Rosenthal,HOW TO TRUST (walled off, trust)
Wk June 12, 2005
wc: 728
WOMAN WRITES: “I DON’T KNOW HOW TO TRUST PEOPLE”
Dear Neil: I am 43 years-old and have never been
married. I have a college degree, am adventurous
and fun. But I don’t know how to trust
people and allow my defenses to come down.
I couldn’t trust my parents. My
first boyfriend cheated on me with my best friend, and I have a history of
choosing toxic partners. I don’t know
how to lose the defenses that I have developed.
I have been celibate for the last three years. I feel myself not caring anymore if I ever
allow myself to try to trust a boyfriend again.
Why try when it’s already been 27 years of failed relationships with
male and female friends? I always have
conflicts with my jobs. I feel as if
everyone always wants to find out my faults, my failings, my inadequacies. Why can’t people see that I’m fun,
intelligent, caring, responsible, kind and interesting? What am I doing wrong?
East
Coast Defense
Dear East Coast: If I have a hard time trusting people, I have
grown to expect that you’re going to hurt me.
So how am I going to get close to you?
I fear that if I let you get close, you’ll either judge me, criticize
me, reject me, hurt me, control me, betray me or abandon me. So, if
I have a hard time trusting others, I find myself in the impossible position
that the closer you get to me, the more I feel the need to push away, react to
you with anger or criticism, withdraw or otherwise create a shield around myself
to defend me against the pain I anticipate receiving from you.
What can you do about low
trust? The following exercises, taken
from Joseph Santoro and Ronald Cohen in the book The Angry Heart (New Harbinger) attempt to assist you in exploring
that question:
- In what ways to you think failures to receive adequate
support and guidance in childhood may be influencing your current
behavior, especially in regards to other people?
- How do you think aspects of the relationship with
your childhood caregivers might be affecting you today in terms of both
your ability to make lasting friendships and your ability to enter into a
loving and lasting attachment with another person?
- Have you ever sabotaged something good in your
life? How? Why?
Is there a part of you that feels that you don’t deserve good
things to happen to you? What needs
to happen in order that you feel that you deserve good things?
- As a child did you ever fantasize about running away
from home? Did you ever act on such
a wish? Did you ever run away
mentally? As an adult, have you
ever fantasized about running away from a relationship? Did you act on
that wish? What motivated you to do
so? Did it make things better for
you? How did this adult fantasy or
action differ from your childhood fantasies or actions about running away
from home?
- What sources of support or guidance do you have in
your life now? What additional
sources of support or guidance would you like to have?
- Think about the things that empowered you as a
child. Were the things that gave
you a sense of power good or bad for you?
Now think about those times when you felt powerless. How did you cope with those feelings? What did you as a child need to hear in
order to feel empowered? What do
you, right now, need to hear or say to yourself in order to be more
empowered? What thoughts, feelings
and images contribute to your sense of mastery and empowerment?
- How much trust would you like to place in
others? What needs to happen in
order for that to become a reality?
- Ask yourself the question: “What can I do in order to feel better
about myself?” When your
self-esteem is high, you won’t think that people are just looking for your
faults and inadequacies. Look at
how you can improve your self-esteem and self-worth.
============================================================
Neil Rosenthal is a licensed
marriage and family therapist in Boulder
and Denver, and a relationship
coach. Call him at (303)758-8777, or
e-mail him from his website www.heartrelationships.com