January 29, 2012

I Just don’t Understand Perpetrators!

Posted in DID/MPD, Dissociative Identity Disorder, Domestic Violence, Maggies, Mind Control, Physical Abuse, Prevention of Sexual Abuse, Ritual Abuse, sexual abuse, Trauma tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , at 4:44 am by Kathy Broady


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*** This is a difficult post and it is meant for your older parts.  Please note — it could be triggering to many within your system.  Please check this article with your internal leaders before letting your littles or sensitive ones read any further.  Thanks, Kathy. ***

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Recently, I witnessed a fight between some wild animals that was particularly upsetting to see.  There is no need to go into great detail about the actual situation.  I can speak about it in sweeping statements and you will get more than enough picture of the situation from there.

The long and the short of it was that a rather large group of critters (yes, they were birds) were picking on one particular bird to the point that it appeared that it could be a fatal situation for the one very unfortunate bird.  Talk about outnumbered!  It was just really really not ok to hear or see.  It was particularly disturbing and very upsetting.

At first I wondered about what to do – somewhat fearing for my own safety if I got involved – but I really was not comfortable not interrupting the attack in some way, somehow.  I hesitated for a brief while, knowing that Mother Nature and wild animals do what they do and wondering if maybe I should just respect that.  But I could hear it and I could see it, and I just couldn’t not do anything.  It was just too upsetting to not act somehow.

So I darted across the street, running in the direction of the mob of birds.  I didn’t know what I would do when I got there, I just knew I had to do something.

Lucky for me, my running at them was more than enough to disturb the birds and interrupt their horrible attack.  All the birds, including the one being picked on, flew away and left the area in a big hurry.

Thank goodness.

I mean really, thank goodness.

I was so relieved that the ordeal was at least over for that moment.  I knew the group of birds could attack the injured bird again, another time, and in another place, but I was so very thankful that it had at least been stopped at that time.  I could at least hope that I had stopped it completely.

There was no way of me knowing how injured the victim bird was since he flew off and away when everyone else did.  I can only hope that I interfered quickly enough that he didn’t get very badly hurt.

I’ve been watching for an injured bird, but I haven’t seen one.  I don’t know if that is good news or not.  And I don’t know what injured birds do when they are hurt, so I don’t know if I would see one or not.  I don’t know whether to be relieved, or whether to worry more.  I just don’t have the answers to this situation.

But boy, oh boy, was this an emotional situation for me.  I found the whole experience to be incredibly upsetting.  I was tearful.  I was afraid.  I was worried.  I was brave.  I had all kinds of emotions going on throughout the whole day.

And again, the parallels of this situation to the lives of dissociative trauma survivors are many and layered.

First of all, I think that nearly every DID survivor that I have spoken to has told me of horrific situations where they were the one targeted victim being attacked by a group of perpetrators.  Even if there was only one main perpetrator, there were other people around, watching and / or supporting the perpetrator and not helping the person being hurt.

This is just soooooo not ok.

It is just so wrong for groups of anyone to gang up against one person, purposefully hurting them, doing terrible things to them.

It can be just as wrong for anyone to witness such crimes and to not step in and help the person(s) being hurt.  Granted, this is very much a gray area since there are a number of complicated factors involved when it comes to interrupting and stopping violence.  At this point, my comments are directed specifically towards those who really could have the ability to stop or interfere with the abuse, and simply choose not to.

I can’t even come up with enough words to describe how wrong these things are.

I couldn’t tolerate watching a bird being injured.  How on earth do perpetrators tolerate watching a person getting hurt, especially a little person?

I just don’t understand that.

Not one tiny bit do I understand that.

*** Please note – in these comments, I am not referring to the situations where someone is forced to perpetrate when they don’t want to.  There is a kind of victimization / abuse where dominant perpetrator abusers force others in a less powerful position to do abusive acts to others.  I call this situation victimization by perpetration.  Most DID survivors have experienced this situation too, and please know, that my comments today are not in reference to those very difficult and equally horrible situations. ***

I am talking about the abuser types that are truly sadistic and hurtful, completely by choice.  I’m referring to situations where the perpetrator does not have to hurt anyone, but they simply want to and choose to because they like it and enjoy it.

THAT is what I don’t understand.

