Sunday, December 22, 2024

I do See Plenty of Traditional Old Traps Everywhere

 Dear V,


Thank you for writing. I’m happy to read that you got a lot more by reading my book for the second time and you feel supported by it.

To be a support to others that’s why I wrote my book sharing my story.

I too used to like the trap of yoga and believe it or not I got Kripalu yoga teachers training certificate before my emotional liberation when I was still looking for help and answers.

 Yoga is a very charming, alluring and seductive trap; it was another dead end or a trap.

Yoga is good practice to keep the body flexible, but like Al-Anon, kept me emotionally stuck for years.

Yoga is a great tool for strengthening the walls of repression and master the art of repression to perfection -- it helps us survive in our emotional prison, but will never help anyone resolve their childhood repression and  will not liberate anyone, to the contrary will create a trap so deep and walls so thick that very few will be able to escape from it, because it creates the illusion of freedom and well-being by helping people repress their authentic painful feelings completely and falsify them with feel-good feelings they don’t have, just like a chemical drug does, yoga is a mind-altering no chemical drug, but does not help people resolve their childhood repression and they will endless continue stuck unconsciously and compulsively reenacting their childhood  drama in one form or another sooner or later --- as long people's repression goes unresolved someone down the road will have to pay the price --- if not this generation -- a future generation will pay for this generation lack of courage to open their eyes to see, face and feel their own painful truths.

I agree with you, most “helpers” or “mental health professionals” working in institutions cause more harm than help by strengthening the walls of people’s emotional prisons  -- making it near to impossible for people to ever liberate themselves.

I feel for people that suffered extreme brain damage in their early years and depend on mental health professionals to help them.

To this day I have not met a mental health care provider that can provide real assistance in people’s healing and liberation, if you are not able to find the strength and courage to stand on your own two feet and create for yourself the space and time to heal, I am sorry to say, but you are screwed, because most likely you will not find an institution and mental health providers that can provide real assistance.  

However, I do see plenty of traditional old traps everywhere.  These words by Alice Miller come to mind: “when I am looking for them on the Internet I find plenty of esoteric and religious offers, plenty of denials, commercial interests, traditional traps, but not at all what I am looking for.”
 
I’m sorry you felt abandoned by these people casting themselves in the role of parent figures acting as if personality pretending to know better and to be more knowledgeable with memorized half-baked concepts they never experienced themselves to fool themselves and others.

This has been my experience throughout my life too. And I felt abandoned constantly, but now that I have developed my adult self -- I will not ever abandon myself no matter if others in the external world do.

If I had not found the books and website of Alice Miller for guidance and support to stand alone on my own two feet I would still be living in an emotional prison and would never have emotionally liberated myself from all these people along the way happy to cast themselves as substitute parent’ figures standing in symbolizing my parents or childhood caregivers. Like this psychologist from the Netherlands was trying to regress me into the state of the child and cast herself as my substitute mother figure.

I wish I had suggestions of what to say to your boyfriend, but I don’t. Once a person is an adult, only he can find the courage to open his eyes to see and feel. We can't force anyone to open their eyes to see. We can only offer to be a support to them if they find the courage to open their eyes to see and feel, but we have to be careful to not be used and manipulated by people that only are looking for enablers to support their avoidance behaviors and denials.

Most people are just looking for pacifiers, like for example yoga to soothe themselves. I refuse to be used as someone’s pacifier.

Wishing you courage and strength in your path to your truth and emotional liberation,

Sylvie

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Dictators

 

Here is an example that when power comes from the external world it can be taken away at any time. Is just sad that so many had to suffer horrifically for so long because of these mad dictators.

"The unconscious compulsion to revenge repressed injuries is more powerful than reason. That is the lesson that all tyrants teach us. One should not expect judiciousness from a mad person motivated by compulsive panic. One should, however, protect oneself from such a person." Alice Miller -- Breaking Down the Wall of Silence page 82

“Humiliations, spankings, and beatings, slaps in the face, betrayal, sexual exploitation, derision, neglect, etc. are all forms of mistreatment, because they injure the integrity and dignity of a child, even if their consequences are not visible right away. 

However, as adults, most abused children will suffer, and let others suffer, from these injuries. This dynamic of violence can deform some victims into hangmen who take revenge even on whole nations and become willing executors to dictators as unutterably appalling as Hitler and other cruel leaders.

