included – are left to bear the burden, endure, and survive.  That to me is a different kind of hero than the ones sorted and filtered into the descriptions of ‘hero’ I found in either of the two places I mentioned above.  Little ones live in a different world than adults do.  Jay does.  My mother did.  I did.

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Now, more than this I cannot write because I have made my attempt at clearing the log-jam in my thinking so I can move forward in writing my response to Question #3.  I will only provide a simple linking bridge to that ‘other side’ where that other writing is going on.

All the circumstances of my mother’s life intersected during the time she was in labor with me.  She suddenly, in the midst of that current-moment experience simple BROKE.  The burden she had carried all of her life became at the moment her psychosis about me was born MORE than she could bear.  How ironic to me in some ways that it was as I, her firstborn daughter was coming into the world (or even exactly as I was born and she was told ‘It’s a girl’) that my mother let go of HER burden and put it onto me.

I then became the next generation of Atlas hero.

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NOTE:  I discovered another interesting pattern in Jay’s current developmental stage of thinking yesterday.  She has watched me and helped me all the way through the work to build the adobe chicken coop and pen.  She saw these six chicks from the day I brought them home.  They are still young at one month old, and yesterday as I took her into the pen to sit with me and watch them she asked me, “When are you going to get the big chickens that will lay the eggs?  I want to see THOSE chickens!”

As hard as I tried to explain to her that these six young birds are the SAME ones that will grow up and lay the eggs she could not comprehend what I was telling her.  I tried to explain that they are like she is, and that she will grow up to be an adult.  I explained to her that every adult was once a baby and a child like she is now and that they grew up just like these young birds will.

She ABSOLUTELY did not understand what I was telling her because she COULD NOT.

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+BORROWING A POST: FIVE WAYS TO (INCREASED) WELL-BEING

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This post on the Prevent Child Abuse New York blog just felt GOOD to me as I read it, so thought I would share it with readers here.  These are not complicated or impossible things for us to do to improve well-being, as this post says.  Enjoy!

May 03, 2011

Five Ways to Well-being

Evidence suggests that a small improvement in well-being can help to decrease some mental health problems and also help people to flourish in many aspects of their lives.

The center for well-being at UK-based NEF (the New Economics Foundation) reviewed the inter-disciplinary work of over 400 scientists from across the world in order to develop “Five ways to well-being” a set of evidence-based actions to improve personal well-being.

  • Connect…Connect with the people around you. With family, friends, colleagues and neighbors. At home, work, school or in your local community. Think of these as the cornerstone of your life and invest time in developing them. Building these connections will support and enrich you everyday.
  • Be active…Go for a walk or run. Step outside. Cycle. Play a game. Garden. Dance. Exercise. Most importantly, discover a physical activity you enjoy and one that suits your level of mobility and fitness.
  • Take notice…Be curious. Catch sight of the beautiful. Remark on the unusual. Notice the changing seasons. Savor the moment, whether you are walking to work, eating lunch or talking to friends. Be aware of the world around you and what you are feeling. Reflecting on your experiences will help you appreciate what matters to you.
  • Keep learning…Try something new. Rediscover an old interest. Sign up for that course. Take on a different responsibility at work. Fix a bike. Learn to play an instrument or how to cook your favorite food. Set a challenge you will enjoy achieving. Learning new things will make you more confident as well as being fun.
  • Give…Do something nice for a friend, or a stranger. Thank someone. Smile. Volunteer your time. Join a community group. Look out, as well as in. Seeing yourself, and your happiness, linked to the wider community can be incredibly rewarding and creates connections with the people around you.

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About nef

nef (the New Economics Foundation) is an independent think-and-do tank that inspires and demonstrates real economic well-being.

We aim to improve quality of life by promoting innovative solutions that challenge mainstream thinking on economic, environment and social issues. We work in partnership and put people and the planet first.

nef was founded in 1986 by the leaders of The Other Economic Summit (TOES) which forced issues such as international debt onto the agenda of the G7 and G8 summits.

We are unique in combining rigorous analysis and policy debate with practical solutions on the ground, often run and designed with the help of local people. We also create new ways of measuring progress towards increased well-being and environmental sustainability.

nef works with all sections of society in the UK and internationally – civil society, government, individuals, businesses and academia – to create more understanding and strategies for change.

The pursuit of growth has failed on its own terms, and for people and the planet. We are working on a new way to structure the economy.
The first comprehensive international analysis of well-being provides an alternative measure of national progress to GDP.

Almost every country in the world uses GDP – Gross Domestic Product – to measure its success and social progress. But does GDP really capture what is really important to us? Does it measure what really matters?

Rises in GDP over the last thirty-five years have not resulted in increased human well-being. Once we’ve reached a certain level of material stabilitiy and comfort, increases in income don’t make us any happier. What’s more, by focusing so narrowly on growing GDP, we’ve increased inequality between the rich and poor, and are causing irreparable damage to the natural environment on which we depend. A growing number of academics and politicians have called for a new measure of progress, and nef has responded with the creation of National Accounts of Well-being.

National Accounts of Well-being uses comprehensive data from a survey of 22 European nations examining both personal and social well-being. Personal well-being describes people’s experiences of their positive and negative emotions, satisfaction, vitality, resilience, self-esteem and sense of purpose and meaning. Social well-being is made up of two main components: supportive relationships, and a feeling of trust and belonging. Together they form a picture of what we all really want: a fulfilling and happy life. With National Accounts of Well-being, policymakers have a new compass to guide us.

CHECK OUT THIS LINK!!!  Find out more at www.nationalaccountsofwellbeing.org

For all kinds of really cool info — and to take the (free) survey to measure your own level of well-being!  No kidding, this might be the best website I have ever encountered – LOVE IT! 

About Overall well-being | Indicators | Explore | National Accounts of Well-being

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Fight clone towns with Reimagine Your High Street: a new project helping communities protect, enhance and benefit from the places that matter to them.

New Economics Institute

The New Economics Institute is working to make the new economics, one which supports people and planet, mainstream in the United States. It is a partnership between the E. F. Schumacher Society, the predecessor of the Institute, and nef (the new economics foundation).

The US economic system is failing in its essential purpose: to provide fulfilling and healthy lives for all people while nurturing the social and natural systems on which the economic system depends. The New Economics Institute is helping people imagine the kind of economy that is designed to enhance human well-being and ecological health. To do this, it is forging a narrative and theory of such an economic system, showing how it is possible to get from here to there. It is setting out a new language for economics, which describes the world more effectively, and – using a combination of cutting edge economics and innovative communications – it is explaining how this new economics is already emerging.

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