DEAR DR. NERDLOVE: Long time reader, first time writer from Germany here. I’m a 30-year-old trans woman and mostly writing in to thank you for all the good work you’re doing. Your blog has been a tremendous help for me a few years ago and played a non-negligible role in helping me realise I’m a trans woman.
After reading your advice for a while I finally gained enough courage to actually transition and not let the fear of rejection control me anymore. And for that I can’t thank you enough, even though transitioning actually came with a lot of heartbreak and rejection. But also, a lot of newly gained confidence and self-love.
I don’t really have any active dating woes that I’m struggling with right now, but I do have a question that I’ve been thinking a lot about lately in my journey of self-growth. So the thing I’m struggling with the most is despite cognitively knowing something about myself, it’s not quite getting through emotionally which in turn leads to cognitive dissonance and/or avoidance. Let me give you an example of what exactly I mean.
So sometimes unpleasant thoughts pop into my mind. Things like “I’m not worthy of love and kindness and understanding” or “Why do I even try anymore? I always end up with people who hurt me” and all these other things depression keeps drip-feeding into my ear like poison in my own voice. And while cognitive-behavioral therapy has helped me a lot in understanding these thoughts as neither being myself nor true and how to challenge them, they still feel very draining. And despite knowing from a logical standpoint that these statements are overgeneralizations that stem from experiences in my past that doesn’t mean I’m not still feeling the hurt of these statements in my soul.
To give you a little bit more context of my situation: I grew up with an emotionally abusive stepfather and a loving but also overwhelmed mother that had to suffer the same abuse. Which for me as a child and teenager came down to me feeling neglected by her. I’ve been starting to realise the last part in my latest therapy sessions. Add on top of that a whole layer of oppression by patriarchal, misogynistic and transphobic systems and individuals in my life and I’ve gotten myself a pretty strong cocktail of anxiety, depression, trauma and gender dysphoria. So far, I’ve had cognitive therapy to treating my anxiety and depression which worked quite well, especially with the anxiety. Also, I’ve had some gender related care like HRT, legal and social transition but no surgeries until now. Currently I’m looking for a new therapist to do some psychodynamic therapy with me to treat a post-traumatic stress disorder that came to light during my cognitive therapy and seems to cause me a lot of very deep-seated pain in my heart or maybe the other way around.
I know that my question might be a step above your paygrade but maybe you still have some wisdom and insights to share about my situation. Even if it doesn’t help me maybe it can help someone else out there.
So, do you have any advice on how to integrate healthy thoughts about myself and make sure for them to come through emotionally?
Kind regards
Always in the Wrong Place at the Wrong Time
DEAR ALWAYS IN THE WRONG PLACE AT THE WRONG TIME: Before we start, AWP, I want to say I’m proud of you for all those changes and improvements you’ve made and all the ways you’ve been taking care of yourself – from embracing who you are to seeking out the kind of help you needed. That’s huge and you should feel proud of yourself for doing so.
Now, I will say that you’re right: I’m not a real doctor, so some of this is above my paygrade. So all of what I have to say should be filtered through the lens of “I’m just a loudmouth with a column”, rather than anything that resembles actual medical or mental health care.
So with that in mind, one thing that leapt out at me from your letter was about your home life, with the abusive stepfather and watching your mother deal with the same abuse. I have to wonder if some of the negative thoughts that keep coming up may stem in part from not just the trauma you and your mother went through, but also from guilt or shame from being abused or for not doing more – whether to confront your father, protect your mother or just somehow change your circumstances. A lot of folks who not only suffer abuse but watch family members be abused can feel like they’ve failed or internalize some of the abuse for the supposed sins of not being able to stop it, or even for letting it bother them so much.
It’s the sort of thing that makes sense in a f--ked up kid-logic kind of way – this idea that you should be able to do more, endure more, not let ‘em see you bleed – but completely ignores that you were a child. It’s a way of taking on responsibility that isn’t yours and assuming that you had far more control or even ability than you could have. This can be especially perverse, because it’s easy to look at someone else who’s gone through similar trauma and say “hey, this wasn’t your fault, there was nothing you could have done, you did nothing wrong here,” and then immediately turn around and say “But I, on the other hand, absolutely should’ve been able to, which is why I’m a horrible person.”
This is why I think one thing that may be important is to forgive yourself for, well, being a child and not being able to magically stop this abuse from happening. As you say: you may know this intellectually, but trying to accept it emotionally is a lot harder. This is why forgiving yourself can have a more profound reaction; you’re not accepting the emotional truth of it, so much as working with it and finding a way to deal with it that is easier to embrace because you aren’t fighting against that part of yourself. Wrapping your inner child in a hug like Robin Williams holding Matt Damon and saying “it’s not your fault” might go a long way here.
A similar method – that sort of emotional jiu-jitsu – could well work for dealing with those intrusive thoughts you keep having. You already know �– thanks to your work in therapy – that these unwelcome thoughts are just that: thoughts. They’re not real, they’re not true… but that doesn’t make them stop, nor does it make challenging them any easier. So perhaps the answer is to make it easier to challenge them.
As I’ve said before: our brains don’t know the difference between what we imagine and what’s real; they respond to imagined scenarios as though they are real. But because they’re imaginary and originate from within us, that means we have control over them… and that means we can change them. So in order to make those intrusive thoughts have less impact and easier to challenge, you can alter them. Not in what they say, so much as in how you “hear” them.
It’s one thing when your jerkbrain and anxiety weasels are whispering awful things in your voice, or the voice of someone you care about or who you admire. It’s another thing entirely if, say, you’re hearing it from Krusty the Clown. Or Daffy Duck. Or that weird flea from Spongebob Squarepants. Maybe it hurts when it comes from a trusted source, but when you hear those words from someone you could never take seriously, then suddenly it has all the impact of an underhanded toss of a decorative pillow. Who’s going to care about being told “You’re a horrible person who doesn’t deserve love” when it comes in the voice of Wealwell Gotch or Reacher Gilt?
By changing the voice “saying” those words, you take away it’s bite and externalize it; it goes from being “harsh truths” to pointless insults from someone you wouldn’t trust to give you an opinion on cheese. And because it comes from the “outside”, as it were, it’s easier not just to challenge it but to mock it. Making it absurd makes it easier to sass that voice right back.
“Oooh, i’M nOT woRtHy of LOvE aNd kINDnEsS AnD uNdeRStAnDiNG…”
The key is to remember that you’re not trying to make it stop, per se, so much as just make it easier to dismiss. You expend less mental and emotional energy trying to counter it or challenge it, simply because… how could you ever take a squeaky-voiced 12-year-old trying to convince people he’s a real-deal political intellectual seriously?
Which is about as seriously as you should take those thoughts. So make ‘em absurd, make ‘em silly, and sass ‘em right back. That’ll make things a little easier while you’re seeking out your new therapist.
You’ve got this.
Good luck.
Please send your questions to Dr. NerdLove at his website (www.doctornerdlove.com/contact); or to his email, doc@doctornerdlove.com