Dictators and the dynamics of cruelty
Every dictator torments his people in the same way he was tormented as a child. The humiliations inflicted on these dictators in adult life had nothing like the same influence on their actions as the emotional experiences they went through in their early years. 

Those years are “formative” in the truest sense: in this period the brain records or “encodes” emotions without (usually) being able to recall them at will. 

As almost every dictator denies his sufferings (his former total helplessness in the face of brutality) there is no way that he can truly come to terms with them. 

Instead, he will have a limitless craving for scapegoats on whom he can avenge himself for the fears and anxieties of childhood without having to re-experience those fears.
Read more in the link below:

“The Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu knew nothing of the way he suffered as a child from having been pent up in one room with ten brothers and sisters in a state of extreme neglect. 

As an adult living in the monomaniacal opulence of luxurious palaces, he repressed all explicit memory of it. But implicit (body) memories of his childhood suffering remained, and they incited him to take vengeance on a whole nation. 

Like his own mother, the women in this dictatorship were not allowed to have abortions. Like his own parents, most couples in Romania were forced to have more children than they wanted or were able to take for. 

As a result, Romanian orphanages were full to bursting with youngsters displaying severe behavioral disorders and disabilities caused by extreme neglect. 

Who needed all those children? No one. Only the dictator himself, whose unconscious memories spurred him to commit atrocities and whose mental barriers prevented him from recognizing them as atrocities. "
Taken from the book “The Truth Will Set You Free” by Alice Miller

"I designate as pessimistic the thought that we are far more dependent than our pride would like to admit on individual human beings (and not only on institutions!), for a single person can gain control over the masses if he learns to use to his own advantage the system under which they were raised. People who have been "pedagogically" manipulated as children are not aware as adults of all that can be done to them. Like the individual authoritarian father, leader figures, in whom the masses see their own father, actually embody the avenging child who needs the masses for his own purposes (of revenge). And this second form of dependence--the dependence of the "great leader" on his childhood, on the unpredictable nature of the unintegrated, enormous potential for hatred within him--is decidedly a very great danger." Taken from the book "For Own Good: Hidden Cruelty in child-rearing and the Roots of Violence" by Alice Miller (page 243)

A great danger indeed

"Only unflinching realization of one’s own past reality, of what really happened can break through the chain of abuse. If I know and can feel what my parents did to me when I was totally defenseless, I no longer need victims to befog my awareness. I no longer need to reenact what happened to me with the help of innocent people because now I KNOW what happened. And if I want to live my life consciously, without exploiting others, then I must actively accept that knowledge.

...Am I saying that forgiveness for crimes done to a child is not only ineffective but actively harmful? Yes, that is precisely what I am saying. The body does not understand moral precepts. It fights against the denial of genuine emotions and for the admission of the truth to our conscious minds. This is something the child cannot afford to do, it has to deceive itself and turn a blind eye to the parents’ crimes in order to survive. Adults no longer need to do this, but if they do, the price they pay is high. Either they ruin their own health or they make others pay the price – their children, their patients, the people who work for them, etc." -- Alice Miller


The above excerpt from the article Deception Kills Love by Alice Miller

"It is not true that evil, destructiveness,
and perversion inevitably form part of
human existence, no matter how often this
is maintained. But it is true that we are
daily producing more evil and, with it, an
ocean of suffering for millions that is
absolutely avoidable. When one day the
ignorance arising from childhood
repression is eliminated and humanity
has awakened, an end can be put to the
production of evil.”
— Alice Miller, Banished Knowledge, p. 143

"Children who are told the truth and are not brought up to tolerate lies and cruelty can develop as freely as a plant whose roots have not been attacked by pests (in our case, lies)" Alice Miller 
And lies are the fuel that creates wars. 

The great malady of our society, implicated in all our troubles and affecting us individually and socially, is the idealization of our parents and childhood and the denial of childhood suffering. When we idealize our parents and childhood and deny childhood suffering, it does not go away. It appears symptomatically in obsessions, addictions, violence, greed, deceit, and loss of meaning. Our temptation is to isolate these symptoms or try to eradicate them one by one, but the root problem is the idealization of our parents and childhood and the denial of childhood suffering.

