Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Boundaries and how to set them

So the Lord has been wonderfully leading me along the way I should go. Just as his word says in
Psalm 16:11 "You will make known to me the path of life. In your presence is fullness of joy. In your right hand are pleasures forever." 

I am so thankful for his leading me to the right sermons and teachings at just the right time by experienced Christian counselors and ministers.

Joyce Meyer was the first one who spoke directly from God's heart to mine about having good boundaries.

Then God lead me to another source on YouTube. His name is Patrick Doyle. He taught so profoundly on "Setting Boundaries In Relationships".

Just like the above verse says I felt so much joy. It was like I dug up long lost treasure on a deserted island. An Island I have always wanted to get to yet did not quite know how. The island where the confident people live who do not put up with people treating them poorly. It was not a place I ever thought I could reach, trapped in the insecurities of my past and held captive by my fears of what others think about me. Sadly this is the way most "bullied survivors" live. But the Lord is always leading us to Him. He has a better way and it is oh so glorious.
This SOUL treasure uplifted my soul and set my weary spirit free. I was glued to the screen watching this man speak with such conviction and boldness. He spoke so well and straight to the point. He was practical yet firm. He spoke with great straight and conviction form years of experience and seeking the Lord himself.

He was honest in saying boundaries cause a risk at first, but in the end they will lead to a solution.

Patrick said either 2 things can happen after a boundary is set;

1. It can move towards health and respect in the relationship

2. It can move towards it no longer being a relationship that you are willing to be in.

He went on to say "either way you get what you need when you set a boundary. You are no longer mistreated . This will stop them from hurting you."

Amen. Sweet VICTORY! I could use some of that freedom for my tender heart.

So he summed it all up with this
"Boundaries will either;

SPEED up the healing of a relationship
                                OR
SPEED up the destruction of it."

So how do we set boundaries? I highly recommend you watch his clip. I took pages and pages of notes. I almost danced around my house in delight with every word he spoke.


I hope you enjoy it and find some sweet soul treasures for your soul.

 




God is working through my prayers

I did not end up seeing the visiting family member who has hurt me many times in the past. I listened to my heart and I listened to my God and I knew despite how it might make her feel I had to follow God first. It was not worth me risking being mistreated again. Not this time.

She is not a vicious person. Just cold and unpleasant. I do love her very much. But I do not love nor appreciate the way she treats me.  This has gone on for about 8 years now and I am over it. It is OK to be done with being mistreated. It is OK to stand against meanness. No matter who I may offend in the process. After all it is my heart and my emotions at risk here, not anyone else's.

Wow look at me. If only I could have said this to my young self who begged for friendship from people who were once my friend, like in Year 3 and than later denied being friends with me in high school due to my UN-popularity.

I felt bad about not seeing her and her child. But God lead me to stay safe this time. This was not a battle he wanted me to enter into at this time. I enjoyed spending time with my loving heavenly father instead. I visited my dear friend Emily and I so enjoyed chatting with her while we painted her bathroom. Painting is very therapeutic for me, especially while painting with a friend.

It felt good to paint in safety. While deep down I prayed this family member and I could somehow rekindle a relationship with her. We too once painted Aunt Cindy's kitchen. This was before I was married. This was when she seemed to like me and I did not annoy her. Although I am not sure how I annoy her now. Just being myself seems to get under her skin.

I prayed and asked God if I should email her and apologize for my absence. I felt badly when Micah told me my nephew asked how I was. Yet God told me to wait till she emailed me first. Ok so I waited. Honestly I was totally expecting this family member not to email. Yet to my surprise, just as God said she would, she emailed. Not me but my husband.

Her email seemed sincere in her willingness to make peace and apologize.  She guessed my absence was due to her and I not having a good relationship. After praying and getting over the shock of her seemingly humble email I was able to email her back and be honest.

Maybe I was a little too honest. Yet it felt good to bring my hidden cards to the table.

I told her I was not strong enough to handle her anymore. I told her I feel rejected by her and that she may not know this, but I was bullied for many many years and her behavior triggers nightmares and mild panic attack symptoms. I told her I also suffer form PTSD symptoms form my past.

Gosh it is hard to be open and vulnerable with someone who you just do not trust to handle your heart with the care it deserves. I was worried I shocked her.

She emailed back and said she needed some time to process this info. I do not know how she feels about it. But it is the truth and I felt the Lord lead me to share it even if it made her feel very uncomfortable.

I eventually told her after waiting for her reply that I no longer wanted to sort out our differences over email, Skype or phone. I needed to wait till I saw her in person. It may be the summer or not till Christmas. Yet Jeremy and I strongly believe and feel the Lord leading that this is the best way to confront, and hopefully make up is in person.

