The Mother of All Relationships
Sunday, December 19th, 2010The Mother of All Relationships
Diary entry 12
(Diary entries are intended to be read in order)
Psychotherapy – a very slow, but helpful process
In therapy and healing, explanation and understanding for your feelings and behaviors are gradually unfolded to you, and week by week, not all at once. All my young life, I was 110% certain I was a “basket case” (as my father used to say) specifically as a result of a megalomaniacal, emotionally abusive and manipulative father. It is only to my surprise that I have been finding out through my reiki and my psychotherapy, I estimate, that roughly 95% of my own dysfunction in love relationships has been passed to me from maternal neglect, and not paternal psychosis.
The realization which was revealed to me, that the primary source of the most severe, profound and enduring damage to my psyche that had been brought upon me as a baby, a child and then a teenager was actually my mother’s neglect and not my father’s psychosis, was a little uncomfortable. My relationship with my mother had become pretty good, relatively speaking. Today it is better than it has ever been in my life.
Despite the relatively good (= peaceful, ≠ close) relationship I have with my mother nowadays, with diminishing frequency, thankfully, there are still moments when her worry for her money rises to the surface and I once again am transported back to the old, awful feelings of feeling worthless and disposable, of being #10 on her 10-item list of priorities.
It must be said at this point in my story, that this tension is caused by the fact that, since I had intended to kill myself last April, 2008 (read story), a promise I then made not to do so required that I return to the country of my childhood, where my mother still lived, and that I be financially supported by family (primarily my mother, secondarily my brother—both of whom are quite wealthy) and also undergo intensive therapy. Naturally, in such a mental state, I also quit my job of ten years.
That is to say, that because my mother and step-father do not want me to live with them, my mother has been paying my rent all of this time, and paid my food for a year, while I have been looking for a job for over a year now and continuing to see a psychologist, also at my mother’s expense.
It is in this context that my mother’s worry about her money now and then surfaces and I have a relapse into my “dark place.” In fact, I have noticed that it is ultimately her worry and caring about money and her long-standing emotional detachment from me and my life, her “unworry” and uncaring about me, which used to trigger in me the desperate solution to kill myself, since I felt incapable of sustaining my life on earth just by myself in the state I was in, and I felt I was a great, and sometimes resented, burden to family members.
This feeling of being a resented burden to family was perpetuated, if not also partially created, by my mother’s (seemingly unfounded) financial concerns, as well as some personality issues, by which she avoided becoming emotionally close to anyone, including me, and perpetuated even more profoundly by the far more harsh words and authoritarian, critical and uninformed judgments habitually passed on me by my brother.
I find myself ever-pressured by both family members to go in life directions and do things that would make me utterly miserable in my life, usually a direction opposite to the one I am trying to go–and on occasion, I find I do things, take certain steps or develop plans (and begin to carry them out) that I know they will think are good and smart, just to make them happy with me, so I can have something to tell them, to distract them or buy time to find my own solution and get out of my dependency on and obligation to them.
Due to our opposite personalities, the impossibility of them ever understanding me or ceasing to pressure me and badly judge me, I let them talk at me, “suggesting” to me all kinds of things I should do with my life, things totally unsuited to me that prove they have no idea who I am. I keep my opinions and plans to myself, giving them as little information about what I’m doing, planning or thinking as possible, in order to minimize the damage their responses will have on my emotional state and on my mind, which is both fragile and vulnerable, especially to family.
Last winter, on the occasion of another episode of my mother’s “money-worry,” my usual solution of suicide was reduced to thoughts of merely getting evicted onto the street, and probably an eventual death as a result.
These solutions of mine always seem to involve 200% rejection of family—first their rejection of me in some form, then my subsequent rejection of them and, lastly, of myself. I begin to think things like “She can keep her precious money, I don’t need her or her money!” And this goes hand-in-hand with the acceptance that I will die, or go to live on the street, simply because I don’t know how to live; I haven’t the self-confidence or the emotional and mental foundation necessary to get or hold a job and I am literally not able to survive in this world. All I want at times like that is that she keep her money and I stop burdening her with my life, while simultaneously not having the slightest care for what happens to me as a result. I thereby free myself from her resentment of me needing her support, or the horrible experience of feeling her hesitancy at helping me. If the decision is not clear-cut for her, then I take away the option to help me entirely. I might die, but at least I will die free of any feeling of guilt.
Another of these episodes occurred again this past week, as she brought to my attention the fact that she is worried about her money, even in spite of the fact that I now have several fortuitous and promising leads on jobs, and I have been getting an increasing amount of work as a freelance translator now from my former employer. This time, instead of turning to thoughts of suicide, I thought more and more certainly that I will tell her to stop paying my rent, stop giving me her money, starting now.
I could make it through December without her money. And I would either succeed in earning money, or, if not, I could at least escape this room I stay in and escape this entire situation, and, best of all, be free, again, of family. However, I feel fairly confident that I will be earning some money by the end of December. Nonetheless, I think I would be willing to take the risk. The more time passes, the better freedom from family looks–eventually it will become priceless.
I managed quite well to ignore my mother’s money-worry when I got her email this week, but today, as I was explaining the situation to my roommate, I felt the full force of her concern for her money.
I felt bad again and feeling bad is almost becoming a foreign experience to me. I didn’t like it. I set about writing down my feelings and thoughts around the situation:
As always, my mother is pressuring me to do things that will keep me down and perpetually dependent in life – she just wants to ensure that she is not the one I am dependent on. And no amount of positive developments will give her any hope or respite from the fate it seems she has already doomed me to in her own mind.
As I was letting out all of my thoughts and feelings onto paper, I had remembered words fromAbraham-Hicks, video clips of whom I have been watching a lot in the last few weeks, who said that you don’t need to delve into the past for your life to work for you—all you need to do is heal yourself in the now, address the now, cause yourself to feel good right now. This gave me the idea to reiki my present feelings and thoughts, which I did.
Feeling quite bad and emotional, I set my intention for my reiki at that moment to be to “heal all the thoughts and feelings I am having right now, and remove and heal the cause and source of all of these thoughts and feelings.” Then I began to reiki myself.
I recorded the time of the start of reiki at 10:28. I felt the reiki coursing through me. By 10:30, another teaching of Abraham came to my mind. Abraham says that when you are faced with a challenging relationship, think of all of the positive aspects of the person you have the relationship with and write them down, and associate the person only with those aspects.
As I continued to reiki, I immediately wrote this down and thought of two items about my mother for this list immediately. I was able to add some more items. As I continued reikiing, I began to feel some things: the heavy weight of my pain was lifted from my heart as I felt the reiki coursing through me, and a dark cloud, like a frown, was cleared from my mind and I felt lightened, I also began to feel great love for this miracle, reiki, and wondered how I ever lived without it, and I answered myself: “Miserably!”
And this all transpired in the course of nine minutes.