"...there is a difference between the powerless, legitimate rage of a desperate child that reacts to the cruelty of their parents and the rage of the adult who is attacking others out of denial of their history by imitating the behavior of own parents from the position of “power” (even grandiosity). The first rage (of the child) should be felt and expressed in therapy, it can be then RESOLVED. The second one (of the adult), directed toward scapegoats, can NEVER be resolved (see dictators). If therapists see it as an endpoint of their therapies and don't enable the patients to confront the early parents and the feelings of that time they do much HARM to them. Staying trapped in the hatred toward scapegoats can’t be the successful end of a therapy. I hope that you can continue your work if you have this difference in mind and can also explain it in your forum." Alice Miller 


"Pain is the way to the truth. By denying that you were unloved as a child, you spare yourself some pain, but you are not with your own truth. And throughout your whole life, you'll try to earn love. In therapy, avoiding pain causes blockage. Yet nobody can confront being neglected or hated without feeling guilty. "It is my fault that my mother is cruel," he thinks. "I made my mother furious; what can I do to make her loving?" So he will continue trying to make her love him. The guilt is really protection against the terrible realization that you are fated to have a mother who cannot love. This is much more painful than to think, "Oh, she is a good mother, it's only me who's bad." Because then you can try to do something to get love. But it's not true; you cannot earn love. And feeling guilty for what has been done to you only supports your blindness and your neurosis.

I try to reach the child in the readers and allow them to feel. I see my style as ranking keys. Everybody can take one so that they can go open their own door to find something. Or they can say no, I don't want to go through this door; I will return the key. I try to evoke feelings, and images. In this way, I offer keys to your own experience. You can then go look at your children and learn from them, not from me. Because only from your own experience can you really learn.

In my first studies, I was very abstract; I wanted to understand the most abstract ideas -- of Kant, Hegel, or Marx. My dissertation in philosophy was very abstract. Now I see that each philosopher had to build a big, big building in order not to feel his pain. Even Freud.

If a child has been molested and the therapist doesn't deny this fact, many things can open up in the patient. The therapist must not preach forgiveness, or the patient will repress the pain. He won't change, and the repressed rage will look for a scapegoat."

" . . . the anger felt by every individual person stems from the primary justified anger of the small child at the blows inflicted on it by the parents. The immediate expression of that anger is suppressed, but at a later stage this suppressed fury will be directed at innocent victims with uninhibited savagery." -- Alice Miller, "Free From Lies"

“If we hate hypocrisy, insincerity, and mendacity, then we grant ourselves the right to fight them wherever we can, or to withdraw from people who only trust in lies. But if we pretend that we are impervious to these things, then we are betraying ourselves.” Alice Miller  Free from Lies: Discovering Your True Needs page 55

The conversation about the effects of childhood repression in our society needs to start happening in the stage of the world, sooner rather than later, if we want to save ourselves and humanity from falling off the cliff and committing mass suicide. 

Having formal education or not has nothing to do with being a conscious person. 

Adolf Hitler was emotionally blinded by the repressed emotions of the child he once was; just like the masses that followed him. 

Society has not changed since then, and people still are emotionally blinded by the repressed emotions of the child they once were to follow dangerously repressed leaders into an abyss. Humanity is doomed.

As long as people's childhood repression goes unresolved -- they will be shackled into the chains of compulsion repetition -- and it doesn't matter how well anyone articulates very nice ideas... The problem is not a lack of knowledge and educated people, there are plenty of educated people with intellectual knowledge, the problem is an emotional blockage with the so-called “professionals” or “educated people” hiding behind their rationalizations and seductive theories to protect themselves from having to face and feel their own emotional pain. It takes courage to see, face, and feel our painful truths, intelligence alone is not enough; but it rather helps create seductive, rationalizations, theories, illusions, and lies. 

Alice Miller explains beautifully in her book For Your Own Good: Hidden Cruelty in Child-rearing and the Roots of Violence pages 42 and 43: "Just as in the symbiosis of the "diaper stage," there is no separation here of subject and object. If the child learns to view corporal punishment as "a necessary measure" against "wrongdoers," then as an adult he will attempt to protect himself from punishment by being obedient and will not hesitate to cooperate with the penal system. In a totalitarian state, which is a mirror of his upbringing, this citizen can also carry out any form of torture or persecution without having a guilty conscience. His "will" is completely identical with that of the government.

