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Vacancy: Self-Worth in the Mind of a Childhood Abuse Survivor

 

I feel utterly exhausted tonight.

Just drained with nothing left in me.

No smiles.

No laughter and with nothing left in the tank the very moment I stepped home through my apartment door. In fact, I noticed I felt weary this morning when I got to the gym. I lacked energy and motivation at boot-camp and it didn't help when I noticed my two friends Mac & Tosh were walking, instead of jogging around the track during warm-up. I honestly felt like joining them and their early bail-out to Starbucks.

Another burpee? No thanks.

And please, not another push-up.

What didn't help was the thought of going into work right after as well. And to be clear, there's nothing really stressful or taxing at work today that made me dread going in. I just simply wasn't feeling it today.

Despite loading up with caffeine in my cup of green tea followed by a cup of coffee, I knew it was going to be a long day.

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(image credit: Pixestock)

I messaged my friend around 10am this morning:

"Hey Christine, it's me. I really feel blah today."

I often use the word blah with her to describe my feelings of: heaviness, loneliness, boredom, lack of energy, lack of motivation, depression, fatigue, reclusiveness and blue. But instead of listing all of these feelings, blah typically captures it all, and she gets it.

She's one of my most compassionate friends I have. She always shares a word or two of understanding and never jumps right into problem solving mode. She offers the listening ear, without judgement which a good friend always does and today was no different.

She described my feelings as "emotional exhaustion" and I glowingly replied, "Nailed it!"

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(image credit: Pexels)

In the past three months, I've presented in four major mental health events, one of which was my own author reading at Western Sky Books. I've discovered in this past year that I really enjoy sharing my story with others to help them break the ice about their own personal struggles. Time after time, after each presentation I make, I receive the warmest words of gratitude and appreciation from audience members for sharing about my stories of childhood abuse, trauma and my struggles as an adult with anger, depression and anxiety. This is always (and I mean ALWAYS) followed by at least one individual who openly shares about their personal challenges and experiences, relating them to mine.

I get goose bumps whenever I hear them talk about their stories of childhood abuse. On one hand, my heart breaks for what they've gone through and continue to go through. And on the other hand, I'm filled with joy and hope for them because I believe that their capacity to talk about their painful experiences is a step in the right direction towards a life of recovery. I also feel good about myself when I know I can make a difference. Former NHL hockey player, Theo Fleury @theofleury14 (who's someone I really respect for speaking out about his experiences with childhood abuse) recently asked followers to tweet him any question.

I asked him, "What's the best form of therapy for you?"

He tweeted back, "Helping others."

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(image credit: Pixabay)

And after all these events in the past few months, I think I'm emotionally crashing and feeling the need to recenter myself. As much as I draw energy from helping others, I also feel the need for some rest and to remind myself that by helping others, I'm also retelling a lot of my stories of childhood abuse which may have a deep down draining effect on me.

I reached the following conclusions while driving home today:

Sometimes there's a hollow feeling inside myself that I can not seem to fill and I think other childhood abuse survivors can really understand and empathize what this empty space is, which I'm about to describe. Despite all the successes I've had in my adult life, this hollow void in me needs to be filled with self-worthself-acceptance, self-forgiveness, self-compassion, self-esteem and self-love. However, it's something which I need to replenish and fill on my own. No one else can give that to me; my son, my friends nor my family can fill it. And most definitely, material goods can not fill that space either.

The feeling of having a healthy supply of self-worth is something I can only imagine might have been more readily available, natural and automatic if I was able to see that in myself as a child. But I didn't get that memo. As an adult survivor of childhood abuse, self-worth was not supplied in healthy doses while growing up, thus there's sometimes a vacancy sign inside my brain where self-worth is supposed to reside in. As an adult, I'm responsible for replenishing that space inside myself with reminders, and practices of affirmations, self-talk and recognition that my childhood abuse experiences were not my fault. It's a lot about positive reinforcements and raising self awareness in my mind and body whenever I feel triggers and a sense of heaviness.

At my author reading, an audience member asked me, "Are you currently in a relationship?"

I confidently replied, "Yes! With myself!"

However, this process of rewiring my brain in order to give back to me what I lost can be sometimes exhausting and lonesome. After decades of facing abuse and control, I know that it will take a long time to untangle what I used to believe about myself. Like on a dusty desert road, it's a journey I sometimes feel I have to endure alone. 