What does it take in someone to be truly sadistic?  How does this happen?  How can those abusive violent people live with themselves?  Where is their compassion?  Why do they have no compassion or kindness?

I know there are intellectual answers to those questions, but my thoughts are based on more of an emotional and spiritual level.

I just don’t get it.

Do you?

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Copyright © 2008-2012 Kathy Broady and Discussing Dissociation

April 4, 2010

Do You Need Faith to Overcome the Effects of Trauma?

Posted in DID Education, DID/MPD, Dissociative Identity Disorder, emotional pain, Physical Abuse, Ritual Abuse, sexual abuse, Therapy Homework Ideas, Trauma tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , at 12:51 pm by Kathy Broady


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Don’t worry – I’m not a preacher – I’m not going to preach at you.

But I do believe in a thing called faith.

I do believe there is goodness and light in the world.  And I believe there is evil and darkness in the world.

And I believe that there is a huge war going on out there that pits good vs. evil.  And one of the ways this war plays itself out is between people, including between violent perpetrators and their innocent victims.

Many dissociative trauma survivors have seen this war in a very literal way – in a way that most people don’t ever even begin to realize exists.  DID survivors have fought evil on their very own, even as a child – completely alone, tiny, without help, without support, without comfort.  And somehow, even in the midst of fighting the most horrid evil and degrading violence, some DID trauma survivors have maintained a strong, undeniable connection to goodness, light, compassion, and empathy in their heart, soul, and spirit.

Is there anything more impressive than that?

How can someone fight evil on their own, as a very young child, and still hold onto the powers of goodness and light?!

How can these young children withstand years of the intensity of the anger, violence, and sadism they are exposed to, and still grow up to be a kind, decent, compassionate, empathetic, gentle people?

Is some ways, it is the biggest testimony to the power of goodness and light that I have ever heard.  And I’ve seen this over and over and over in a number of different survivors.

Somehow these young, abused children hold onto a faith, a goodness, a hope that gets them through the trauma and the pain.  There are scars from the abuse, yes – tons of them, on all kinds of levels – but deep within, in a very protected place, there remains that strong unbreakable connection to goodness and light.   It doesn’t get squished out.  It doesn’t get beaten away.  It can’t be stolen.  It’s there.  It’s real.  It might be protected or hidden, but it exists.  I can see, absolutely without question, or a shadow of a doubt, the connection to goodness and light exists.

That is powerful.

It’s amazing.

It’s mind-boggling.

I don’t know how it happens, but that to me is proof.

It is proof that good trumps evil.
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I have a song to share with you all.  A trauma survivor first introduced it to me, and I want to pass it on to all of you, because it is a powerful song about overcoming darkness.  It is about having the faith to stand even against the odds.

Many of you are still struggling from the horrors of your abuse and pain – the hurt is real, and healing is not an easy path.  I hope this song provides comfort, strength, hope, and healing for you.

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“What Faith Can Do”
by Kutless

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Everybody falls sometimes
Gotta find the strength to rise
From the ashes and make a new beginning
Anyone can feel the ache
You think it’s more than you can take
But you are stronger, stronger than you know

Don’t you give up now
The sun will soon be shining
You gotta face the clouds
To find the silver lining

I’ve seen dreams that move the mountains
Hope that doesn’t ever end
Even when the sky is falling
And I’ve seen miracles just happen
Silent prayers get answered
Broken hearts become brand new
That’s what faith can do

It doesn’t matter what you’ve heard
Impossible is not a word
It’s just a reason for someone not to try
Everybody’s scared to death
When they decide to take that step
Out on the water
It’ll be alright

Life is so much more
Than what your eyes are seeing
You will find your way
If you keep believing

I’ve seen dreams that move the mountains
Hope that doesn’t ever end
Even when the sky is falling
And I’ve seen miracles just happen
Silent prayers get answered
Broken hearts become brand new
That’s what faith can do

Overcome the odds
You don’t have a chance
(That’s what faith can do)
When the world says you can’t
It’ll tell you that you can!

I’ve seen dreams that move the mountains
Hope that doesn’t ever end
Even when the sky is falling
And I’ve seen miracles just happen
Silent prayers get answered
Broken hearts become brand new
That’s what faith can do
That’s what faith can do!

Even if you fall sometimes
You will have the strength to rise

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To watch the official music video of this song, please click here.