Now that we have seen how easy it is for intellectuals in a dictatorship to be corrupted, it would be a vestige of aristocratic snobbery to think that only "the uneducated masses" are susceptible to propaganda. Both Hitler and Stalin had a surprisingly large number of enthusiastic followers among intellectuals. Our capacity to resist has nothing to do with our intelligence but with the degree of access to our true self. Indeed, intelligence is capable of innumerable rationalizations when it comes to the matter of adaptation. Educators have always known this and have exploited it for their own purposes, as the following proverb suggests: "The clever person gives in, the stupid one balks." 

For example, we read in a work on child raising by Grünwald (1899): "I have never yet found willfulness in an intellectually advanced or exceptionally gifted child" (quoted in Rutschky). Such a child can, in later life, exhibit extraordinary acuity in criticizing the ideologies of his opponents--and in puberty even the views by his own parents-- because in these cases his intellectual powers can function without impairment. Only within a group--such as one consisting of adherents of an ideology or a theoretical school--that represents the early family situation will this person on occasion still display a naïve submissiveness and uncritical attitude that completely believes his brilliance in other situations. Here, tragically, his early dependence upon tyrannical parents is preserved, a dependence that--in keeping with the program of "poisonous pedagogy"--goes undetected. This explains why Martin Heidegger, for example, who had no trouble in breaking with traditional philosophy and leaving behind the teachers of his adolescence, was not able to see the contradictions in Hitler's ideology that should have been obvious to someone of his intelligence. He responded to this ideology with an infantile fascination and devotion that brooked no criticism.”





I'm Free and I’m Staying Free for the Rest of my Life

 


I wanted to share the excerpt from my book below on the blog Toxic Positivity triggered by the video below,  but then it slipped out of my mind.
So I will share the vedio again with the excerpt from my book on this blog.


Yes, don't let yourself be driven by the unresolved repressed emotions of the child you once were to do something you might regret later. Learn to be still and consciously feel the emotions within the context of your own childhood.
Just like I wrote in my book A Dance to Freedom: Your Guide to Liberation from Lies and Illusions pages 163, 164, 165, 166, 167 and 168

I’ll be honest with you, some of the feelings at times were so intense that I probably shouldn’t have been alone with them. But thanks to Alice Miller’s books I was able to understand and move through them. Frankly, I didn’t have a choice. 

Before I discovered Alice Miller I was close to the breaking point, and I probably wouldn’t have been able to go on much longer without her writings. 

You may not have a choice, either. Regrettably, true enlightened witnesses are hard to come by. To this day I haven’t met a therapist I can recommend. All I can really suggest is that you get as much as you can out of this book, and out of all the writings of Alice Miller you can get your hands on. 

Just remember this: If particular people or circumstances trigger excruciatingly intense feelings inside you, just keep telling yourself that these are the repressed feelings of the child you once were. 

Feelings don’t kill anyone no matter how intense they are. Only actions kill. So if you ride your intense feelings into shore, direct them at the real culprits who hurt you when you were a defenseless child and avoid taking any actions you may regret later, you’ll be free and no one will get hurt. As an autonomous adult, you do have some control over the people you let into your inner circle, and you may have to make some relationship adjustments as you do your emotional work. 

I took a lot of extra time to be with myself in solitude because most of the people in my life just didn’t understand what I was going through. When you’re trying to resolve your repression, being around unconscious people who are doing everything they can to avoid their own truths puts you at risk of relapsing into playing your old roles. 

Before Marty and I broke up in the year 2000, I was planning an extended trip to Portugal to take care of some family business. But the triggering of my repressed emotions put an end to that plan right away. I knew my family couldn’t help me explore and understand my feelings, since they couldn’t handle their own. 

They use every technique available to them to repress their own feelings, and I was afraid — knowing that I was in a vulnerable emotional state — that they’d once again make me their scapegoat, projecting their own repression into me like they did when I was younger. 

Sometimes you have to let go of some money or time to free yourself from certain people, like I did with that Mormon guy Justin, but that’s nothing compared to your freedom and peace. 

Other times it may not be practical to show people in your life the exit door, but do the best you can given your specific circumstances. The real key is to be patient with yourself. Keep trying to focus on your intense feelings and eventually, you’ll begin to understand them. Once you do, they’ll start to subside and you’ll start to feel liberated from your old wounds, roles, and patterns. You’ll begin to realize that any intense, excruciating emotions you feel today are the repressed emotions of the child you once were and have very little to do with your present situation. 

