Whenever I see someone new to the boards posting, despondently, about solipsism my gut-reaction is that this is someone who has been deprived of someone to trust and is looking less for philosophical engagement, than reassurance that there is no outside world — csalisbury
I think its often less about any particular therapeutic modality and more about the relationship itself. — csalisbury
But I can imagine highly intelligent and critically minded clients seeing only confirmation of their general sense of the world as a stage of fakers in such a pose. To be above it and invulnerable is to longer be humanly present. — sign
There is a religious aspect of friendship that I have in mind connected to forgiveness of sin — sign
But, like unenlightened pointed out, in the real world, everyone has their breaking point. — csalisbury
he was disgusted with your vulnerability - but were you respectful of his? — csalisbury
Tho actually - I think that this:
There is a religious aspect of friendship that I have in mind connected to forgiveness of sin
— sign
is at the heart of it, what lets you move beyond. I remember at one point while i was deep in 'phase ii' geting drunk and scribbling down 'god cant forgive what he doesnt understand'
What i think i was missing is the hubris in thinking that 'god' wouldnt understand my suffering and 'sin'. It was really me saying - 'i can still hide what i need to' camoflauged as an anger at being failed by others — csalisbury
Either remain hunched and silent or try to talk and tell 'lies'. The feeling was frustration and anger. and despair. I felt like this was a prison I was trapped in that couldnt be conveyed. — csalisbury
Why attempt to upset me? — All sight
DS: In order to reach that place of new life or
healing, the whole story on which the person has
built his or her life, and the system that enabled the
child to survive, has to be dismantled. That is
terrifying. It does not change without enormous
resistance, pain, fear and a huge fight.
DK: Yes, and it happens one step at a time; there is
no quick way through. A person comes into therapy
because something has happened that makes her /him
realise that s/he cannot continue as s/he is –
something needs to change. But understandably,
s/he is very ambivalent about giving up the defensive
belief system that has ensured survival.
And this system is most often challenged when the
patient actually starts to care about the therapist….or
shall we say that the little girl/boy inside the
patient, hidden from view, starts to make a new
attachment to a real person beyond the survival
system. When this happens, the
protector/persecutor is challenged, and the selfdefence
system goes into over-drive. It will try to
sabotage the therapy and the relationship with the
therapist – anything to regain control.
This approach has perpetuated the vicious circle - sufferingthe psychological response to trauma is a defensive splitting, and the divided selves are mutually antagonistic — unenlightened
Beautiful. What comes to my mind is something like authenticity as being in touch with always being still a sinner and a fool to some degree. God has to be a sinner and a fool to understand. Only a sinner and a fool can understand a sinner and a fool from the inside. A friend as true friend is an unfinished sinner-fool or only half-wise listening. Love-trust-hope builds a bridge from the undecided to the undecided. I feel that you know what I'm getting at, but I will add for others that I don't understand all this 'love' talk in terms of determinate metaphysical entities arranged in some quasi-geometric proof. The 'opened-ness' I have in mind is 'behind' or 'beneath' the signs, near the place of their genesis and reception (which I nevertheless can only point to with signs.) — sign
Only a sinner and a fool can understand a sinner and a fool from the inside. A friend as true friend is an unfinished sinner-fool or only half-wise listening.
That's a pretty great description of Hell. I've been there. In some ways not being able to say it is the very heart of its darkness. The flow outward is damned up. One understands oneself as a disease that should not be spread in the worst phase. But one believes in this darkness, that one has seen the truth. So one protects others from this terrible truth. Or (maybe at the heart of the heart of the darkness) one thinks of oneself as purely crazy, afflicted not by the truth but the fantasy of a dark truth. I'm almost afraid to summon it to memory. Let's just say that it's amazing how disgusting and obscene existence can seem or be for certain states of mind. One maybe ever experiences a wonder along with it, that it could all be so disgusting and perverse. 'Implosion' and black holes come to mind. The world becomes a hollowed-out stupid skit, oblivious to its own nullity. Of course death appears as a sweet release. Suicide beckons to such a state of mind as the only heroic and/or rational act available.
To me one of the strange things is that a person can be mostly happy and yet still unexpectedly dragged into this darkness, surviving it and returning to be happier than most even. This helps me make sense of the some of the great musicians who committed suicide. Good music comes from ecstasy, from being happier than most. But probably sensitivity is two-edged. Heights and depths come together perhaps. — sign
I'm almost afraid to summon it to memory. Let's just say that it's amazing how disgusting and obscene existence can seem or be for certain states of mind.
Yes exactly. The 'hiding' of 'sin' creates this weird symmetrical structure. The more I hide my indiscretions from myself and others, the more I suspect others of harboring equally unforgivable abuses. And If I act shallowly and falsely, maintaining an aura of innocence - then, at the same time, I'm soliciting the other person to play along. And when they play along, its easy to see them as shallow and false. — csalisbury
This is verrry cheesy. BUT one of my most cherished memories is at a xmas party, with a group of friends - linked arms, heads bowed down, eyes closed, gently swaying, singing 'bridge over troubled water' together in unison. That was probably the closest I've been to a shared religious experience. Or at least a certain type of shared religious experience. The experience of it welled up and overcame the sappiness I would've been put-off by were the critical observer part of me more in control. — csalisbury
I can especially relate to the feeling of having to 'protect others' from yourself and your ideas. — csalisbury
"Ah me! how hard a thing it is to say
What was this forest savage, rough, and stern,
Which in the very thought renews the fear." — csalisbury
Seems melodramatic until you know what he's talking about. Which, yet another poet said better
"even a proverb is no proverb to you until your life has illustrated it." — csalisbury
(Now I maybe have turned that mockery on itself, weaponized that contempt against the contempt for all things gentle. ) — sign
All of this somewhat candifies the experience. If I am ever thrown back into that state, I will want to vomit at the idea that something could be made of it.
On the one hand, I think that's sure progress. Like - being contemptuous of contempt for all things gentle is a better way of navigating the world than being contemptuous of all things gentle.
But, at the same time, that same contempt-muscle is being flexed and strengthened. — csalisbury
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