I have not gotten any apology. She may not say sorry after all. But I am praying daily for her and forgiving her daily. Sometimes forgiveness is a journey.

It is OK for me to have boundaries. It ids OK for me to stand against being treated poorly. I am worth more to God than that. My loving heavenly father continues to remind me I am his chosen one, dearly loved and more precious to him that the most expensive jewels. ( put in verse texts).

I enjoyed listening to Joyce Meyer teach on borders and boundaries. I took heaps of notes. God was leading me to finally have boundaries with this person.





The Lord will fight on my behalf. I watched the movie War Room recently and felt very encouraged to keep fighting in prayer for her, our relationship and not against her, though I still feel mad at her and her lack of apology. I do not trust her but I trust the Lord who is the one who created unity.
Psalm 133:1 "Behold, how good and pleasant it is when brothers dwell in unity."...sisters in our case.



I have posted more verses in my prayer room/office. Off to war I go. You will be defeated Satin! Oh, wait you already are!!




Tuesday, February 6, 2018

I used to pretend....

As a child I would often pretend someone I really liked and or admired was watching me. I would act really cool and practise being "liked".

My imagination would take me off into a place where my actions were affirmed.

I remember classmates asking me where I was...as I I'd drift off into a day dream and be sitting there smiling at what seemed like nothing to the outside eye.

I had other adults seem annoyed at me telling me I was in a world of my own.

This imagination was my friend..in a world where friend's were few and far between. It was my false self worth production.

I found myself imagining others watching me "being cool" well into my teens and even adulthood.

It became a strange habit that was hard to get rid of.

I am not sure what to make of this. I am sure it is normal for someone with my history of not fitting in and being picked on.

I am yet to research it. I will get back to this thought soon.

Monday, February 5, 2018

Complex PTSD from surviving childhood bullying

Adults Who Were Bullied as Children Can Suffer From Debilitating Symptoms Similar to PTSD

 I got this info from the research from a book called "Bullying Scars" by Ellen deLara

I have been told I have some PTSD symptoms by my last counsellor. Especially when I told her if a group of teenager's walk past I feel very anxious. In fact it got so bad one time that I almost lost track of my young children in KMart. had been fine a minute ago. I was shopping with my three year old girl and my five year old son. Suddenly a group of teenager's walked past and I froze. My mind took me back to high school. My first and worst year of bullying when the whole of my grade turned against me. My friends would only be my friends in private. Except for a tiny few. Laughing kids or teenager's would mostly mean they were laughing at me. I let my daughter's hand go and dropped some of my groceries. My heart started racing, my hands got sweaty and I felt dizzy and faint. It was a mild panic attack. My son asked " are you ok mummy?" As my adventurous daughter toddled off. Thankfully my son asked me if I was Ok. Bless him. He was only five at the time and noticed the frozen look on my face. He noticed the grip I had on his hands went loose and sweaty. I let go of my daughter's hand yet did not even notice. I froze. I wanted to run yet couldn't. I felt trapped just like I did in high school. How could I be reliving this pain? I had not even met this group of teenage kids. I was in my early 30's at the time.

Here is what this author had to say about what I and many other adult survivors of childhood bullying experience.

In interviewing the people in my research study, I began to notice something unusual. While many of the participants spoke of the bullying episodes they experienced as traumatic and described the impact they felt at the time and what they are left with now in terms of traumatic memories, no one explicitly said they felt like they had PTSD. However, collectively, they listed many symptoms that did fit the PTSD diagnosis. Still others clearly experience what I call adult post-bullying syndrome, or APBS. I have named it this to distinguish it from PTSD.

While APBS can share some symptoms with PTSD, there are distinct differences. One is that there can be both negative and positive aspects to APBS, whereas there are no positive aspects in the research literature associated with PTSD. The negative symptoms of APBS can mimic those of PTSD or the effects seen from child abuse. These effects, similar for child abuse, APBS, and PTSD, and lasting into adulthood, can include shame, anxiety, and relational difficulties. Further, negative cognitions about the self often occur after a trauma. This trauma-related thinking is often inaccurate and serves to support and maintain PTSD. The changes in emotional reactions that characterize PTSD can lead to unexpected and often unpredictable outbursts of anger and aggression. Something can happen to which the person with PTSD just reacts. There does not appear to be an intermediary step of thinking. There is the event, then the reaction. This is a critical difference between PTSD and APBS, where adults do not tend to show this kind of event/reaction immediacy but rather seem more inclined to take no action and instead ruminate on past and present events.