When a current event or person triggers a strong emotion, you’ll be able to take a step back from it. You’ll be able to tell yourself that the intense feelings of powerlessness, fear, or anger are from the child you once were, and that the present event or person is just a substitute that reminds you of a time when you were really vulnerable. 

In the future, you’ll no longer be blinded by your repressed emotions. You’ll be able to clearly recognize red flags and avoid getting too intimate with people who’ll reenact your childhood drama and have you relive old pains over and over again. 

You’ll be able to better deal with present-day triggers. As a child you were powerless, but as an adult, you can obtain the power and the freedom to take care of yourself and get yourself out of abusive situations. 

While the child you once were was unable to feel intense fear or anger, it’s safe for you to feel these emotions as an adult today. Eventually, you’ll no longer feel scared and angry. Just don’t give up! You must let your honest feelings show you the true story of what you had to go through as a child. 

The thing that really kept me going was the fact that I knew I’d be incapable of loving anybody — especially myself — unless I faced and resolved my repression. I was tired of false starts and sustained failures. The promise of real change gave me the courage to soldier on against the odds. If you can do the same, then you too will have this incredibly liberating experience, and you’ll be truly amazed at how much the quality of your life will improve. 

By 2003, I was feeling stronger. Every day, the excruciating feelings started to diminish and I found that I could enjoy being around other people again. 

I was energized, yet relaxed; confident, without being arrogant. In a word, balanced. Not being trapped inside an emotional prison of my own making I was able to deal with day-to-day problems without connecting them subconsciously to my repressed childhood traumas and blowing them out of proportion. 

For the first time in my life, I was able to keep things in perspective, and was finally free from repeating the drama of my childhood every time something went wrong. 

I even felt strong enough to return to Portugal. I had come a long way from the 22-year-old who had left her family behind for a new life in London. 

My visit lasted a year and a half, and I was able to see my family members for who they were — without being triggered by their projections. 

In fact, I had a quiet calm about me that everyone noticed. My family could tell that I was a different person and they all had a strange kind of respect for me. They still tried to bring me into their dramas, but I politely refused to get involved. 

I finally understood that they, too, were victims of their upbringing. When I was young I allowed them all to convince me that they were superior, that they knew what was better. But when I went back to see them after feeling the true emotions of my childhood, I knew that we were all equals — and that nobody knew what was best for me except me. 

While I never expected to get my siblings to change their ways, I was heartened by the fact that some of the younger members of my family were interested in what I had to say. Some of them would take a step forward and then retreat when some repressed childhood feeling got triggered by what I had to say, but they were making an effort and that was a step in the right direction. I tried to explain what was happening to them in a gentle, loving way. Sometimes they understood, and other times they’d freak out and stay away from me for a while. But usually, I wasn’t alone for very long because lots of people in my extended family were curious about my newfound freedom. 

One of my nephews and his wife, for example, were having a hard time handling their two-year-old son’s temper tantrums. They both tried to dismiss the child’s behavior as the “terrible twos,” but I could see that this little boy was in a lot of emotional pain. His father buried himself in his work, and his mother had no idea what her son needed. 

When I saw this cute little guy for the first time, both of his parents were trying to force him to stop crying and come give his Great Aunt Sylvie a kiss. I told them it was okay to let him cry and express his unhappiness, and that it’s never a good idea to force a child to kiss anyone. 

I certainly wasn’t taking it personally! The boy had never seen me before, so I thought he should at least get to know me first before giving me any kisses. My nephew and his wife backed off, and sure enough, the little boy stopped crying. 

The next day my niece-in-law said that she had never heard anyone talk about children like I had. From then on she pretty much came to see me every day or asked me to be with her and her child. She didn’t want to abuse her son anymore. She wanted to help him and become a better mother. 

We spent many hours talking about the pain her son was feeling because his father worked so much, and because for two years he was left in the care of a nanny who, they found out later, was taking psychiatric drugs. When I finally had to return to Arizona, I felt so bad leaving my niece-in-law. I continued to help her via phone and Skype, but one day I wasn’t available and she went to her doctor and told him she felt suicidal. 

Instead of helping her process and understand the roots of her despair, this doctor put her in the hospital. They gave her strong drugs and kept her there — and away from her son — for an entire month. My nephew was working, of course, so the child was shipped off to his maternal grandparents. When I tried to call him, the grandparents kept me away. They blamed me for their daughter’s problems. It was easier to make me their scapegoat than to take responsibility for what they did to their daughter. 
 
