(Post 8)
“A Fear is a Wish”
When we are anxious/fearful of
something, it usually is us “writing the script” of that which we are afraid
will come true (Please view Post 4 under, “Being in
the Moment”). Our fear represents what we think are “doomed” to happen
to us. So, a “Wish” is this case, is really a Self-Fulfilling Prophecy…when we are afraid of something, our unconscious actually “makes it” happen…
Frequently, this “Wish”
is being fueled by our Core Belief (Please
refer to Blog Post # 1). Such that, we unconsciously repeat what we
think/believe how life will inevitably “turn out”…
For Example:
Mark is afraid that he will be
rejected by loved ones as he was ~ his mother chose his twin brother over him,
leaving him in the hospital at birth, while taking his twin home (whom was
healthier, and the mother felt had a better chance of surviving). His mother’s
excuse was that she was too busy at home caring for his twin, she didn’t have
the time to travel to the hospital to look in on him. So, he was left in the
NICU for the first six weeks of his life, without being visited by his mother.
Mark unconsciously feels “doomed” that he will be rejected by others and is
fraught with the suspicion that his wife had an affair early on in their
marriage. So, his fear of rejection is his self-fulfilling prophecy, as he is “certain” that
his wife has cheated on him (just like his mother did by choosing his twin over
him). So, we don’t really know whether or not his wife had actually cheated on
him. But to Mark’s mind/belief, he is “certain” that she did…
Treatment Suggestion:
We can provide psycho-education
to Mark on this concept of Fear is a Wish,
and ask him if this is part of the dynamic, which Core
Belief he thinks might be “replaying” in his life? We can help him grieve
his primal rejection by his mother as a newborn, while separating his mother
from his wife by saying to himself: “My mother is my mother, and my wife is my
wife. My wife is not my mother and my mother is not my wife” in order to help
him not to displace his rejection onto his wife.
The Interplay of Anxiety and Negative
Emotions
When a person is feeling anxious, it is usually coming from one’s feeling of negative
emotions or anger. We might not permit ourselves to feel negative emotions, and
our anxiety becomes our way of coping with
these feelings. Sometimes, anxiety is our unconscious trying to tell us that we have
negative emotions…and we react by “morphing” negative emotions into anxiety…
For Example:
Charles was taught/trained to
not “entertain”/feel negative feelings toward others. He developed somatic
symptoms of indigestion, fainting spills, tremoring, heart palpitations and
cold sweats. He continually goes to see various specialists to find what is
wrong with him physically, but test results consistently come back as negative
for physical ailments.
Treatment Suggestion:
Introduce the idea that his anxiety
might come from him not being allowed to feel
negative emotions, and ask him to hypothesize which negative emotions
might he be feeling, if he had any? If he has a hard time identifying negative emotions,
it might be effective to help him to identify with someone whom he loves (ideally,
a child), going through what he has gone through in life…how might that person/child
feel? Help the patient to empathize with this vulnerable child in order to get
in touch with his own vulnerability.
Give him permission to feel
his negative emotions by putting them into words,
validating and joining
these feelings. This brings the unconscious feelings
to the conscious - where there’s reasoning,
which enables the patient to have better control over these feelings.
Depression is Anger Turned
Inward
When we are “trained” to not feel anger toward others, the unconscious redirects that
anger toward ourselves, and we implode and become depressed. This usually came
from our Primary Object (our parents) not
being able to take our negative feelings, especially anger, toward them.
Typically, our parents would have reacted to our negative feelings toward them
in one or more of following: 1) Retaliation ~ Scolding us, yelling at us, our
physically punishing us for being “rebellious;” 2) Crumble ~ Our parent feels
so hurt that s/he has been such a terrible parent, that s/he cries, causing us
to feel guilty for hurting him/her; 3) Withdrawal ~ Our parent feels hurt or
inadequate, and emotionally withdraws from us.
Since we cannot safely express our negative/angry feelings toward our
parents, we then turn our anger toward ourselves. Narcisstic Defense is operating here (Please refer to Blog Post # 4),
namely, we “protect” our parents from our negative emotions, when in truth, we
are protecting ourselves from their negative emotions/ reactions toward us.
Treatment Suggestion:
Help the patient to identify her anger toward
the person who has disappointed her, verbalize her anger and feel and embrace
her anger. Help her to understand
why she feels angry toward the person (explore to see if it’s a displacement of feelings from a Primary Object, or a person who has hurt us from
the past, aka, “transference”). And, in
spite of her anger, help her to choose to act constructively in the situation. Sometimes,
the constructive action might be: to forgive the person; to distance herself
from the person; to confront the person; to reconcile with the person…or
combination of any of the above (forgiveness is a necessary step to heal us from
depression).
It’d be good to also help our
patient to direct/verbalize her negative emotions/anger toward us. When she is
able to verbalize her negative emotions, we do not defend or explain ourselves,
nor withdraw, nor do we attack back (like her parents did). Instead, we invite the patient to tell
us more, how we have failed her. We explore how we have failed her. We validate her feelings through joining, and we thank her for telling us
her negative emotions, as it took courage for her to do so. So, we model for
her what her parents should have done: Acceptance of her anger/ negative emotions; validation of
her feelings. And we invite her to “help” us to become a better Transference Object to her (one that sees, hears,
understand and accepts her unconditionally). Depending on what she didn’t
receive from her parent, sometimes we might need to frustrate her in order to
help her build her frustration tolerance: Healthy (re)parenting is a combination of
nurturance and frustration.
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