Even if you fall sometimes
You will have the strength to rise

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By:

Kathy Broady LCSW

www.AbuseConsultants.com

www.SurvivorForum.com

Copyright © 2008-2010 Kathy Broady LCSW and Discussing Dissociation

April 3, 2010

This is Easter Weekend

Posted in Dissociative Identity Disorder, Prevention of Sexual Abuse, Ritual Abuse, sexual abuse, Therapy Homework Ideas, Trauma tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , at 2:27 pm by Kathy Broady


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Hi Everyone,

This is Easter weekend.

For DID trauma survivors with a ritual abuse (RA) background, this is a very difficult weekend, full of difficult memories, painful emotions, and system conflicts.

*** I’m going to speak of some of the horrors of ritual abuse – here is your trigger warning – for those of you that need one of those. ***

With ritual abuse, anything that represented something positive in the Christian faith would have been turned into something dangerous and harmful in the dark worlds.  The good would have been twisted into evil.  The light would have been made dark.  Distortions, perversions, confusion, pain, violence, and chaos would have been celebrated.

Opposites are taught – white becomes black.  The day-world church is very distinctly different and opposite from the night-world church.

Children should never ever be exposed to the level of sadistic violence that occurs in ritualistic ceremonies.  It is wrong for this to happen.

Children should never ever be forced to participate in the outrageous activities and horrendous practices of the dark night ritualistic world.  It is wrong for this to happen.

If you were forced to participate in sadistic ritualistic activities, my heart goes out to you.  You’ve seen some of the worst of the worst that happens in this world.  It is not ok that anyone hurt you like that.

If you were ritually abused, you would have been painfully traumatized, emotionally tortured, sexually assaulted, and physically beaten.  These are horrible crimes.  It was wrong for anyone to do this to you.  It was wrong if your parents did this to you.  It was wrong if strangers did this to you.  It was wrong if friends or neighbors did this to you.  It is wrong, criminally wrong, for any and all children to be forced to participate in these kinds of activities in any way, shape, or form.

You did not deserve that kind of treatment.  (Don’t believe lies that say otherwise.)

You were not born to live in the darkness.  (Don’t believe lies that say otherwise.)

You were not destined to belong to evil.  (Don’t believe lies that say otherwise.)

You are not the child of Satan.  (Don’t believe lies that say otherwise.)

You do not have to live your life chained to this darkness.  (Don’t believe lies that say otherwise.)

It is ok and important to get healing from any kind of ritualistic abuse that has happened in your life.  RA is gory and violent, it’s controlling and demanding, it’s hateful and sadistic, but it does not have to define who you are.  You do not have to stay connected to anyone or anything that pushes you into that direction.

You can separate from those people, places, organizations, and become your own true, genuine self.

You can make your own decisions for what you believe in, and for what kind of life you want to have.  You don’t have to be involved in a RA lifestyle if you don’t want to.  You don’t have to go to any more RA gatherings, and you don’t have to be one of them.

Your abusers would have told you otherwise, but now that you are an adult, you can decide for yourself.  You can think on your own, and you don’t have to be bullied any more.

You can be your own self, with your own life.  You can develop your own values, beliefs, and preferences.  You don’t have to like the things you were told to like – you can decide for yourself what it is that you like.  You don’t have to want the things you were told to want – you can decide that for yourself as well.

You don’t have to be one of them.  You can have a life full of kindness, gentleness, compassion, empathy instead.  You don’t have to prefer violence and hatred.  You can be different from that.

If you have dissociative identity disorder (DID / MPD), be sure to let the parts who were ritually abused to experience some of the more positive things in your life.  They might initially say they aren’t interested (I’m guessing they were taught to say that), but if you encourage them to experience some of the positive things in your life, you can help to bring healing to them too.  Don’t leave them stuck in their traumatic history – help them to heal and to have a chance to live in a safe, positive, warm place.

All the parts of you can heal from the atrocities of ritual abuse.

But for that to happen, you will need to be willing to introduce the light of the day-world to those parts that were split off into the world of darkness.  Invite them to actively participate in your day-world.  Let them have a cup of coffee or your favorite soda.  Let them sit outside in the sun.  Let them listen to some of your favorite music, or watch television, or walk the dogs in the park.  Let the have a turn at your favorite computer game, and to nibble on your favorite treats and munchies.  The dark-side parts will need to experience some of what your world is like in order to understand how it can be better for them.  Be gentle with them.  Slowly show them the things that you like.