Also from my book pages 61, 62, and 63
"Alice Miller often talks about the “life-saving function of repression.”27 As defenseless little children we have no choice but to subconsciously repress our negative feelings for two reasons. First of all, we need support from others. And second, we just don’t have the ability to understand how the people we must rely on could actually be cruel to us. 

In the short-term, repression can have a positive effect in traumatic circumstances. But the subconscious actions that we think are saving our lives as children are what really keep us down as adults. 

In fact, Alice Miller believed that it wasn’t so much the traumas we experience that harm us, but “the unconscious, repressed, hopeless despair over not being allowed to give expression to what one has suffered and the fact that one is not allowed to show and is unable to experience feelings of rage, anger, humiliation, despair, helplessness, and sadness.”28 

Abused and otherwise traumatized children are forced to repress their true feelings unless they’re lucky enough to find someone to comfort them. But because enlightened witnesses (and even helping witnesses) aren’t always readily available, most of us develop what Alice Miller calls a false self — usually for the sake of our parents — only to pay for it later in life. 

In an article entitled “The Essential Role of an Enlightened Witness in Society,” Alice Miller writes that “it seems clear to me that information about abuse inflicted during childhood is recorded in our body cells as a sort of memory, linked to repressed anxiety. 

If lacking the aid of an enlightened witness, these memories fail to break through to consciousness, they often compel the person to violent acts that reproduce the abuse suffered in childhood, which was repressed in order to survive. The aim is to avoid the fear of powerlessness before a cruel adult. This fear can be eluded momentarily by creating situations in which one plays the active role, the role of the powerful, towards a powerless person.”29 

This is how the vicious cycle of parental abuse continues for generations. And in extreme cases, the repetition compulsion can lead to violent atrocities against humanity. 

“To his dying day, Hitler was convinced that only the death of every single Jew could shield him from the fearful and daily memory of his brutal father,” Alice Miller writes. “Since his father was half Jewish, the whole Jewish people had to be exterminated. I know how easy it is to dismiss this interpretation of the Holocaust, but I honestly haven’t yet found a better one. 

Besides, the case of Hitler shows that hatred and fear cannot be resolved through power, even absolute power, as long as the hatred is transferred to scapegoats. On the contrary, if the true cause of the hatred is identified, and is experienced with the feelings that accompany this recognition, blind hatred of innocent victims can be dispelled. … Old wounds can be healed if exposed to the light of day. But they cannot be repudiated by revenge.”30 

In milder cases, which cover the majority of human beings on this planet, our repression tricks us into believing in the false self until we die with our lies or until something like depression, psychoses or physical illness jars us out of our illusion. The tragedy of our existence is that most of us aren’t even aware of the fact — or find out too late — that we’ve lost all love and respect for who we really are.

Repression is an evil that prevents many people from even giving Alice Miller’s theories a second look, because they seem so radical to someone who’s totally repressed. The fact that repression hides our truth is why writing this book is so important to me. Because I know how great it feels to be free from lies and illusions, I want to make the experience possible for as many people as I can. 

Great forces were at work against me, but I’m here to tell you that they can all be overcome. It may take a lot of courage, and it may force you to see your childhood with new eyes, but the personal liberation is worth any pain you need to go through to get there."

Once your emotions are understood and consciously felt in the right context, they start to subside and released from your body and you liberate yourself from the emotional prison of your childhood. You will no longer be blinded by them to fall victim again to people in the present moment standing in symbolizing your parents or childhood caregivers triggering your emotions to manipulate you to play the part in their twisted dramas. 

I'm always amazed at how doctors articulate very well half disconnected truths and no one ever mentioned the root cause of people's dysfunctions is the repressed emotions that drive people into the state of compulsion repetition. As I wrote in my book A Dance to Freedom pages 129, 130, 131 and 132 
I’ve touched on this a lot in this chapter and elsewhere in this book, particularly in the section about Dr. Julio MachadoVaz — the psychologist who used me for sex — but I really want to reinforce the idea that so-called therapists and gurus only substitute one dangerous illusion for another. 

