-Caveat Lector- an excerpt from: Ritual Abuse Margaret Smith©1993 HarperCollins Publishers 10 East 53rd Street New York, NY 10022 ISBN 0-06-250214-X 213pps — out-of-print --[3]-- Chapter 3 Therapy for the Survivors My first therapist taught me to play by the rules. He taught me what to say and what not to say. He helped me realize that I wasn't half as bad as people said I was. At the most hopeless point in my life, he was the person who kept me from killing myself My next therapist didn't know much about psychological theory. He operated from one assumption. He said I felt bad all the time because I couldn't control the people around me. In a way, he was right. I was miserable because I couldn't control other people. I couldn't make people stop being mean to me. I decided to give up on therapy. When I decided it was time to confront my past, I went back into therapy hoping somebody had the answers that would soothe my pain. I didn't have any clear memories of the ritual abuse, but I had always known something really, really awful had happened to me in my childhood. In high school, I used to have flashbacks where I would feel overwhelmed with panic. I remember crying, "Oh, my God. Somebody get me out of here! Please, somebody help me! I'm going to die!" In junior high school, I used to wake up in the middle of the night literally paralyzed from fear I never had an explanation for any of these things. Also, I have been preoccupied with sex since I was five years old. I used to think I sexually acted out because I was dirty and messed up inside. That certainly was how I was treated by my parents and teachers when I sexually acted out. As an adult, I looked back on the sexual things I used to do as a small child and realized something. I knew more than any five-year-old should have ever known about sex. I knew about oral sex and intercourse. my vocabulary was filled with the most graphic terms for genitals and sexual acts. Where did I learn these things? This realization started a whole new string of visits to therapists. MY next therapist wasn't interested in talking about my fears that I was sexually abused as a child. She told me I hated men. She even told me I liked to have sex because it made me feel like I had a penis. That was the last straw. I knew wanting a penis was not my problem. My problem was that I was miserable, and I wanted to know why. Then I found a book, The Courage to Heal, a healing guide for sexual abuse survivors. Reading that book was like reading my life story. I never knew anyone else in the world felt as lonely and hurt as I felt. I realized I was not alone. Then the memories of the incest and ritual abuse surfaced. I started having flashbacks of abuse on a regular basis. My entire life fell apart. I couldn't keep the feelings down. My entire past was coming to a head. My therapist at the time was well educated on the topic of sexual abuse. She was nice, and a great therapist for incest, but she couldn't handle the ritual abuse. She wasn't comfortable with the intensity Of emotions, and she was unreliable. I would call her on Friday with an emergency, and wouldn't hear back from her until Monday. That was not acceptable for me during that critical time. I decided to move on. Next I found a woman who knew a great deal about ritual abuse and multiple personalities. She seemed to be comfortable with all my feelings. She believed most of what I told her but she couldn't believe certain things about my abuse that seemed to ruin her picture of the world. She identified me as the problem. I trusted her with so much of my past, and she stopped believing me when I needed her the most. I am sure she still believes I was just 'fantasizing" certain details of the abuse. I terminated the therapy. Finally, I started to see the woman I am with today. When I first met her I felt threatened. She was excessively nice-too nice, in my book. She had a soft, sweet voice. I figured there was something wrong with her I thought she was denying her own rage. I took it slowly with her waiting for her to say something abusive. I waited for her to make a little cutting comment when I felt vulnerable. Nearly all the therapists I had seen before would make such comments. I thought all people felt a need to hurt people who were vulnerable. That is practically all I have seen, both in the cult and in the world. But this woman was to change my view Even when she feels angry, she carefully chooses her words to make sure that she doesn't hurt me. She consistently tells me that her commitment to me in therapy is to hear my feelings. If she has feelings that come up while we are together she says it is her responsibility to find out where the feelings are coming -from inside of her She doesn't blame me for her feelings of discomfort. She doesn't think I am shameful. I think even if she did think something mean, she would deal with it without trying to hurt me. This is how she lives her life. She is a genuinely caring person who truly believes in the child inside of everyone, the child who wants love. I have seen God knows how many therapists. I have put up with a lot of bullshit. Almost everyone I met in my life felt a need to control me. But this woman just lets me be. I spend our therapy sessions telling her exactly what I need to say. She doesn't have an agenda. My personalities come up when they want to say something, and she doesn't label