It might feel scary to interact with these parts, but keeping them separated from you only keeps them stuck in the darkness they have known.  With the help of your therapist, let those parts become more connected to your personal worlds where they can learn about kindness, gentleness, peace of mind, etc.  Build up your courage and ability to listen to them.  Comfort them from the hurts they have experienced.  Help them to get out of those places that have been so violent.

Separate yourself from anyone in the outside world that wants you to stay in the darkness.  Firmly reclaim all your insiders as parts of you that belong with you, and not to anyone else.  Work very hard to not leave any of your parts left stuck in such violence.  Have the courage to pull them all out into a life of safety.

Your whole system can have the life that you want.  Don’t let any of them stay stuck in the yuck of the past.

Let them experience the goodness and joy that can be part of Easter.

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By:

Kathy Broady LCSW

www.AbuseConsultants.com

www.SurvivorForum.com

Copyright © 2008-2010 Kathy Broady LCSW and Discussing Dissociation

November 15, 2009

Attachment to the Perpetrator

Posted in Dissociative Identity Disorder, Trauma, Therapy and Counseling, DID Education, DID/MPD, therapy, sexual abuse, mental health, Therapy Homework Ideas, Friends of Multiples, Family Members of Trauma Survivors, Physical Abuse, emotional pain tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , at 7:53 pm by Kathy Broady


Last night, I saw another television documentary on Jaycee Lee Dugard – the young woman who was kidnapped at age 11, held captive for 18 years, and found alive, along with her two daughters on August 26, 2009.

Jaycee is now 29 years old.

Jaycee spent the past 18 years held captive in the backyard of a registered, violent sex offender, Phillip Garrido.  Garrido fathered Jaycee’s two daughters, and has been charged with numerous criminal offenses.

While most of the world was thrilled to see Garrido arrested and locked away into police custody, Jaycee and her girls had different emotional reactions.  Initially, when questioned by the authorities, Jaycee was supportive of Garrido, she refused to admit her real identity, and when the facts weren’t adding up, she claimed to be hiding from a fictitious abusive husband that lived in another state.  She had chances to tell about her perpetrator, but her first responses were to protect him.  Her two daughters cried when they heard Garrido was arrested.

Garrido spent years torturing these young women, but yet they were clearly connected to him.

How can this be?

This dynamic is called Stockholm Syndrome.  It is when victims form positive, caring attachments with their violent perpetrators.  The more victims have to depend on their perpetrators for their very survival, the more likely the victim will form an attachment to their perpetrator.

The world has been appalled as they heard this story.

But this story is not a new story.

This story happens to many children every day of the year.

Many dissociative trauma survivors have lived a life all too similar to the life that Jaycee lived while with Garrido.  As children, most dissociative trauma survivors lived – day after day, year after year – under the strict sadistic control of a sex offender.  They were repeatedly sexually abused, many became pregnant, they were given hidden identities and new names, and they were taught bizarre religious beliefs.  Many DID survivors were locked and confined in unhealthy places, made to be completely dependent upon their abusers, and the reality of their daily abuse was hidden from the neighbors.  It is not at all uncommon for DID survivors to have been sexually involved and sexually controlled by their perpetrators well into their adulthood.

The main difference between most DID Survivors and Jaycee Dugard is that most DID survivors were not kidnapped by a stranger.  Most DID survivors who have lived this kind of ongoing abuse were simply living in their family homes.

These DID survivors were being raised by their father and mother.  They didn’t have the hope that someday they would be rescued and returned to their “real family”.  They were with their real family.

In either situation, the child-victims learned to adapt to the sadistic behaviors of the abusive parental figures in order to survive.  Despite the extreme abuse, they learned to depend on the abusers.  Everything from breathing, food, clothing, water, shelter, warmth, education, medical attention, etc. was controlled and monitored by their abusers.  There was no personal space.  There was no way to get away.  There was no known place to run to even if they had gotten away.

The child-victims knew they were stuck there.

