Fear of Intimacy

Laurence's picture

Fear of Intimacy - The Wounded Heart of Codependancy






The simplest and most understandable way to describe intimacy~
is how we open and share ourselves~
with the outside world around us~
That is what intimacy is all about -
allowing another person to see into us,
To see who we really are~
the ability to share who we are ~
with another person.
It is hard for many people to share a pure form of intimacy~
because at the core of our relationship ~
with ourselves and who we think we really are~
Many of us hold feelings ~
that we are somehow defective, unlovable and unworthy -
because of emotional trauma suffered during childhood~
We were programmed during early childhood
to believe that we were powerless~
And withdrawing into our own little world~
became a defense mechanism that helped us to survive~




It is based upon the feeling that we are shameful,
that we are defective, unworthy, and unlovable.
Our codependent defense system is an attempt
to protect us from being rejected, betrayed, and abandoned
because of our unworthy, shameful being.




We have a fear of intimacy because we were wounded,
emotionally traumatized, in early childhood -
felt rejected and abandoned -
and then grew up in emotional dishonest societies
that did not provide tools for healing,
or healthy role models to teach us how to overcome that fear.
Our wounding in early childhood caused us to feel
that something was wrong with our being - toxic shame
- and our societal and parental role models
taught us to keep up appearances, to hide our shamefulness from others.




Toxic Shame - defective, unlovable
It is very important in recovery to start making a distinction - drawing a boundary - between being and behavior. Growing up in dysfunctional societies taught us to equate our worth - and judge the worth of others - based upon external appearances. We experienced love as conditional on behavior. Someone who behaves badly - i.e. not the way we want them to - is a bad person. Someone who behaves the way we want them to is a good person.
It is very important to stop judging our worth based upon the dysfunctional standards of societies that taught us it was shameful to be imperfect human beings.




Our behavior and additude has been dictated by our childhood wounds; it does not mean that we are bad or defective as beings. It means that we are human, it means that we are wounded.




It is important to start setting a boundary between being and behavior. All humans have equal Divine value as beings - no matter what our behavior. Our behavior is learned (and/or reactive to physical or physiological conditions). Behavior, and the attitudes that dictate behavior, are adopted defenses designed to allow us to survive in the Spiritually hostile, emotionally repressive, dysfunctional environments into which we were born."




At the core of codependency is toxic shame - the feeling that we are somehow inherently defective, that something is wrong our being.




The emotional trauma we suffered in early childhood
created within us the feeling of toxic shame.
"We do not need fixing. We are not broken.
Our sense of self, our self perception, was shattered and fractured
and broken into pieces, not our True Self.
We think and feel like we are broken
because we were programmed backwards.




We are not broken. That is what toxic shame is
- thinking that we are broken, believing that we are somehow inherently defective.


At the foundation of our relationship with our self - and therefore with other people and life - is the feeling that we will die if we reveal ourselves to other people, because then they will see our shameful self. I felt deep within me (in those rare instances of breaking through my denial and blaming to a moment of honest clarity), that if I let anyone see who I really was, they would run away screaming in horror at the grotesque, deformed, shameful being that I was.




Our lives have been dictated by an emotional defense system that is designed to keep hidden the the false belief that we are defective. We use external things - success, looks, productivity, substances - to try to cover up, overcome, make up for, the personal defectiveness that we felt caused our hearts to be broken and our souls wounded in childhood. And that personal defectiveness is a lie. That feeling of toxic shame is a lie.




It was so painful that we had to lie to ourselves about it. We were forced to be emotionally and intellectually dishonest with ourselves by the codependent defenses we adapted. We had to learn how to live in denial of the pain and shame at the core of our relationship with ourselves. Codependency is a vicious form of Delayed Stress Syndrome, of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. (Codependence as Delayed Stress Syndrome) The emotional trauma caused us to disassociate - to not be present in our own skins in a conscious way - and to rationalize and deny our emotional experience of life. We built up a dishonest self image to try to convince ourselves that we had worth based upon some comparative external factors: looks, success, independence (the counterdependent rebel), popularity (people pleasers), righteousness (better than others, right to their wrong), or whatever. That false self image was not completely dishonest because it was formed in reaction to some basic aspects of who we Truly are - but it was a twisted, distorted, polarized perspective of our self adapted in response to toxic shame for the purpose of giving us some ego strength, some reason we could feel better than others.




That false self image, the masks we learned to wear, is something we invested a lot of energy into convincing ourselves was the truth. But deep inside, in our moments of insight and clarity, we knew we were hiding a shameful secret. Often we got that toxic shame about our being confused in our memories with some behavior in our childhood that felt shameful. It is very common for us to have a secret that involves a way in which we were abused - physically, sexually, etc. - that we go to great pains to avoid because we associate the feeling of toxic shame with that incident and think it was our fault.




We do not want other people to see in to us, because then they will learn our shameful secret. We have a fear of intimacy because our relationship with our self
is based upon a false belief~
We have spent our lives trying to protect ourselves from a lie about who we are.
We have spent incredible energy in our lives
trying to keep the toxic shame hidden.
The secret that is killing us and has made our lives miserable,
the secret we have lived in reaction to - is a lie.
We have been compulsively -
because we were reacting to what felt like a threat to survival
- living our lives in reaction to our need to keep secret
who we feel we really are in the deepest part of our being.




"Because as small children we did not have any perspective or discernment
we were incapable as viewing our parents
as anything other than perfect Higher Powers.
Our God and Goddess.



by Robert Burney M.A.




♥~Walking together in Love,Light & Awareness~♥


Laurence



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