anything. I talk, and she listens and lets me know that she understands. And when she doesn't understand, she usually asks me to elaborate. Most of all, she is honest. I think she really cares about me. Not because I pay her money, but because the way that she gives has made me be the best person I can possibly be when I am with her This doesn't mean I say nice things. In fact, I tell her all the mean things I think and do, and she hears the feelings behind the actions and acknowledges them and supports me. She always makes me feel heard. Looking for a good therapist is like looking for a best friend. Don't settle for a therapist just because he or she claims to be an expert. Don't settle for a therapist just because he or she says you need to learn how to trust people. if a therapist is making you feel uncomfortable you might want to switch therapists. Don't let someone tell you it is "your process issues" that are making you feel bad about the therapy and that you need to stay until you see things from his or her perspective. Don't let a therapist tell you that your discomfort is not justified. Trust your feelings. If you don't trust your feelings, how will your feelings ever be heard? And if they are never heard, how will you ever find happiness? Many people search for that special person who will listen to all their secrets without judging them. Often we are unable to share all of our thoughts and feelings with our friends or lovers. Everyone is influenced by societal expectations to deny certain types of feelings; and often our most vulnerable feelings are not listened to or judged. In therapy many people find the needed safety that allows them to share the hidden thoughts they share with no one else. Effective therapy for ritual abuse survivors allows them the chance to finally be heard. It offers survivors a chance to focus on their needs and wants without having to worry about the reactions of other people. Therapy is a unique relationship because clients don't have to spend half the session talking about their therapists' problems at home. The focus is solely on the feelings and thoughts of the clients. THERAPEUTIC STAGES Therapy is a relationship survivors must enter into with caution. For survivors of ritual abuse, therapy is almost always the first time another human being has made a commitment to listen to the details of the ritual abuse. Sometimes survivors tell the truth of their experience only to be judged or not believed. Sadly, survivors are frequently revictimized by therapists and other professionals. This makes it very difficult for them to seek help in the future. However, if survivors are persistent, often they are able to find therapists who are knowledgeable about ritual abuse. Some survivors even find therapists who are willing to listen and believe the entire truth of their ritual abuse experiences. Most ritual abuse survivors develop MPD as a result of the trauma. The therapy process described outlines the standard framework for therapy for ritual abuse survivors with multiple personalities. Establishing Trust During the first stage of therapy, therapist and client establish a bond of trust. If the client is not aware of the multiplicity, the therapist tells the client of the probability of multiple personalities and allows the client time to process this new information. Colin Ross, a well-known authority on MPD, speaks of the importance of developing trust with the MPD client: The therapist develops trust by being trustworthy... It is important to remember that the MPD patient has had her trust in loved ones violently broken countless times. She has developed a complicated system of protectors, persecutors, and other personalities to deal with problems of trust and safety: The total personality system simply won't accept "caring" statements about how much the therapist can be trusted. Ross notes the importance of validating the personalities who do not trust. He agrees with these personalities that it is smart not to trust all people, but he also reminds the client that some people can be trusted.[1] The issues surrounding ritual abuse are complex, and it is important for the therapist to allow the survivor to decide just who can be trusted. It is not useful for therapists to suggest that their clients blindly trust them. As in all relationships, the survivor needs a great deal of time to evaluate and determine whether the therapist is trustworthy. Survivors of ritual abuse learned at a very young age not to trust a person just because he or she is in a position of authority or in a "helping" profession. Many survivors report having been abused by such individuals. Developing Communication and Cooperation During the next stage of therapy, therapists attempt to speak with alter personalities. They help survivors develop tools to aid in the process of personality communication and cooperation. Therapists generally attempt to establish verbal or written commitments with self-destructive, suicidal, or homicidal personalities before beginning the process of uncovering memories of abuse. It is essential that therapists learn to communicate effectively with their MPD clients. Communication between therapists and MPD clients can be complicated by a number of factors. First, therapists must remember that clients with MPD do not always know what their other personalities think or feel. Multiples often contradict