I think I do understand betrayal trauma.
We’re in a tricky spot, I think, because of the trauma that I’ve experienced for much of my childhood. I had a parent— someone who was supposed to care for me and be safe and want the best for me— emotionally abuse me, twist my words, push me towards outbursts and then punish me for them, never let me feel like I was "good enough," manipulate me and my other parent and our family therapist and everyone else who could have interceded on my behalf… A lot of messed up shit.
Now that I’m an adult, I’m still in hyper-vigilance mode: I expect that everyone I meet might possibly want to hurt me in the same ways. I often interpret being misunderstood as other people intentionally misrepresenting what I’m saying in order to steer the conversation to their benefit. I get triggered when I’m not believed for any reason, or when people tell me what my feelings and motivation are as if they know me better than I do… and that’s my brain trying to protect me from further trauma.
Naturally that’s not gelling well at all, to say the least, with what BH’s brain is doing to try to protect him from further betrayal from me. He loved and trusted me, and in doing so, made himself vulnerable. I violated that trust, and now nothing I’m saying has credibility. He hears the words that I say when I explain myself, my feelings, and the situation before/during/after the A. But his brain has put this filter in place that paints everything in the most negative light possible, sometimes to the point of twisting them to have the exact opposite meaning. This is the basis for his untrue beliefs. In effect, they prevents him from returning to being close with me, and from being vulnerable to betrayal again. If he already believes the worst— that I’m using him for lifestyle benefits and secretly want to be with someone else, that I’m going to leave at the first chance if I find someone "better," that if we should even slightly miscommunicate in the future, then I’m likely to betray him again— then he won’t be as hurt if they do happen.
And I understand why that’s going on, the same way I understand why my brain is doing something similar. I understand that often times our feelings don’t make sense, and that we can’t always logick ourselves or other people out of them… But isn’t that kind of what therapy is? Recognizing the thought patterns that are keeping us in that hyper vigilant, "protective" state that doesn’t actually serve us, especially if the goal is to rebuild that trust and closeness, and interrupting them. Replacing them with something that, yes, may make us vulnerable to hurt again… but that allows us to move towards actually feeling safe and better and "normal" again.
I’m embarrassed of this, but I was getting really frustrated with BH last night. I was rehashing that even while the A was going on, I still wanted the things I was getting from the AP from BH. That I still loved him dearly and wanted to be with him, but that going back to loneliness and silence and feeling sexually burdensome instead of desired was terrifying to me, and so I behaved selfishly and continued the affair…I was trying to explain to him that he was twisting things and seeing them through that negative filter, and wouldn’t it feel so much better to just believe what it was I was saying? That our M is not totally fucked up and as hopeless as he’s making it seem?
But he’s in denial that he’s even doing that, so of course he can’t choose to interrupt the thought process that’s keeping him feeling hurt, devastated, sad, angry betrayed… all of those negative feelings that his brain is holding onto so desperately in attempt to protect him. He thinks I’m getting frustrate with him expressing those feelings, rather than the fact he won’t recognize or challenge the thought process that’s perpetuating them, which was also frustrating…It was very much a clusterfuck of a conversation. I am not proud of my emotional reactions at all.
I knoooow I need to give it time. That I need to be patient with him, and let him get to a point where he feels safe enough to trust me and take down those belief-barriers. But like I said, it’s really hard with my own triggers because my trauma brain is saying "he’s twisting what you’re saying on purpose to make you look even worse. He doesn’t want to reconcile and he’s going to abandon you, the same way your mother did when this was happening to you as a child… You’ll spend years with him and never make any progress only for you to end up alone and broken." I need to break that thought pattern myself in order to be properly supportive. I’m praying my IC can help with that.
At the end of the conversation, we focused on his belief that he deserves poor treatment and betrayal from his loved ones. I told him it wasn’t true. I asked him to think about what life would be like, and how he would behave differently, if he believed he deserved to be treated well, with love and kindness and respect. He said he would put down boundaries and stick by them, instead of doing the pick me dance for people that hurt him. We agreed that that would be more protective than believing he deserved it... I’m proud of him for even answering the question and challenging that belief, even just briefly. He asked me what I thought of him and I got to tell him all the amazing, wonderful, lovely qualities I see in him, and he tried to believe me. It gave me some hope.
[This message edited by DayByDay96 at 10:05 PM, Thursday, September 18th]