I might go to bed a bit earlier tonight to help recharge and reset myself. My amicable, millennial colleague Stella, often teases me about my early 9 pm bedtime (she jokes that it's bedtime for seniors).

I'll bet that I can make her laugh even harder tomorrow when I tell her that I went to bed at 8 o'clock tonight. I think it'll be a good laugh for me as well, and heaven knows, laughter's a healthy regimen I need to include more often in my mental diet.

Jason Lee, Author of Living with the Dragon

Cover image from Pixabay.

living with the dragon abuse

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Jondi Whitis posted:

Wonderfully expressed.  Thank you so much.  I appreciate that there are legions of caregivers out in the world today, doing yeoman work, and yet also carrying the emotional burdens of unresolved childhood events.  It's a subject I discuss with them a lot, mentoring new facilitators in adding professional Tapping to their toolboxes and practices. Often we find that burn-out, compassion fatigue and vicarious trauma are at work, not only causing them pain, but also preventing them from serving their mission at their highest capacity and satisfaction. 

It's finally time for widespread consciousness of ACEs and TIC concepts to take its rightful place in our national conversation, treatment and mindset.  Thank you for your contribution to that, Jason.  

Thank you Jondi!

Wonderfully expressed.  Thank you so much.  I appreciate that there are legions of caregivers out in the world today, doing yeoman work, and yet also carrying the emotional burdens of unresolved childhood events.  It's a subject I discuss with them a lot, mentoring new facilitators in adding professional Tapping to their toolboxes and practices. Often we find that burn-out, compassion fatigue and vicarious trauma are at work, not only causing them pain, but also preventing them from serving their mission at their highest capacity and satisfaction. 

It's finally time for widespread consciousness of ACEs and TIC concepts to take its rightful place in our national conversation, treatment and mindset.  Thank you for your contribution to that, Jason.  

Cissy White (ACEs Connection Staff) posted:

Jason:
You are a beautiful writer. Thank you for posting and sharing. Your words resonate deeply. Every. Single. One. I love the images you share as well to show what you're saying. You wrote:

Sometimes there's a hollow feeling inside myself that I can not seem to fill and I think other childhood abuse survivors can really understand and empathize what this empty space is, which I'm about to describe. Despite all the successes I've had in my adult life, this hollow void in me needs to be filled with self-worthself-acceptance, self-forgiveness, self-compassion, self-esteem and self-love. However, it's something which I need to replenish and fill on my own. No one else can give that to me; my son, my friends nor my family can fill it. And most definitely, material goods can not fill that space either.

The feeling of having a healthy supply of self-worth is something I can only imagine might have been more readily available, natural and automatic if I was able to see that in myself as a child. But I didn't get that memo. As an adult survivor of childhood abuse, self-worth was not supplied in healthy doses while growing up, thus there's sometimes a vacancy sign inside my brain where self-worth is supposed to reside in. As an adult, I'm responsible for replenishing that space inside myself with reminders, and practices of affirmations, self-talk and recognition that my childhood abuse experiences were not my fault. It's a lot about positive reinforcements and raising self awareness in my mind and body whenever I feel triggers and a sense of heaviness.

Just yesterday I was talking with a dear friend (who is probably reading this  now - and we were saying that because of our high ACE scores, it's like living paycheck to paycheck emotionally. It's not just the present but the fear of one future event that might tip us into total debt because we're not supplied with that foundation or knowing others who are advantaged in childhood can rely on and pull from. 

It's hard to describe to people. I recently had the flu, and the flu is always a trigger for me, it always wears me down and makes me feel fragile, aware that I don't have the same family of origin networks some have, aware that my body is vulnerable, aware that my moods don't want or need to take any hits. And this while I have more resources, abundance, bounty than ever. I know others have way less, and that's it hard even with lots. It's a depleted feeling. 

The only solution for me is time, extra rest, extra guided imagery, poetry, walks, soul connecting writing with friends. Reminding myself I've been here before but it's not really the same here as before because, LIKE YOU LIKE, that long-term relationship with myself means I can respond sooner, more, and shame myself less for feeling flat, low energy, less than a beacon of bliss or joy or whatever. 

Anyhow, THANK YOU for this post. It's centering and validating and helped me recenter. I'm deeply appreciate.