themselves inadvertently, confusing their therapists. Nevertheless, the therapist can address the entire personality system if important information needs to be communicated to everyone. Second, it is important to remember that all personalities can hear what the therapist is saying. Therefore, to slander one personality in the presence of another would create conflict and pain in the multiple. All personalities developed for survival purposes, and each still serves a purpose today. The personalities are an elaborate system that helped survivors live through extremely painful and traumatic experiences. Therapists need to treat clients with respect. Frank Putnam, author of Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Personality Disorder notes a specific type of personality found in most multiple systems who is capable of facilitating the process of communication between therapist and client. This personality, often referred to by therapists as an Internal Self Helper (ISH), is able to communicate the needs, desires, and wishes of the system as a whole. Therapists have found that establishing trust with this personality early in therapy aids the process of healing. The ISH Is often very protective of other personalities; it can serve as an extraordinary helper, assuring that all personalities are heard and that all needs are met throughout the process of therapy.[2] Empowering and validating the reality of all the personalities is also essential throughout the process of therapy. Developing communication and cooperation among all personalities is a vital step in the healing process. The therapist can aid in this process by pointing out common ground among personalities. When the barriers among the personalities are softened, they are able to feel closer together. Communication and cooperation aid in the development of a new understanding, which results in a greater sense of relief for the survivor. When each personality is able to have his or her needs met, this ends the battle among personalities for control of the survivor's behavior. Once the personalities begin to communicate and cooperate, boundaries among personalities begin to dissipate. The separate reality of each personality leaks into the reality of the others. As this happens, survivors become plagued with memories of abuse and often experience overwhelming suicidal or homicidal impulses. It is essential to develop both internal and external safety for ritual abuse clients as they remember the abuse. Most therapists and clients achieve this through the use of commitments that assure survivors will not hurt themselves or someone else as the memories surface. Commitments can be made either among the personalities themselves, or among the personalities and the therapist. Each survivor is able to decide which type of commitment is the most useful in his or her individual situation. Therapy for ritual abuse survivors is often a long and painful process that involves uncovering horribly traumatic memories. Most survivors experience these memories during what is referred to in psychological terms as an abreaction. During an abreaction, survivors feel all the physical sensations and emotions they had at the time of the abuse. Survivors of ritual abuse report the same process of abreaction as described with regard to sexual abuse by Ross: During an abreaction the child alter may beg the parent to stop, scream, cry, express intense sadness, or clutch her lower abdomen. There may be hand movements to push the father out of her vagina or motor movements accompanying the abreaction of an oral rape. The genuineness and the intensity of the abreaction is one of the most convincing features of MPD. For the therapist it is almost like having to watch a real rape, and then talk with the victim afterwards.[3] THE MEMORY PROCESS The memory process described by ritual abuse survivors is remarkably similar to the memory process described by war veterans and incest survivors. As people are severely traumatized, the violent memories become frozen in time. Later, after the danger has ceased, the victims recall the trauma in their bodies through unidentifiable physical sensations. They may have recurrent aches in their arms and legs. In the case of sexual abuse, they feel sharp pains in their vagina or rectum. They may be plagued with visual flashes of the violence. Most victims experience flashbacks in which their entire bodies and minds actually react as if they were back in the traumatic moment. The victims feel all the physical ,sensations and emotions they felt when the trauma occurred. The violence and pain seem to be happening all over again. According to the men and women who volunteered for the research project on which this book is based, the memory process is extremely painful, both emotionally and physically. Most survivors said the memories surfaced in fragments. initially, for example, survivors often experience body memories-physical sensations in their bodies with no current cause. The sensations experienced during the body memories are literally the body reliving the pain it felt during the trauma. During or after the body memories, the emotions emerge that they felt during the attack. Survivors often see flashes in their minds of abusive episodes that seem related to the feelings and body memories they are experiencing. As these memory fragments fall into place, the entire