While there are negative aspects of adult post-bullying syndrome, there are some unexpected positives that seem to accompany it also. In interviewing people who appear to experience APBS, I noticed that they have a tendency to exhibit some, if not all, of the following issues:

Self-Esteem Issues and Shame

“I have low self-esteem, a poor self-image, and virtually no confidence in myself.”

“Unfortunately, I took right to heart, literally, the hurtful things that were said to me. Now that I am grown up I try to see things differently, but in my core I still believe they are true.”

Self-doubt and harsh self-judgment are byproducts of childhood bullying. They leave an indelible mark on self-esteem for those who suffer with APBS. Children take to heart relentless torment through name calling and castigation of their character and looks. Years later, as adults, people can still easily recall what they were bullied about: their weight, their height, their clothes, having acne, the people to whom they were attracted. People with APBS typically report having low self-esteem. They feel a sense of shame connected to the core of their being. People who feel a great deal of shame or who are shame-based can manifest this in arrogant behavior. This can be seen in vacillations in thinking between: “I’m a loser” and “I’m better than all of you.”


Problems Trusting Others

“I find it hard to trust other men at work.”            

“My worry that people are judging me is constant.”

Problems trusting others can take a generalized state form (as in “I don’t trust anybody”) or can be very specific to certain groups. People suffering with APBS tend not to trust others. They are particularly cautious in intimate relationships such as friendship and marriage, always expecting that they will be betrayed. Further, they do not trust people who look, act, or even dress like those who bullied them. This lack of trust is problematic for establishing relationships in the first place and for managing them.

Problems in Relationships

“You begin to think you don’t deserve anything. You don’t deserve a good relationship.”

“At the first sign someone is not nice, I distance myself.”

The problem of mistrusting others significantly impairs a person’s ability to connect with other people and then to stay connected. People who trust easily establish relationships readily and maintain them. They do not have attachment problems. Children who have been bullied and then end up with adult post-bullying syndrome often appear to either run from relationships or manage to get into abusive ones. After all, they have learned as children that their peers or siblings will treat them badly. For the most part, they never learned how to stop bullying as children. Consequently, they do not know how to and often do not even want to extricate themselves from physically or emotionally abusive relationships as adults. This is all they know. At the other end of the continuum are adults so scarred from their bullying experiences that they are willing to end even their marriages based on what, to others, might seem reparable. But to some adults suffering with APBS any hint of disrespect or bullying is intolerable.

People-Pleasing

“My strategy in relationships is to be a people-pleaser.”

A majority of those with adult post-bullying syndrome declared that they were “people-pleasers.” Never feeling quite good about themselves, never being good enough, based on the maltreatment they endured through bullying, they have determined that pleasing others is their best defense. It makes a kind of emotional sense. Having experienced numerous forms of bullying from verbal to emotional to sexual to physical, becoming someone that no one could object to seems like a good strategy. However, in the process authenticity of self can be lost. This is a high price to pay.

Food and Other Substance Misuse

“I drink a lot and I have used drugs to help me with the anxiety I feel about the bullying in my past.”

Numerous studies detail an association between bullying as victim, bully, or bully/victim and substance use in childhood. In my study, some adult participants reported using alcohol, other drugs, and food management to quell the feelings of anxiety or depression they experience related to bullying episodes from their childhood. Other research substantiates these findings. At this point, research on the consequences to adult mental health demonstrates long-term correlations between childhood bullying and outcomes such as anxiety, substance abuse, depression, and adult conduct disorders. One inquiry investigated bullying during 5th grade and its relationship to later heavy drinking and marijuana use. The sample was from the Raising Healthy Children project and included over 900 children. The study determined that “childhood bullying was significantly associated with violence, heavy drinking, and marijuana use” in adulthood even after controlling for other risk factors.

Emotional Problems and the Development of Psychiatric Disorders

“I am a cold person because of it (bullying).”

“It has virtually destroyed my spirit.”

“I have panic attacks and an anxiety disorder because of bullying.”

Research indicates there is a greatly elevated risk of developing adult psychiatric disorders for those who were involved in bullying as children. A Finnish study examined the impact of bullying and victimization on boys over a 15-year period into young adulthood. The long-term results found that those who were classified as frequent bullies when they were 8 years old had developed a personality disorder. Those who were frequent victims had an anxiety disorder, and those who were considered bully/victims were more aggressive than any other group. In my study, Chris explained that she experienced bullying and harassment throughout her school days. It affected her overall physical and mental well-being. She said, “Bullying had an extreme impact on my psychological health, anxiety, and the obsessive compulsive disorder I had. Bullying exacerbated it all. I developed depression; people thought I might be bi-polar. I developed an eating disorder as an adult. I was bullied for being overweight. Then I developed bulimia. Now I have panic attacks. But even with this, I see that I am a survivor; I see positive things in my life as a result.” The impact on Chris is severe as a result of being bullied as a child. While she does not meet the criteria for PTSD, she might be a candidate for adult post-bullying syndrome.

