“Helpless Smart Dummy” wrote in to “Dear Abby” saying she was in a terrible relationship with a very abusive man and she didn’t know how, with 2 master’s degrees, she could have picked such a narcissistic jerk. She wondered, “what’s wrong with me?”
Come to find out, she grew up in an abusive family of alcoholics and ragers and fit the characteristics of adult children of alcoholics, She went on to say “I’m afraid to kick him out because I never meet anyone and I’ve been alone most of my life”
Amy responded: “People who grew up in chaotic, neglectful, abusive, and alcoholic households often internalize the idea that they are somehow “Not enough.” Probably because, despite their heroic efforts as children, they can’t fix, heal, or change the dynamics of their family of origin.
They wind up having codependency issues or like Beverly and Tom, have terrible reactions and wind up with miserable relationships if they don’t attend to their childhood traumas. The writer to “Dear Amy” didn’t even realize what was wrong. She didn’t like it, but she thought this was normal -- isn’t this how everybody’s home is? Because when you live in the middle of chaos and are shown nothing else, that’s what you think. “Everybody lives like this, and I guess I just have to live like this too. What else am I going to do?”
So you have to recognize that, and how you do that is sometimes just by reading stories like this, and lightbulbs go off over your head – yeah, this is not normal; it’s not right.
The question then arises:
How do you attend to those childhood traumas? Attend means to: Pay attention to – don’t ignore, to take care of, to minister to. So, all the mess you thought you’d left behind can come back to haunt you until you
1. Are aware of destructive patterns
2. Ask for help
3. Begin to process the pain
When you have that aha! moment i- “OMG, that sounds like my childhood,” what do you need to do? You can see a counselor; you can take a course, read a book or attend a group.
Often, you can’t see the forest for the trees and need an objective third party to help point out patterns that are self-destructive, not only for the people around you, but for you as well.
When somebody says to you, “Whoa! That was way out of line,” pay attention, notice patterns. When you’ve come out of such backgrounds, you’re going to come out with wounds and scars – you can’t help it. It’s not your fault. However, a lot of kids growing up that way will feel “there’s something wrong with me, I’m not good enough,” because they probably tried to get it to stop – they begged and pleaded, and when it doesn’t work, they feel they’ve failed, I’m not good enough” because nothing changed. And those messages stick in your limbic brain, that survival part of your brain and will raise its ugly head in your romantic relationship.