abusive event is then recalled as if the event was happening at that very moment. Some survivors report that their alter personalities tell them the memories of abuse. Sometimes survivors experience feelings related to the abuse, which they are unable to account for in their daily lives. One ritual abuse survivor reported having intense sexual feelings associated with violence, and later feeling baffled that she would ever think such things. This is a somewhat common experience for ritual abuse survivors: The personality who felt sexually stimulated learned the association of sex and violence during the ritual abuse. The other personality was baffled because such feelings are unacceptable to her and dont feel like her own. One survivor related that she could stop the physical and emotional pain experienced during the memory process by letting another personality who feels no pain take over. Survivors may use this dissociative technique to help ease the pain when a memory is surfacing in an unsafe environment. Most survivors say there is an initial object, situation, or sensation—often referred to by survivors as a trigger-that begins the process of the memory. According to survivors, if they can identify the trigger, the memory process is shorter in duration and less painful. One survivor illustrates her process of memory recovery in great detail: Getting a memory is not always an unbroken journey from point A to point B, but the process has taken on a consistency and familiarity that now helps me (and my support providers) jump in and manage the emergence of information. I think the process I endure is complicated by several factors: (1) whether or not I've been exposed to a specific trigger or cue, either deliberately (communication from a family member) or incidentally; (2) if I am vulnerable to being overwhelmed by repressed memories because of the time of year or a full moon; (3) if outside, normal life events are causing me to experience feelings that are connected to memories of the abuse; or (4) if there has been specific programming put into me in childhood that is causing me to react to a life event such as a specific birthday or holiday. if I've been exposed to a specific trigger, the process feels a little simpler to me, especially if it has been an incidental trigger and not a deliberately placed one. Example: I saw a pair of earrings on a woman at a party; I didn't connect it at the time, but I later realized it was the exact moment I started feeling "concussed," as if I'd suffered a dizzying blow to the head. I left the party and went home feeling "fogged out," unconnected, unreal, distant, forgetful, "crowded:' overwhelmed. (Sometimes I hear from "inside people' at this time, kids usually, who know something about the event I am fighting to keep from consciousness.) I then started to feel complete despair, hopelessness, and futility. I wanted to die. I didn't want to live. I couldn't live. I thought of my blood running out onto the floor. I felt anguish, terror, a feeling of unavoidable impending punishment and doom. I tried to manage the feelings while also attempting to trace back to the original trigger, and got support from my husband. I finally got the memory, hours after the party. I held onto my husband and got flooded with feelings of terror, horror, nausea, and grief. The earrings were tiny ceramic deer heads (something I had not remembered until then). The memory was about having to help my father disembowel and dismember a deer in a public restroom at a national park, and having to make satanic symbols in blood on the walls, floor and ceiling. I cried and shook and held on, swore I didn't believe any of it, swore I was "crazy and manipulative," and cried some more. My husband kept reassuring me, telling me he believed me, reminding me that I was experiencing intense, uncontrollable emotion, feelings he knew I could not and would not fake. Once it passed, I felt enormous relief I felt clearheaded again, and I no longer wanted to die or harm the body. But 1 did feel a lot of grief and sadness and anger at being used, which required several more days to work through, and a whole lot more tears. If the trigger has been deliberately delivered to me (a birthday card from my father, for example); or if it's a satanic holiday or a full moon; or if I'm experiencing a lack of confidence or support; if I'm experiencing stress at work or in my relationship; or if I'm reacting to previously programmed information, recovering a memory gets a little more complicated. I have a much harder time "catching the association," and a much more difficult time believing I am a ritual abuse survivor in the first place. The denial is excruciating. But there generally is always a transition from being concussed, and feeling dead or nonexistent, to being flooded with intense feelings of terror, dread, unbearable shame, self-contempt, anger, and confusion (all in no particular order). I no longer act out as frequently as I used to, but the incredible urge to self-mutilate is frequently still there. I frequently have to struggle with intense suicidal feelings, and long, horrible bouts of panic. I've learned, though, that all this hoopla, the suicidal feelings, the panic, the intense self-hatred, the scathing hostility that too many good and safe people get bar-raged with, the confusion and hopelessness and despair, are usually just a