Hi TN. I hear how awful you feel right now and I feel for you. ((((((((TN)))))))) All the feelings that are coming up as a result of this seem overwhelming and I'm glad that you've come here to vent/get support. We are listnening and, as HB pointed out, while you may judge your feelings and yourself, we do not.
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So part of me is terrified I can't do this. Another part of me is so horribly angry with him that I want to punch the walls down. Yet another part of me acknowledges I am nobody and I deserve to be abandoned during the holidays. Lastly I am angry with myself that I have allowed someone to get so close to me again and that I am so stupid for letting my guard down and becoming so attached to someone
What struck me about your above comment is how nearly this situation most likely mimics something you've felt before.... something that, as a child, may very well have been life or death. The intensity with which you blame yourself is stringent, and it is a feeling I know too well. For those of us who have been betrayed by those we HAD to depend on, it certainly is easier to think that we are at fault, that there is something wrong with us, then it is to trust that we deserve what everyone else deserves and that our cargivers can fail miserably. Like HB said, what would you do if your child was as upset as you are? You might try working through that scenario, as if your child was saying the things you wrote. Even if you can't be nice to yourself, or comfort yourself at all, it might be worth telling yourself that even though you don't feel it, the truth is that you deserve the same love, compassion and nurturance your child does. Maybe ask yourself WHY you don't deserve it. What is it about YOU that makes you unworthy? The truth is that you are very much so worthy and deserving, but I think you'll have to work through the shittiness of why you feel unworthy before you can get past this.
In situations like these, I often tell myself that I am unworthy because, if I were deserving of comfort and love- if I didn't deserve to be abandoned- then I woulf have been cared for properly the first time around. As if there is some direct connection that exists between what I received as a child and the way I should have been parented. But in reality, it's like saying "well, because my parents didn't give me water as a child, I don't deserve to drink water." Everyone needs security and love and comfort just as everyone needs water! You deserve to be abandoned during the holidays just as much I deserved to be left crying in my crib for hours! As my t says- and trust me, I'm paraphrasing, just because what has happened to us was f***ed up, it doesn't me that we deserved it.
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I also feel guilty about having all of the above feelings. After all, the guy is just going on vacation right? The world is full of much more serious problems and I'm just a whiney child.
Yes, he is just going on vacation. But vacations mean that people leave for a while. And when that's our t's, it feels like they are rejecting us and abandoning us and it stirs up all those awful feelings in us that remind us of what it felt like to be abandoned and hurt before. I'm sure your t fully expects you to react to his leaving. I mean, how could you not? Would you really want to be in relationship with a t who it didn't matter to you if he was leaving for a while? When my t tells me she'll be out, (and we go through this everytime) I tell her "no thank you" and that I'd prefer she'd stay. She then says that she'll be back and that it will be okay, we'll make it. I then tell her that I'd like to go with her... that I'll be good and quiet and won't ask "are we there yet?"
She says she's not worried about how I'd behave and that she wishes that she could give me what I wanted. And always, on the session before she leaves, as I walk out the door, I say "you're coming back, right? cuz I really want you to" and she says "yep, I sure am." And then I call and leave her messages while she's gone and when she gets back, the first thing I say is "thanks for coming home, I appreciate it!" and she simply says "sure!" Now there are a lot more feelings involved, and it is hard and scary, but IMO, it's a part of the therapy. If we don't learn that it is okay to be left and that our t's will come back, I don't know how else we can work through the attachment issues. Now your t dropped the ball when he didn't call, but he DID come back. You've been able to work through things with him, and it has been hard and trecherous, but even you said that you've been doing good work lately. What if you tell him how scared/upset you are, he leaves, he comes back, and you can feel even safer and move even closer to him? How much more will you be able to trust him after he keeps his word and comes back?
Well, I'm sure I've blabbered long enough. I hope I'm making sense and that you at least can think about WHY you think you deserve to be left instead of focusing on deserving to be left in general. I think you'll be hard pressed to come up with legitimate answers because you don't really deserved to be left at all... but I think you have to come to that conclusion no matter how many times we say it (i'm tempted to copy and paste it a thousand times, but i shall refrain... for now)
I'm thinking of you TN and I truly hope that you and your t can use this experience to deepen your relationship.
-CT