etherealgoddess
perseverance is inevitable success
- Dec 8, 2022
- 193
I dealt with a ton of emotional abuse, but it's almost like I feel like it's not true? Does anyone get what I mean? I will have titles for my paragraph, so you don't have to be intimidated by fat paragraphs.
My parents' behaviors:
My story: I was yelled at multiple times a day, every day, for probably a bit over 10 years. Imagine someone screaming at you from a foot away in your face because you forget where you put your notebook. For any small mistake I made, I was screamed at by my mom like a lunatic. I was constantly stressed about going home, and I had no escape from her. My dad, on the other hand, never participated in emotionally parenting me. I sometimes wish he could have stood up for his children. Following my suicide attempt, instead of offering comfort and love, he threatened to let me die if I tried again. He maybe has talked to me twice just this year, but we live in the same house. He never cares about what I have to say or my opinions. He only talks to me when he is excited about a new space topic. He talks about it for an hour and then ignores me when I want to discuss my interests. He had no idea what was going on when I was in school or who my friends were.
What this caused:
In this very stressful environment, I used to come home from school and really struggle to think or concentrate. I could not study for tests and could not do my homework because my mom would be constantly shouting at me or my brother for something. In psychology, when you're highly stressed, your survival instinct takes over and your logical thinking shuts down. At that point, it was impossible for me to study or do homework. When the school year began, I was able to focus on my homework and studying. However, the constant yelling started to take a toll on me, and I could feel the stress building up inside me. This was a pattern that happened every year. By the time school had reached the two- or three-month mark, I could feel myself collapsing. I was constantly having so much anxiety that I could not do anything but just tank my emotions. I always thought something was just wrong with me. The anxiety of not doing well in school when I was having bad performance made me feel even more anxious, and the yelling would never stop.
Realizing my situation was bad:
As I got older and got a boyfriend for the first time at 14, that was when I was able to see the stark difference between my family and other families. That's when I realized my situation was not normal. It finally gave me the relief to finally validate myself, but it pushed me into a depression. I think the delusion that my family was normal was what kept me going, but when I realized it was not normal and was begging my mom to stop, I think being aware of the abuse I was in made the abuse that much more hurtful. I have memories of writing in my diary about how I could feel myself becoming suicidal because of my mom's yelling because it was nonstop. My ability to function was already very limited due to extreme stress. Now that I was finally reflecting on my situation, my executive functioning was gone. I was not studying unless it was full adrenaline, doing all of my homework in 2 hours before school would start. I could not use my logical brain unless I was in extreme stress. But because I was constantly under stress, I couldn't just do my homework normally like other kids.
My perspective right now:
I have been reading a lot of research studies, and it's very clear that childhood trauma, especially emotional abuse, is related to a number of adverse effects. It relates to poor executive function, poor self-esteem, depression, anxiety, and even on a structural brain level. I did get hit a couple of times as a child very hard, but I wouldn't label myself as physically abused because it was so rare. It maybe happened 10 times in my life. However, I do want to say that technically we have brain plasticity: think about how plastic can be molded in just about everything. Our brains work similarly. However, spending 10 years in emotional abuse is going to take a lot of wiring, and I'm on this website. It's pretty obvious what I want to do, but I also know I don't have the will to kill myself.
However, there's a part of me that's just.... it believes that it was my fault for not being a good kid. For some reason, I can't emotionally believe that I was so psychologically abused. I just can't... believe it? I can't really sit with myself and validate my feelings? I just look at my executive functioning and hate myself. I can't get myself to do anything. Doing my laundry or brushing my teeth is a big deal. It's even ruined my teeth. My enamel is crazy eroded. I used to have white teeth, and now my teeth have that greyish-looking outline because they're slightly translucent and look tainted yellow. Now, it's definitely mild, but I'm literally a young adult, and these teeth are supposed to apparently last for decades...
I wonder if any of you guys have similar experiences? Like, not believing your situation's severity relates to how badly it affected you? I almost feel like emotional abuse is 10x worse because it seems so easy to invalidate and be like, "I got yelled at a few times, it's not a big deal." But those people have never dealt with how it feels when your mom's only communication with you when she needs to correct you is screaming at you instead of being a sane person and trying to help your child to help your child find a strategy or do a parenting strategy or SOMETHING.