complicated "cover-up" for the emerging memory. Once I can get somewhere safe, and experience the terror as fully as I can stand it (this frequently entails having to "let go of the body" and "accept the memory from whomever is holding it"), and get as many details as I can about what actually happened, and then get supported and comforted and reassured (as well as gently corrected, if I'm steadfastly insisting that "I deserve to die" or "It was all my fault"), I typically experience immediate and profound relief. My "post memory" state can include anything from an incredible feeling of lightness and relief, to a mind-numbing heavy grief, to a blinding rage at my perpetrators, but I always feel better-less controlled by outside forces, less pursued, less off-balance and confused, less crazy. I should also mention that at varying stages of this process before, during, and after a memory, I frequently experience intense physical pain: the sensation of a thin metal wire being inserted into my urethra; the sensation of pins being pushed in my nipples, the maddening sensation that my ankles or wrists are tightly bound (Until I figured that one out, I kept insisting, "It feels like my feet are being cut off." My feet obviously were never cut off, but if the circulation is impaired, that is in fact the physical sensation); the feeling of being "torn apart" by a rape, or "being ripped in two" (feeling a bodily sense of physically being very small); the feeling of being crushed or confined in a very small cage, or buried (including, on one occasion, the sensation that my fingernails were torn and bloodied from scratching uncontrollably on the lid of the coffin); or the sensation that the tips of my fingers are cut, burned, or crushed. But again, once the memory becomes more conscious, I always feel some relief, even if it takes a while to manifest. The ankle memory in particular just about drove me nuts: night after night after night, I couldn't sleep without tying socks around my ankles because the sensation of them being cut off was so strong. That one still comes and goes, but at least I have a context for it now. It is far worse to be suffering and have no way to process it, no way to explain it or endure it. THE FOUR PHASES OF MEMORY RECOVERY The process of recovering a memory generally goes through four phases. In phase one, the survivor feels anxious, nauseated, and panicky; in phase two, fragments of memory return; phase three is abreaction; and phase four is relief. Phase One: Anxiety, Nausea, Panic Many survivors are able to identify certain feelings that let them know a memory is surfacing. One survivor described this initial sensation "as a black presence coming over me." Other survivors reported mounting anxiety and feelings of nausea or fatigue. Some survivors said they felt a strong desire to revert to addictive behaviors. They wanted to start smoking again or out-of-control eating. Some individuals started to feel foggy or experienced irritat-ing headaches. They felt they couldnt think. These feelings are a glimpse of how survivors felt during the original trauma. Most of the feelings experienced by survivors as the memory surfaces are body memories. The body is experiencing what it felt during the abuse, but the mind is unable to identify why the body is feeling the pain. It is not uncommon for survivors to experience suicidal feelings or desires to self-mutilate as the memory surfaces. The pain and anxiety survivors experience as memories emerge is often so great that suicide seems like the least painful solution. The suicidal feelings may also be body memories of how they felt when the abuse was happening. Death might have seemed comforting to a child being tortured. A numb, dead feeling may also accompany the suicidal impulses. For example, a survivor goes into shock during physical trauma, which causes a numb sensation throughout the body. When the memories return, the survivor experiences a heavy, numb sensation that creates great discomfort. Inflicting cuts on his own body may cause enough pain to seem to stop the numb feeling. However, the numb feeling is a body memory that will reemerge unless the survivor looks at the source of his feelings. if he can ride the numb feeling out without cutting his wrists, the entire memory may surface, which results in freedom from the pain. If he doesn't ride it out, and instead acts on his urges to self-mutilate, he continues the cycle of pain his abusers caused. It is extremely important for a ritual abuse survivor to be in a safe environment as the memories surface. This might be extremely difficult if the survivor is in an unsupportive relationship or work environment. One of the most important aspects of healing from such extreme trauma is finding a safe place. The survivor needs to confront memories in order to recognize and grieve about losses, and for the past to no longer control the present. Finding a safe place may be a challenging task. No place feels safe to a survivor of ritual abuse. That in and of itself is part of the memory. No place was safe as the abuse was happening. Survivors can call on nontraumatized personalities (the ones who do not remember the pain and fear), and personalities who are aware of how the cults work, to help determine when and where it is safe for memories to emerge. Because the pain is so intense as the memories surface, survivors must take