They knew that their life and basic survival needs were completely dependent upon keeping the perpetrator happy.  They learned to base their own survival on effectively meeting the needs of the perpetrator, and the perpetrator had the power to decide if they would live or die.  To survive, they became loyal to the perpetrator.

Perpetrators purposefully create this kind of dependence in their victims.  They want their victims to feel trapped, and to lose hope, and to be stuck in their abuse.  They do not want their victims to know there is a way out, or to find a way out.  Perpetrators want to be in control of absolutely everything, barely leaving their victims room to breathe on their own.

In keeping the required secrets, the surviving children often  learned that the ONLY person to turn to in time of trouble or need is the perpetrator.  To get their daily survival needs met, the child learned they had to placate, please, and depend upon the abuser.

In these long-term abusive situations, the perpetrator is both the caretaker and the abuser.  The child learns to love and hate this parent.  The child feels either trapped in the abuse, or feels tied to them in order to get their needs met.

Consequently, the child-victims have to depend on their abusers for their care.  Who else will feed them?  Who else will get their books for school?  Who else will provide clothing and a place to sleep? These children have no where else to turn, so they form a variety of trauma bonds with their perpetrator.

Since the child-victim’s life depends on their perpetrator, the victim develops a loyalty to the perpetrator.  They experience a positive loyalty when the perpetrator meets their daily needs.  They experience a fear-based loyalty when their life depends on it.

Whether the offender parent is being appropriate or violent, the dissociative child is drawn into the relationship, and feels emotionally connected to the perpetrator.

Child-victims might split off parts that keep the abuse separate from their feelings of love and appreciation.  It’s hard to genuinely care about someone who is hurting and abusing you, but child victims often have to manage both of these scenarios. They might split off parts to deny the abuse, so they don’t have to remember the violence.

And after living that dynamic for years of time, survivors lose the ability to recognize who or what a perpetrator is.  They grow up feeling responsible for pleasing perpetrators, learning how to tolerate abusers instead of learning how to leave perpetrators. They grow up believing that attaching and bonding to a dangerous person is critical for their own life.

Attachment to the perpetrator creates many layers of confusion for many years to come.  It is a critical area of healing that requires a great deal of work in the therapy setting.

Do they love their abuser?  Do they hate their abuser?  Do they recognize their abuser as an abuser? Can they recognize who in the world is or isn’t an abuser?  Can they leave their abuser?  Can they bond with a non-abuser?

Even as adults, far too many DID survivors can no longer separate who is who.  They will live a life connecting to one abuser after another, yet they won’t be able to recognize a safe person when they meet one.  DID survivors may feel more comfort in the victim role, and they may prefer the familiarity of abusive relationships over the strange unknown of safe relationships.  Or, they may assume that all people are abusers, and thus miss out on the opportunity to learn the difference between a safe person and a perpetrator.

Every DID survivor has attached to at least one perpetrator in their lifetime, and probably more than one.

It is critical to work on this trauma dynamic in therapy.  This work is essential for healing.  Otherwise, DID survivors will feel a high degree of comfort with perpetrators, and will not be able to stay connected to a safe person when they meet one.  Or, they’ll accuse a safe person of becoming a perpetrator.

There are a lot of different possibilities, most of them ending up as relationship disasters.

In order to have any chance at having successful social relationships, dissociative trauma survivors absolutely must address the attachment they feel to their perpetrators.

The health of your future relationships depend on it.

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By:

Kathy Broady LCSW

www.AbuseConsultants.com

www.SurvivorForum.com

April 26, 2009

Expressing Anger Instead of Pain

Posted in DID Education, DID/MPD, Dissociative Identity Disorder, HBO's Series "In Treatment", therapy, Therapy and Counseling, trauma therapist tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , at 4:37 pm by Kathy Broady


Every now and then, Dr. Paul Weston (Gabriel Byrne) from HBO’s series, “In Treatment” comes out with a good line, full of depth, and accurate to the therapy process.

In one of the episodes I saw this week, Dr. Weston says, “Is it easier to be angry with me than to look at your own pain?”  His client was throwing all kinds of angry jabs at him when clearly she was angry, upset, and miserable about her own life.

Even though it was said on television, that line has a lot of truth in it.

Is it easier to be angry with me than to look at your own pain?

I realize that most of you reading this blog are not connected enough with me — Kathy — to make me a likely target for your anger.  Frankly, I appreciate that.  Believe me, I’m not “volunteering” to be the target.