My parents' behaviors:
My story: I was yelled at multiple times a day, every day, for probably a bit over 10 years. Imagine someone screaming at you from a foot away in your face because you forget where you put your notebook. For any small mistake I made, I was screamed at by my mom like a lunatic. I was constantly stressed about going home, and I had no escape from her. My dad, on the other hand, never participated in emotionally parenting me. I sometimes wish he could have stood up for his children. Following my suicide attempt, instead of offering comfort and love, he threatened to let me die if I tried again. He maybe has talked to me twice just this year, but we live in the same house. He never cares about what I have to say or my opinions. He only talks to me when he is excited about a new space topic. He talks about it for an hour and then ignores me when I want to discuss my interests. He had no idea what was going on when I was in school or who my friends were.
What this caused:
In this very stressful environment, I used to come home from school and really struggle to think or concentrate. I could not study for tests and could not do my homework because my mom would be constantly shouting at me or my brother for something. In psychology, when you're highly stressed, your survival instinct takes over and your logical thinking shuts down. At that point, it was impossible for me to study or do homework. When the school year began, I was able to focus on my homework and studying. However, the constant yelling started to take a toll on me, and I could feel the stress building up inside me. This was a pattern that happened every year. By the time school had reached the two- or three-month mark, I could feel myself collapsing. I was constantly having so much anxiety that I could not do anything but just tank my emotions. I always thought something was just wrong with me. The anxiety of not doing well in school when I was having bad performance made me feel even more anxious, and the yelling would never stop.
Realizing my situation was bad:
As I got older and got a boyfriend for the first time at 14, that was when I was able to see the stark difference between my family and other families. That's when I realized my situation was not normal. It finally gave me the relief to finally validate myself, but it pushed me into a depression. I think the delusion that my family was normal was what kept me going, but when I realized it was not normal and was begging my mom to stop, I think being aware of the abuse I was in made the abuse that much more hurtful. I have memories of writing in my diary about how I could feel myself becoming suicidal because of my mom's yelling because it was nonstop. My ability to function was already very limited due to extreme stress. Now that I was finally reflecting on my situation, my executive functioning was gone. I was not studying unless it was full adrenaline, doing all of my homework in 2 hours before school would start. I could not use my logical brain unless I was in extreme stress. But because I was constantly under stress, I couldn't just do my homework normally like other kids.
My perspective right now:
I have been reading a lot of research studies, and it's very clear that childhood trauma, especially emotional abuse, is related to a number of adverse effects. It relates to poor executive function, poor self-esteem, depression, anxiety, and even on a structural brain level. I did get hit a couple of times as a child very hard, but I wouldn't label myself as physically abused because it was so rare. It maybe happened 10 times in my life. However, I do want to say that technically we have brain plasticity: think about how plastic can be molded in just about everything. Our brains work similarly. However, spending 10 years in emotional abuse is going to take a lot of wiring, and I'm on this website. It's pretty obvious what I want to do, but I also know I don't have the will to kill myself.
However, there's a part of me that's just.... it believes that it was my fault for not being a good kid. For some reason, I can't emotionally believe that I was so psychologically abused. I just can't... believe it? I can't really sit with myself and validate my feelings? I just look at my executive functioning and hate myself. I can't get myself to do anything. Doing my laundry or brushing my teeth is a big deal. It's even ruined my teeth. My enamel is crazy eroded. I used to have white teeth, and now my teeth have that greyish-looking outline because they're slightly translucent and look tainted yellow. Now, it's definitely mild, but I'm literally a young adult, and these teeth are supposed to apparently last for decades...
I wonder if any of you guys have similar experiences? Like, not believing your situation's severity relates to how badly it affected you? I almost feel like emotional abuse is 10x worse because it seems so easy to invalidate and be like, "I got yelled at a few times, it's not a big deal." But those people have never dealt with how it feels when your mom's only communication with you when she needs to correct you is screaming at you instead of being a sane person and trying to help your child to help your child find a strategy or do a parenting strategy or SOMETHING.