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Grief, Love, & Fear of Intimacy
by
Robert Burney M. A.
"It
is necessary to own and honor the child who we were in order to Love
the person we are. And the only way to do that is to own that
child's experiences, honor that child's feelings, and release the emotional
grief energy that we are still carrying around." ~Codependence:
The Dance of Wounded Souls
I am not sure at exactly what point in my recovery that it took place
- but it was probably around 2 and a half years. It was years
later before I would understand its' huge significance in my life.
At the time it was just a blessed relief.
I went to a meeting at my home group in Studio City. I was feeling
a little crazy. Wound too tight and ready to explode. It
was a familiar feeling. It was a feeling that I had drowned in
alcohol or taken the edge off of with marijuana in the old days.
But I couldn't do that anymore so I went to a meeting.
My friends name was Steve. He hadn't been my friend for very long
although I had known him for years. He had been my agent years
earlier and I had disliked him intensely. I was in the process
of getting to know him, and like him, now that we were both in recovery.
He saw how up tight I was and asked me to go outside with him.
He asked me one simple question: "How old do you feel?"
"Eight," I said, and then I exploded. I cried
in a way I didn't remember ever crying before - great heaving sobs wracked
my body as I told him what happened when I was eight.
I had grown up on a farm in the Midwest. The summer that I turned
eight I had my first 4-H calf. 4-H was to us rural kids
kind of like boy scouts was to city kids - a club where farm kids had
projects to learn things. I got a calf who weighed about 400 pounds
and fed him all spring and summer until he weighed over a thousand lbs.
I tamed him and taught him to allow me to lead him around on a halter
so I could show him at the county fair. After the county fair
there was another chance to show him at a town nearby and then sell
him. Local business people would buy the calves for more than
they were worth to give us kids incentive and teach us how to make money.
By the time I was eight, I was completely emotionally isolated and alone.
I grew up in a pretty typical American family. My father had been
trained to be John Wayne - anger was the only emotion he ever expressed
- and my mother had been trained to be a self-sacrificing martyr.
Since my mother could get no emotional support from my father - she
had very low self-esteem and no boundaries - she used her children to
validate and define her. She emotionally incested me by using
me emotionally - causing me to feel responsible for her emotions, and
feel ashamed that I couldn't protect her from my father's verbal and
emotional abuse. The shame and pain of my father's seeming inability
to love me coupled with my mother loving me too much at the same time
that she allowed herself and me to be abused by fathers anger and perfectionism
- caused me to shut down to my mothers love and close down emotionally.
And then into the life of this little boy who was in such pain, and
so isolated, came a shorthorn calf which he named Shorty. Shorty
was the closest thing to a personal pet that I have ever had.
On the farm, there were always dogs and cats and other animals - but
they weren't mine alone. I developed an emotionally intimate relationship
with that calf. I loved Shorty. He was so tame that I could
sit on his back or crawl under his belly. I spent uncounted hours
with that calf. I really loved him.
I took him to the county fair and got a Blue Ribbon. Then a few
weeks later it was time for the show and sale. I got another Blue
Ribbon. When it came time to sell him, I had to lead him into
the sale ring while the auctioneer sang his mysterious selling chant.
It was over in a moment and I led Shorty out of the ring to a pen where
all the sold calves were put. I took off his halter and let him
go. Somehow I knew that my father expected me not to cry, and
that my mother expected me to cry. By that time, I was very clear
from the role-modeling of my father that a man did not cry - ever.
And I had so much suppressed rage at my mother for not protecting me
from my fathers raging that I was passive-aggressively doing things
the opposite of what I thought she wanted. So, I slipped his halter
off, patted him on the shoulder, and closed the gate - consigning my
best friend to the pen of calves that was going to the packing house
to be slaughtered. No tears for this eight year old, no
sirree, I knew how to be a man.
That poor little boy. It wasn't until almost 30 years later, leaning
up against the side of the meeting room, that I got the chance to cry
for that little boy. With great heaving sobs, tears pouring down
my cheeks, and snot running out my nose, I had my first experience with
deep grief work. I did not know anything about the process at
the time - I just knew that somehow that wounded little boy was still
alive inside of me. I also did not know at the time that part
of my life's work was going to be helping other people to reclaim the
wounded little boys and girls inside of them.