But, have a think about the people that are closer to you — the people that are more visible in your life.

Is it easier to be angry with your therapist than to look at your own pain?
Is it easier to be angry with your spouse than to look at your own pain?
Is it easier to be angry with your friend than to look at your own pain?
Is it easier to be angry with your boss than to look at your own pain?
Is it easier to be angry with a stranger than to look at your own pain?
Is it easier to be angry with yourself than to look at your own pain?

So many people want to deflect their pain by pointing at other people, blaming other people, and being angry with other people.  It’s often too hard to sit with your own pain without doing that.

What makes anger easier to express than pain?

How many times have you argued with or fussed at your therapist when you were in deep pain?

What makes your therapist a safe enough person to be the target of your anger?

For people with DID (dissociative identity disorder), it is even more complicated because there are often insiders with memories of pain that they want to talk about, and the host / front alter part may not want to hear about it.  Host parts can get angry and upset with their therapists for listening to the inside ones.  Why is this so often the case?

Are you getting angry at your therapist instead of looking at your own pain?

Listening to all that a person says is an important part of therapy.  Would you rather your therapist not listen to your inner parts?  Isn’t that the same as asking your therapist to not listen to you as a whole person?   Why should your therapist talk to some of you, but not all of you, especially if those others want to talk about the pain that they are feeling?  Why should they be ignored, neglected, shunned?

What if your therapist listened and talked to them, but not to you?  It probably wouldn’t go over so well if the shoe were on the other foot.

See, even though you are switching, and you feel very much like different people, your therapist will still see you as the same basic person.  While there may be some parts of your system that are more involved with the current day / outside world than others, everyone in your system is still important, and everyone can have their say.

Of course, part of the difficulty here is that some of the insiders speak about things that the host is very very uncomfortable with.  Sometimes the insiders speak of trauma memories that the host doesn’t want to hear about.  Sometimes the insiders speak of ongoing abuse, or abuse by a loved one.  Sometimes the very speaking about abuse at all is more than the host wants to hear.

Another common reason that dissociative trauma survivors express anger at their therapist is because expressing anger at their perpetrators is too complicated.  Displacing and projecting anger at your therapists instead of your perpetrators may help to find some version of release of anger, but it isn’t really going to get to the root of the problem, so it’s not going to get the kind of resolution that you might be looking for.

Expressing anger at the people that hurt you — while one might think that should be easy — is actually very difficult for survivors with dissociative disorders.  There are a number of different reasons for this:

  • The violent, sadistic abuser is still alive and still poses a threat.  If you are overwhelmed by your fear of this person, it is harder to feel safe enough to be angry with them.
  • You may have been threatened with great harm and more violence if you expressed anger or irritation with your perpetrators.  This “rule” is hard to overcome.
  • You may be too dissociated from your trauma memories to really know who your perpetrators are.  When this is the case, you are at risk of expressing your anger at the wrong people.
  • Due to the complications of your family dynamics and trauma memories, you might feel too trapped by your own guilt, or shame, or humiliation to feel able to be angry at anyone else.

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Emotions can be very complex and finding a way to safely and honestly express your pain and your anger may take a lot of work and practice.

The next time you are angry at your therapist, think about what Dr. Weston words, “Is it easier to be angry with me than to look at your own pain?”

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By:

Kathy Broady LCSW

www.AbuseConsultants.com

www.SurvivorForum.com

March 8, 2009

10 Life-Lessons I’ve Learned from Multiples, part 1

Posted in Dissociative Identity Disorder tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , at 1:34 pm by Kathy Broady


No, I’m not a multiple.   I do not have multiple personalities and I do not have dissociative identity disorder.

But I know multiples very well.

I am a trauma therapist who has worked almost exclusively with people with dissociative disorders for 20+ years.  I have met more multiples than I can count, and I have spent hours and hours and hours each week — and most days — with one multiple or another.  Sometimes I talk to multiples in person, sometimes online, sometimes on the phone.  I have led in-patient hospital-based groups for multiples, outpatient groups for multiples, online groups for multiples, and spouse groups for the supportive loved ones of multiples.  I’ve met multiples from various countries and several different continents around the world.