Feelings of Anger, Rage, and Revenge

“When I was bullied, I held back my aggression and turned it in on myself.”

Children who are bullied and sexually harassed often feel shame that can lead to anger and rage. Those feelings often do not dissipate. Those with adult post-bullying syndrome can experience feelings of anger and rage when they ruminate on past bullying. Feelings of rage can also occur when similar situations present themselves. One adult said he “can’t stand to be around anyone who looks like a frat boy.” Another is triggered by athletes because of the bullying he endured at their hands. Often adults with APBS check out their school time bullies on Facebook but not out of friendship or mere curiosity, rather with thoughts toward revenge. They are hoping to find that their tormentors are doing poorly and thus feel that the bullies got what they deserved. The person with APBS feels vindicated when this is the case. Of course some adults have been able to move past what occurred to them and have even befriended former bullies online.

Body Issues

“I’ve tried starving myself so I would never be bullied again.”

There is considerable research on the issue of weight bias, bullying, and the immediate impacts on children’s well-being. Adults with APBS continue to have body image issues carried over from their days of being bullied as children. Bullied, sexually harassed, and “teased” about how they were built or how they looked, these adults are left with lasting impressions. They conclude something was and still is wrong with them to have received this kind of treatment. People who have been bullied still do not consider themselves to be acceptable. People who have been bullied based on being overweight seem to be particularly subject to a lifetime of concern about body image. One woman in my study said rationally she knew that she was thin enough now as a 5’10” 125-pound adult, but could not feel adequate or comfortable with herself because she feared a new friend or friends might begin to exclude her based on her looks.

Positive or Unexpected Aspects

“I feel proud of having overcome being bullied.”

“Being bullied for me was a positive thing because I learned how to cope with criticism and to stay humble. I see that I need that, it’s useful, in all kinds of relationships: with friends, at work, or with my partner.”

There are positive aspects, or unexpected outcomes, seen in adult post-bullying syndrome. Numerous people reported finding inner strength they believe they would not have discovered otherwise. They figured out how to take control of their own lives so that they were no longer helpless. They noted that they had developed empathy for the vulnerable where they thought they might not have. Importantly, most were committed to doing something important with their lives. Sometimes this was to prove their bullies were wrong about them. But whatever the reason, it was a crucial outcome for many of the participants with APBS. There are copious examples of people enduring the negative aspects of APBS and using the positive aspects to better their lives. It was very interesting to find this positive feature along with the negative aspects of APBS.

Reprinted from BULLYING SCARS: The Impact on Adult Life and Relationships by Ellen Walser deLara with permission from Oxford University Press. Copyright © 2016 by Oxford University Press.





I need "safe" people around me right now

Psalm 56:4 (NASB) "In God, whose word I praise, In God I have put my trust; I shall not be afraid. What can mere man do to me?"

This verse was perfect timing for me today. I really love how God does that! His word is so powerful. It hits the hurting spot of my heart every time.

I decided not to see the visiting family member. The one who has been mean in the past. I was not feeling well that weekend with my hormones acting up.

I did not feel strong enough and I was not able to fit in much counselling beforehand.

My husband and I both had a peace I made the right decision.

It turned out she was fairly pleasant my husband said. However I'm not positive she was kind to all the other family members. I l was not in a place to risk it.

Last night I still had a half rejection dream. Actually it was not that bad. It was about my old best friend who ditched me in the popular crowd. She wss ashamed of me.
In the dream I brought us both lunch and ate with her. We were teenagers in the dream. When we were kids in years 3&4 I used to bring extra lunch for her as her mean step mum did not pack enough.

She sat with me off to the side which felt like she did not want anyone else to know of our friendship.

But she was kind which was nice yet confusing.

There is still more therapy needed for me. It's feels so good to admit that and be proud of myself for seeking help. There is no shame I'm counseling. I'm having a hard time finding a therapist close to my town. It may have to wait till summer when my Kid's are out of school.

In the mean time I can choose "safe" relationships. I plan on confronting this family member who triggers the pain of my past.

God knows when is a good time. I am hoping and praying the Lord will bring healing to all of our hearts and bond us all closer together. She has hurt many other family members by her coldness.

God has this whole situation in his hands. He is invested in my healing. He will lead the way.

Jeremiah 17:7 "But blessed are those who trust in the Lord and have made the Lord their hope and confidence.