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As for the attachment injury, I push and push and push my husband away... then feel abandoned and alone. Why do I do this?!?!
I can explain what this was in my case.
My T actually cued in on my attachment injuries by watching my husband and I try to get closer than do something, anything to cause us to move away from each other. Then after I told him that I was attracted to him, he watched me try to run every possible way I could think of. Understanding there were attachment injuries was the key to both our marital and my individual counseling.
What you are experiencing is the bind, or as my T affectionately refers to it "the hellish bind." This dynamic is what makes healing from attachment injuries so very difficult. So here's what's going on.
According to attachment theory, we have a biological instinct to stay close to our attachment figure so that we can survive. They teach us how to regulate our emotions, soothe ourselves, identify our emotions and needs and how to communicate our needs. A healthy human being is literally hard wired to move TOWARDS relationship to get their needs met. We never lose this. What a healthy adult hopes to achieve is not actually independence but interdependence. We never stop needing other people, but we learn how to fend for ourselves when someone else isn't available and we learn how to help other people who need us. But relationships NEVER cease to be important. Human beings have open physiological systems so that when we relate to another person emotionally, our systems actually interact.
So no matter what age we are, we need other people to get our needs met. And when we're children it's a matter of life and death.
But here's the rub, if you are abused or neglected my your caregiver, then moving towards them is the very thing that injures you, so that your amygdala learns that moving closer to other people is dangerous and needs to be avoided to keep you safe. And often the best situation we could achieve was to be alone. So alone feels safe.
So you move closer to get your needs met, but when you get move close enough for that to happen, the sense of danger gets so intense that you HAVE to move away. And part of moving away and keeping yourself safe is to leave before you can be left and hurt again. It helps if you remember that all of your behavior is driven by pain avoidance.
As I learned to move closer to my T, there was a little surprise waiting also. Moving close started to hold out the promise of having my childhood unmet needs met. But I HATED my needs, I hated having them, I hated longing for anything because I knew the ending and I knew it was painful and ugly. I finally realized that my whole life had been spent trying to find the perfect distance from someone in relationship so that my needs would be met, but I wouldn't move close enough to evoke my unmet needs and I could feel safe. It didn't exist.
So this is why its so confusing. Consciously, my whole life I was looking for someone to love me, and love me enough to not leave me if they knew me. I wanted a close intimate relationship. But what I didn't realize until I started to move closer to my T just how very terrifying it was to get that. So in order to heal we have to walk into the center of our terror, essentially doing something that feels life-threatening in order to heal.
It's incredibly confusing until you can understand the dynamic and the tension between moving closer and staying alone to be safe.
AG