At this point in time, I don’t think there is anything someone with DID/MPD could say to me that would be shocking, or more horrifying than the already horrific stories that I have heard.  I do not mean that to say that I’ve heard everything because I haven’t. Everyone’s story is absolutely unique to itself. It never ceases to amaze me how many different versions of trauma exist out there in the world.  But after a while, the versions of evil and horror and terror and exploitation become equal to each other as another chapter in my Listening Book.  There is no way to categorize which traumas are worse than the others – it is all abuse, criminal, and painfully life-altering.

I haven’t heard it all, but I’ve heard enough to not be surprised anymore.

For some, I’ve been at the very beginning of their DID/MPD healing process, being the therapist that diagnoses the Dissociative Disorder and the first person to explain what dissociation is to the struggling survivor sitting in front of me.  For most, I’ve become involved mid-journey to the healing process.

I’ve seen all the stages of healing, and I’ve witnessed many of the adjunct disorders, struggles, and complications that often appear alongside dissociative disorders.  I’ve sat years and years of time alongside some multiples, and had brief exchanges with others.

And with each dissociative person I meet, I am reminded of some of the things that multiples have taught me:

1. The Strength of the Human Spirit.   No matter what happened, no matter how severe the abuse, no matter how much the perpetrators try to use mind control and programmed thinking to manipulate someone, there is still a real person in there.   Dissociative survivors have always maintained the ability to think for themselves, even if they had to hide that deep inside a variety of complex dissociative layers.  With some gentle encouragement and safe support to be who they really are instead of who the perps were trying to force them to be, all DID survivors can overcome the roles that were coerced upon them and decide to have the life that genuinely fits them.  The strength you have to be you can overcome any of the garbage piled on you by a perpetrator.  Despite all that has happened, dissociative survivors can maintain a sense of themselves.  How utterly impressive is that!

2. The Creativity of the Mind.  The mind of a dissociative person is completely creative, complex, and unique.  To be able to solve such serious life problems while so very young, alone, powerless, and resource-less is awe-inspiring.  Finding ways to exist and to maintain sanity without mentally breaking or totally self-destructing, even if that meant finding ways to co-exist with evil as safely as possible, is awe-inspiring.

3. The Strength of the Mind.   Dissociative people have a mental strength.  They developed and perfected this strength during the years of mentally withstanding their abusers. They can think past the twists and turns of manipulation, they can see through lies and half-truths, and long ago realized they don’t have to totally become what is being forced upon them.  The years and years of fighting off abusers that play twisted mind games have created a mental strength that is admirable.

4. The Incredible Ability to Withstand Enormous Physical Pain.   As sad as it is to think that any person has had to learn how to withstand various physical tortures, people with DID/MPD have learned how to survive through these kinds of ordeals.  It is mind-boggling to me that people can have such strength and ability to overcome such physical pain and torment, and not be completely psychopathic and violent afterwards.  Dissociative people can maintain the ability for gentleness, kindness, compassion, and caring even after being physically tortured.  That’s truly amazing.

5. The Strength of Connection and the Power of Love.  Even though surrounded by too many abusers and violent sadistic criminals, most of the dissociative people I have met have retained the ability to love and to connect with someone else outside of themselves.  The ability to bond, and to love, and to have compassion for someone else was not squished out of them, even though the predators of the world would have tried repeatedly to destroy that ability permanently.   This is foundationally important.  Unless someone truly becomes an antisocial sociopath, they cannot completely belong to dark evil organizations.  If trainers and abusers cannot make a person absolutely willing to hurt others, without remorse or regret, then they cannot make a true abuser out of them nor have complete control of that person’s deeper true self.  Maintaining the ability to love and to connect, even when beaten to near-death by abusers is truly inspiring.

To be continued…

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In the meantime, please ask yourself:

  • Do you see these strengths within yourself?
  • Have you recognized the depth of strength and character it takes to mentally fight off the invasive effects of abusers?
  • What strengths do you see in yourself that are not yet listed?
  • Which of these listed strengths is a surprise to you?
  • Do you have what it takes to continue separating yourself from the actions and beliefs of your offenders?