As Alice Miller writes, “What can happen when a doctor doesn’t stop at self-deception in his flight from pain, but deceives his patients, even founding dogmatic institutions in which further ‘helpers’ are recruited to a faith advertised as scientific ‘truth,’ can be catastrophic.”64 

The key to effective therapy is learning how to use your present triggers productively. They can help us clarify, understand and consciously feel our intense emotions within the context of our own childhoods without losing our adult consciousness. 

A good therapist can help us regain our adult consciousness if we lose it and encourage our autonomy, so we can deal with present issues from an adult perspective. But when a therapist regresses us to the state of the desperate child we once were and keeps us feeling old pain over and over again, that just reinforces our dependency, keeps us vulnerable to all kinds of manipulations, and makes our addiction to pain harder to shake. 

Why do people keep punishing themselves? As Alice Miller writes, “… the awareness was borne in upon me that in a state of regression, it is not possible to judge the competence and integrity of the person one has turned to for such guidance. 

This opens up all kinds of opportunities for abuse. The intensive phase with which primal therapy begins is an immediate obstacle to the formation of a balanced, critical, independent assessment of the therapist’s abilities by the client. 

The fact that the attendant uncritical and irrational expectations of healing and ‘salvation’ can lead to the establishment of totalitarian sects is borne out by the crass example of mass abuse at the hands of the exponents of ‘feeling therapy’ as described in detail by Carol Lynn Mithers in her book Therapy Gone Mad: The True Story of Hundreds of Patients and a Generation Betrayed (1994). 

But this study was possible only after the community she describes had disbanded, something that frequently takes decades. Today we know that such groups exist and that members of sects are done irremediable harm before they become aware of the fact.”65 

In another book, she goes on to say, “The thing that concerns me most about cult groups is the unconscious manipulations that I have described in detail in my work. It is the way in which the repressed and unreflected childhood biographies of parents and therapists influence the lives of children and patients entrusted to their care without anyone involved actually realizing it. 

At first glance, it may seem as if what goes on in cults and cultlike therapy groups takes place on a different level from the unconscious manipulation of children by their parents. We assume that in the former instance we are in the presence of an intentional, carefully planned and organized form of manipulation aimed at exploiting the specific predicament of individuals. … First, they had learned how to reduce people to the emotional state of the helpless child. 

Once they had achieved that, they also learned how to use unconscious regression to exercise total control over their victims. From then on, what they did seemed to come automatically, in accordance with the childrearing patterns instilled into them in their own childhood.”66 

Most people who search for answers never actually find them, because people suffering with their own repression are the ones who practice traditional therapies. Since the beginning of human history, priests, teachers, gurus, psychics, doctors, philosophers, and psychologists have all duped people into thinking they could provide real assistance when it was never possible because the healers were also victims of their own childhoods. 

Alice Miller saw the promise of psychotherapy to help people understand why they behave like helpless victims as adults and also to help them take responsibility for their actions. 

But she was disillusioned when she realized that practitioners couldn’t treat patients effectively as long as they failed to deal with their own repression. The people who write self-help books and lead 12-step groups and otherwise claim to heal people are for the most part little children themselves, afraid to speak the naked truth that could actually lead to true liberation. “I don’t see the path to growing but rather the repetition and continuation of the child’s dependency on illusions,” Alice Miller writes of traditional healing methods. “Growing and healing begin when former victims of mistreatment start to confront themselves with the cruelty of their upbringing, without illusions about the “love” of a higher power and without blaming themselves for projections. 

They allow themselves to feel their authentic emotions without moral restrictions and in this way become eventually true to themselves. But the 12 steps continue to keep the ACA [Adult Children of Alcoholics] in the former dependency of the child: fear, self-blame, and permanent overstrain. 

A person who has eventually painfully realized that she was never loved, can, based on this truth, learn to love herself and her children. But someone who lives with the illusion that she was indeed loved by the Higher Power, though she has missed to feel this love, will probably blame herself in the old manner for her lack of gratitude and will tend to demand the love from her children. 

By so doing, she will pass on the blame to her children if they don’t behave in the way she wishes them to do; she will pass on the blame, together with the lie that she learned in her so-called recovery.”67 

It is the major flaw in most human therapies that they are themselves grounded in the fear of the parents and the repressed emotions of traumatic experiences. It’s why therapy so often doesn’t work, and it frustrated Alice Miller and encouraged her to find a new way. “Sometimes for decades on end, clients and analysts remain bogged down in a maze of half-baked concepts,”68 she writes. Whether or not a therapist has been freed of his or her own repression is what will determine the success or failure of a given therapy."