Now I know that emotions are energy which if not released in a healthy
grieving process gets stuck in the body. The only way for me to
start healing my wounds is to go back to that little boy and cry the
tears or own the rage that he had no permission to own back then.
I also know that there are layers of grief from the emotional trauma
I experienced. There is not only trauma about what happened back
then - there is also grief about the effect those experiences had on
me later in life. I get to cry once again for that little
boy as I write this. I have been sobbing for that little boy and
the emotional trauma he experienced - but I am also sobbing for the
man that I became.
I learned in childhood, and carried into adulthood, the belief that
I am not lovable. It felt like I was not lovable to my mother
and father. It felt like the God I was taught about didn't love
me - because I was a sinful human. It felt like anyone who loved
me would eventually be disappointed, would learn the truth of my shameful
being. I spent most of my life alone because I felt less lonely
alone. When I was around people I would feel my need to connect
with them - and feel my incredible loneliness for human relationships
- but I did not know how to connect in a healthy way. I have had
a great terror of the pain of abandonment and betrayal - but even more
than that, the feeling that I could not be trusted because I am not
good enough to love and be loved. At the core of my being, at
the foundation of my relationship with myself, I feel unworthy and unlovable.
And now I know that the little boy, that I was, felt like he betrayed
and abandoned the calf that he loved. Proof of his unworthiness.
And not only did he betray his best friend - he did it for money.
Another piece of the puzzle of why money has been such a big issues
in my life. In recovery I had learned that because of the power
my father and society gave to money I had spent much of my life saying
that money wasn't important to me at the same time that I was always
focused on it because I never had enough. I have definitely had
a dysfunctional relationship with money in my life and 8 year old Robby
gave me a glimpse at another facet of that relationship.
Robby has also helped me to understand another piece of my fear of intimacy
issues. I have been going through a transformation one more time
in my recovery. Each time that I need to grow some more - need
to surrender some more of who I thought I was in order to become who
I am - I get to peel another layer of the onion. Each time this
happens I get to reach a deeper level of honesty and see things clearer
than I ever have before. Each time, I also get to release some
of the emotional energy through crying and raging.
Through clearer eyes, and with deeper emotional honesty, I get to look
at all of my major issues again to heal them some more. I used
to think that I could deal with an issue and be done with it - but now
I know that is not the way the healing process works. So recently
I have gotten the opportunity to revisit my issues of abandonment and
betrayal, of deprivation and discounting. My issues with my mother
and father, with my gender and sexuality, with money and success.
My issues with the God I was taught about and the God-Force that I choose
to believe in. My patterns of self-abusive behavior that are driven
by my emotional wounds - and the attempts that I make to forgive myself
for behavior that I have been powerless over. And they all lead
me back to the core issue. I am not worthy. I am not good
enough. Something is wrong with me.
At the core of my relationship is the little boy who feels unworthy
and unlovable. And my relationship with myself was built on that
foundation. The original wounding caused me to adapt attitudes
and behavior patterns which caused me to be further traumatized and
wounded - which caused me to adapt different attitudes and behavior
patterns which caused me to be further traumatized and wounded in different
ways. Layer upon layer the wounds were laid - multifaceted, incredibly
complex and convoluted is the disease of Codependence. Truly insidious,
baffling and powerful.
Through revisiting the eight year old who I was I get to understand
on a new level why I have always been attracted to unavailable people
- because the pain of feeling abandoned and betrayed is the lesser of
two evils. The worst possible thing, to my shame-based inner children,
is to have revealed how unworthy and unlovable I am - so unworthy that
I abandoned and betrayed my best friend, Shorty the shorthorn calf that
I loved and who seemed to love me back. It is no wonder that at
my core I am terrified of loving someone who is capable of loving me
back.
By owning and honoring the feelings of the child who I was, I can do
some more work on letting him know that it wasn't his fault and that
he deserves forgiveness. That he deserves to be Loved.
So today, I am grieving once more for the eight year old who was trapped,
and for the man he became. I am grieving because if I don't own
that child and his feelings - then the man will never get past his terror
of allowing himself to be loved. By owning and cherishing that
child, I am healing the broken heart of both the child and the man -
and giving that man the opportunity to one day trust himself enough
to love someone as much as he loved Shorty.

Robert
Burney's website:
http://Joy2MeU.com
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