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__________

By:

Kathy Broady LCSW

www.AbuseConsultants.com

www.SurvivorForum.com

February 10, 2009

Current Day Abuse – When Dissociative Survivors are Trapped, Owned, and Exploited as Adults

Posted in Dissociative Identity Disorder, Trauma, Therapy and Counseling, DID Education, trauma therapist, DID/MPD, therapy, sexual abuse, mental health, Child Alters, Prevention of Sexual Abuse tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , at 1:11 pm by Kathy Broady


Dissociative Identity Disorder is created from severe, chronic child abuse, but does that abuse automatically stop in childhood?

Unfortunately, no, it does not.

All too many survivors continue to be trapped in abusive environments long after their childhood has ended.  Sometimes this abuse continues with the same family-related perpetrators that abused the survivor all throughout the childhood years.  For example, far too many adult children of creepy-fathers are still being sexually abused into adulthood.

Creepy-fathers don’t necessarily stop being sex offenders just because their children get older.  These lifelong predators already know how to manipulate your dissociative system, and they will continue to “call out” and dominate the child parts that they controlled for all the years previous.  The child parts don’t necessarily realize that they are in an adult body, or that years of time have passed, so it still feels like more of the same to them.

Typically, in situations such as these, the dissociative walls that separate those abused child parts and the adult host can still be locked solidly in place, allowing no seepage of information to pass through.  The adult DID survivor may not have any conscious awareness that they are still being abused in this way.

Scary.
And sad.
But true, far too often.

Sometimes, the ongoing abuse is more organized than in-home family abuse.  The sex slave industries can use, own, control, sell, and exploit dissociative survivors for many years.

Slavery didn’t end with the Civil War – it just became more hidden.

One of the current ways that slavery still exists — even in 2009 — is through the entrapment of the dissociative population.   Various prostitution / pornography organizations can “own” and exploit survivors by using physical violence, emotional blackmail, drugs, mind control techniques, and dissociation as means to maintain their power and control.  Extricating these dissociative prisoners from these organized predators is a complicated and complex process, but possible nonetheless.

Adult trauma survivors with Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) have had years of experience managing severe trauma while simultaneously blocking themselves off from the reality of that trauma.   Dissociative walls can provide an element of amnesia that both protects the person from the overwhelming crushing awareness of ongoing abuse, but also traps the survivor in an ongoing continuation of that abuse.

If dissociative survivors have current-day chunks of missing time blocked from their awareness, they cannot know what happened to them, but they also cannot remove themselves or protect themselves from the ongoing trauma and abuse.  Without effective therapy and treatment, they also cannot remember or control the fact that they could be handing over their children to be used in the same abusive ways by the very same perpetrator groups.

Unfortunately, we all know that the kiddie porn industry is alive and well.

Dissociative survivors that grew up being used and sold within the kiddie porn industry are at a higher risk of continuing to be owned by, and forced to work for that industry even as adults.

When DID survivors are involved in current day abuse, it is imperative to break down the amnesiac walls created through dissociative processes.  The survivors have to have the courage to look at what they are involved with, and then have even more courage to problem-solve their way out.

Dissociative survivors trapped in other kinds of family violence and domestic violence are vulnerable in these same ways.

Trauma therapists must be aware of these possibilities so they can actively work with the dissociative population in order to assist them to gain freedom from ongoing abuse.  Therapy with a strong emphasis on increasing internal communication and lowering amnesiac barriers is essential.

Therapists need to use basic good trauma therapy while doing this work. Listen closely to the inside parts, help sooth the pain, create both internal and external safety, reconnect the isolated parts with the rest of the system, address the concerns raised by those internal parts in all the normal ways, etc.  Many of the very same processes that work to help heal “regular abuse” continue to be effective in addressing more extreme abuses.
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***  To all dissociative survivors —
You don’t have to stay stuck in the abuse cycles.  If you are able to read this post, you are able to do the work it takes to remove yourself from any ongoing abuse that you are tangled in.    Of course, your perpetrators won’t tell you that you can get out, but you can get out and away from them anyway.  You are older, wiser, and stronger than you were when you were just a child.  You can find ways that will work for you, you can find  safe people to help you, and you can be safe.  Talk lots and lots to your inside people – it’s only as you work together as a team that you can beat the external controls.  It takes a lot of hard work, but if you all really want to be free from abuse and safe from harm, you can be.  It can happen.

__________

By:

Kathy Broady LCSW

www.AbuseConsultants.com

www.SurvivorForum.com

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