Yes, this is a brutal world  because most of humanity is dangerously repressed and outright evil. No, in the end, no one gets away with anything. 

Many people have no integrity and dignity, But they try to manipulate people's perceptions and worry about their image and reputation, that's all they care about...

I try to be as kind as possible, too.


Yep! 

Yep! They wait patiently for the day they can take it all. Most narcissists are afraid to be alone and other malignant narcissists will exploit this weakness to grab on, but a lot of times they sacrifice their whole lives, freedom, health, and soul in the process. Many times the guy/girl and his/her whole family love bomb and stroke the ego of the narcissist with money and assets to keep her/him hooked and exactly where they want her/him to be. Many narcissists think are very smart but they are not that smart after all... 
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What good does it do a man to gain the world and lose his soul. 

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

imposter syndrome

"you don't argue with feelings, but beliefs you can challenge" Very true!

"It has to do with the fact you couldn't be real as a kid." That's how the false self is created!

“Because of his early experiences with his mother, he cannot believe that this need not happen. If he gives way to this fear and adapts himself, the therapy slides over into the realm of the false self, and the true self remains hidden and undeveloped. 

It is therefore extremely important that the therapist not allow his own needs to impel him from formulating connections that the patient himself is discovering with the help of his own feelings. Otherwise, he is in danger of behaving like a friend who brings a good meal to a prisoner in his cell, at the precise moment when that prisoner has the chance to escape --- perhaps to spend his first night hungry and without shelter, but in freedom nevertheless. Since this first step into unknown territory would require a great deal of courage, the prisoner may comfort himself with his food and shelter and thus miss his chance and stay in prison.”

https://sylvieshene.blogspot.com/2012/11/facing-and-feeling-repressed-emotions_29.html?m=1

https://sylvieshene.blogspot.com/2016/02/quotes-from-book-drama-of-gifted-child.html

What are the 5 types of imposter syndrome?

Experts recognize five main subtypes of imposter syndrome: the perfectionist, the superhero, the expert, the natural genius, and the soloist.

https://grad.uc.edu/student-life/news/all-about-imposter-syndrome.html#:~:text=Experts%20recognize%20five%20main%20subtypes,natural%20genius%2C%20and%20the%20soloist.



Yes, the best gift parents give their children is to resolve their own childhood repression, otherwise, the parents' tragedy is repeated in their children 


Yes, it is!

I'm only guilty of sharing my love and insights freely and of staying too long waiting to see if people develop the courage to face their fears of resolving their own childhood repression. I'm getting too old to waste a minute of my life with people who lack the courage to open their eyes to see and feel their own painful truths.

This is an interesting explanation of dissociation. Many people live in a dissociation state, and it's a very dangerous state to live in. 



Yep! Distance yourself and let them be to meet their own future and destiny. 

Yes, the beauty of being an independent and mature conscious adult is that you can walk away from anyone standing in symbolizing your childhood caregivers reenacting your childhood dramas. Free at last!

True!

Yes, many people are very good actors, acting as if personality pretending to be good people but in reality, are wolves in sheep's clothing. 

If you only surround yourself with YES people who tell you only what you like to hear, sooner or later, someone will come along who plays the game better and smarter and will take everything. 

Yes, the chickens 🐔 will always come home to roost. 

Yes, it's a very nasty game! 

Yes, I have stared evil in the face if I had not truly resolved my childhood repression I would not be here to talk about it.

After being the target of a mob of sociopaths conspiring to hurt me I will never look at another human being in the same way.

No, therapy doesn't work on these types of people, once a person has grown into a full-blown malignant narcissist or psychopath, they just waste your time and try to use you for whatever they want and if you ever dare to say no to them, you will become their number one enemy that they must destroy. You will get a target on your back. Run from these types of people as far away as you can. 

Very true. If I didn't recognize evil when it tried to touch me I would be done! And I would not be here today!

The devouring mother archetype represents the shadow side of the maternal instinct, where caring and nurturing turns into suffocating overprotectiveness. These mothers stifle their children's growth, leaving them dependent, lacking agency, and emotionally stagnant.











Friday, December 13, 2024

Jordan Peterson - An Agent of Repression


 I agree with Dr. Gabor Mate that Jordan Peterson is mostly an agent of repression.