BTW: I LOVE the work of @Joyelle Brandt and @Dawn Daum and I'm so glad  Joyelle shared your work here and that you are now sharing your work as well. THANK YOU! I'm going to add this post to Parenting with ACEs, which isn't only for or by parents, but also about how we learn to parent ourselves as adults, when we didn't get that as kids. It's a wonderful and healing process and often unbelievably long, slow, and nuanced.  And lots of what's shared in the Practicing Resilience community is all about this as well (so I'm putting this there as well).

THANK YOU for sharing your blah honesty and survivor wisdom and expertise. 

Cissy

Hi Cissy, I'm so moved by your comment, thank you. Everything you said, especially:

"it's like living paycheck to paycheck emotionally. It's not just the present but the fear of one future event that might tip us into total debt because we're not supplied with that foundation or knowing others who are advantaged in childhood can rely on and pull from. 

It's hard to describe to people. I recently had the flu, and the flu is always a trigger for me, it always wears me down and makes me feel fragile, aware that I don't have the same family of origin networks some have, aware that my body is vulnerable, aware that my moods don't want or need to take any hits."

Paycheck to paycheck emotionally is exactly how it feels and sometimes we are depleted that is hard to explain to others who didn't have similar experiences. I'm going to hang onto that metaphor because it captures it so well. 

Cheers,

Jason

Jason:
You are a beautiful writer. Thank you for posting and sharing. Your words resonate deeply. Every. Single. One. I love the images you share as well to show what you're saying. You wrote:

Sometimes there's a hollow feeling inside myself that I can not seem to fill and I think other childhood abuse survivors can really understand and empathize what this empty space is, which I'm about to describe. Despite all the successes I've had in my adult life, this hollow void in me needs to be filled with self-worth, self-acceptance, self-forgiveness, self-compassion, self-esteem and self-love. However, it's something which I need to replenish and fill on my own. No one else can give that to me; my son, my friends nor my family can fill it. And most definitely, material goods can not fill that space either.

The feeling of having a healthy supply of self-worth is something I can only imaginemight have been more readily available, natural and automatic if I was able to see that in myself as a child. But I didn't get that memo. As an adult survivor of childhood abuse, self-worth was not supplied in healthy doses while growing up, thus there's sometimes a vacancy sign inside my brain where self-worth is supposed to reside in. As an adult, I'm responsible for replenishing that space inside myself with reminders, and practices of affirmations, self-talk and recognition that my childhood abuse experiences were not my fault. It's a lot about positive reinforcements and raising self awareness in my mind and body whenever I feel triggers and a sense of heaviness.

Just yesterday I was talking with a dear friend (who is probably reading this  now - and we were saying that because of our high ACE scores, it's like living paycheck to paycheck emotionally. It's not just the present but the fear of one future event that might tip us into total debt because we're not supplied with that foundation or knowing others who are advantaged in childhood can rely on and pull from. 

It's hard to describe to people. I recently had the flu, and the flu is always a trigger for me, it always wears me down and makes me feel fragile, aware that I don't have the same family of origin networks some have, aware that my body is vulnerable, aware that my moods don't want or need to take any hits. And this while I have more resources, abundance, bounty than ever. I know others have way less, and that's it hard even with lots. It's a depleted feeling. 

The only solution for me is time, extra rest, extra guided imagery, poetry, walks, soul connecting writing with friends. Reminding myself I've been here before but it's not really the same here as before because, LIKE YOU LIKE, that long-term relationship with myself means I can respond sooner, more, and shame myself less for feeling flat, low energy, less than a beacon of bliss or joy or whatever. 

Anyhow, THANK YOU for this post. It's centering and validating and helped me recenter. I'm deeply appreciate.

BTW: I LOVE the work of @Joyelle Brandt and @Dawn Daum and I'm so glad  Joyelle shared your work here and that you are now sharing your work as well. THANK YOU! I'm going to add this post to Parenting with ACEs, which isn't only for or by parents, but also about how we learn to parent ourselves as adults, when we didn't get that as kids. It's a wonderful and healing process and often unbelievably long, slow, and nuanced.  And lots of what's shared in the Practicing Resilience community is all about this as well (so I'm putting this there as well).

THANK YOU for sharing your blah honesty and survivor wisdom and expertise. 

Cissy

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