communicating post emotional abuse
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communicating post emotional abuse
I'm 17, and my only long-term relationship experience was an emotionally abusive one. It's been a year and a half since got out, and in general, I'd say I'm pretty far along in my recovery. In the last few months I've started seeing someone and it's going really well, but there are a lot of self-preservation instincts left over from my first relationship that make it hard to communicate and ask for what I want. I benefit from consistent little reassurances, and my partner encourages me to ask for them, but I have a constant fear that I'm doing something wrong by talking about my needs. Each time I've finally worked up the courage to ask (whether its "can you remind me that you still like me" or "I'm nervous, could you please hold my hand") he's been super accommodating and understanding, but it still takes so much effort to get me to that point. He's given me every reason to trust him, yet I still have to psych myself up for hours before I feel comfortable talking to him about anything more vulnerable than what show we'll watch after dinner. What can I do to make getting over that fear a little easier and less draining? Is communicating always going to be this difficult?
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Re: communicating post emotional abuse
Hi snailshen,
I'm so glad you were able to get out of that relationship, and that you're now in one that feels safe and loving to you.
"Draining" is a really excellent way to describe the process of unlearning the habits you developed in order to survive and abusive relationship. Because it can be exhausting to run a calculus of "is this safe, will this set them off" for things that you know intellectually are no big deal. That's one of the many awful things about abuse; it teaches us patterns or habits that help us stay safe, but then those habits can be wired in there pretty deep.
I can't say how long the process will take, but I do want you to know that communicating likely will get easier over time. Both because you'll get more practice doing it and more time to heal, but also because you'll hopefully continue to be with partners who let you know it's safe to ask for what you need.
You mention having made some big progress in your healing, which is great. Did any of that healing happen with the support of someone like a counselor? Too, have you had any spaces, be they a counselors office, or with understanding friends or family, to just sort of practice communicating?
I also just want to check in on how you're doing in general; there is a ton of stressful stuff going on in the world right now, so we're making it a habit on our boards to touch base with our users about how they're doing.
I'm so glad you were able to get out of that relationship, and that you're now in one that feels safe and loving to you.
"Draining" is a really excellent way to describe the process of unlearning the habits you developed in order to survive and abusive relationship. Because it can be exhausting to run a calculus of "is this safe, will this set them off" for things that you know intellectually are no big deal. That's one of the many awful things about abuse; it teaches us patterns or habits that help us stay safe, but then those habits can be wired in there pretty deep.
I can't say how long the process will take, but I do want you to know that communicating likely will get easier over time. Both because you'll get more practice doing it and more time to heal, but also because you'll hopefully continue to be with partners who let you know it's safe to ask for what you need.
You mention having made some big progress in your healing, which is great. Did any of that healing happen with the support of someone like a counselor? Too, have you had any spaces, be they a counselors office, or with understanding friends or family, to just sort of practice communicating?
I also just want to check in on how you're doing in general; there is a ton of stressful stuff going on in the world right now, so we're making it a habit on our boards to touch base with our users about how they're doing.
And you to whom adversity has dealt the final blow/with smiling bastards lying to you everywhere you go/turn to and put out all your strength of arm and heart and brain/and like the Mary Ellen Carter rise again.
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