certain precautions. if the memory starts to surface while the survivor is not in a safe place, they might comfort the pain by expressing feelings through writing or artwork. Sometimes talking about the surfacing feelings will ease the discomfort. Some survivors use peaceful imagery or desensitization techniques to distance themselves from the overwhelming material. Later, when they are in their safe place, they are able to remember the abuse, with all the feelings it entails. Having to repress memories as they emerge in unsafe environments is one of the most difficult aspects of remembering the abuse. In time, however, survivors find safe places where their feelings are heard. They learn how to ride out the feelings without taking the pain out on their own bodies. Phase Two: Uncovering Pieces of the Memory After survivors are able to get through the initial feelings of anxiety, panic, and dread, they enter into stage two of the memory process. At this point, survivors get information or pieces of the memory without fully reliving the abusive experience. Some survivors see in their minds scenes of abuse as they encounter the initial trigger emotions. Often they have nightmares or flashes of abuse in dreams. At this stage in the memory process, survivors describe different layers of feelings, emotions, visualizations, and other details about the memory that must be integrated in order to relive the memory in its entirety. In therapy, survivors attempt to contact the inner personalities who have more information about the surfacing memory. Some survivors work with their therapists, going over and over a specific memory until all emotions, body memories, and visualizations combine to create a complete memory of an abuse episode. Most survivors said therapy was their safe place. Therapists generally teach survivors relaxation exercises to ease the survivors' minds. This allows personalities who are not usually allowed to speak the opportunity to emerge. Some therapists use formal hypnosis, although this may not be necessary because many individuals with MPD are able to self-induce hypnosis. Hypnosis allows people to enter an altered state. Multiples often are able to move in and out of altered states with great ease. Once the client is in a relaxed state, the therapist usually asks questions about the mental images the client is seeing, or feelings the client might be experiencing. Often survivors see old abuse scenes or remember the details surrounding an abuse episode. The therapist then asks such questions as, "How did you get here? Do you hear any sounds? Who is around you? What are you feeling?" Often these questions prompt more images, which later result in a memory of an abuse scene that includes all the feelings and sensations that accompanied the original incidence of trauma. During this information-gathering stage of the memory process, it is not unusual for survivors to struggle with the images and feelings associated with a variety of abuse memories that share a particular theme. For example, the theme might be, "Don't tell about the abuse," and the survivor sees images of herself being tortured as a child. She may also have feelings associated with a memory as a teenager, when she told a friend at school her father had molested her and she was ostracized by her peers. Sometimes, if the common theme of the emerging memories can be identified, it is easier to process and express the emotions. As the memory process continues, the images become more solidified and they combine with emotions and other details of the abuse to create a complete memory that includes all the feelings and sensations the survivor experienced at the time of attack. The original images often are the framework for an entire memory that is remembered, in the same way war veterans remember trauma on the battlefield. At the final stage of the memory process, survivors know their memories are true as clearly as they know their own name. They feel it in every cell of their bodies because they are literally reliving the experience. It is important that survivors feel safe as pieces of memories surface. This is difficult because, as the memory is uncovered, survivors often lose conscious awareness of their behavior for short periods of time. In order to assure that all personalities feel safe, therapists and clients often establish commitments with personalities who may either hurt their own bodies or their therapists. These violent personalities hold all the suffering and rage of the client and endure the excruciating pain that has never been expressed. They need to be treated with respect. This means the violent personalities need to be allowed the safety of not acting on their feelings, because doing so could result in further traumatization of the system as a whole. Each time a survivor attempts to remember the details of an abuse memory, it is useful for the therapist or survivor to read a commitment designed to protect the survivor from hurting herself or others. The following is an example of a commitment between personalities: We are going to a very important place now, where you are going to find parts of yourself you may have thought were no longer with you. In order for this to happen, your other personalities need to know that all of you can keep yourselves safe. They need to know that you won't hurt me or yourself. You have this object [perhaps a stuffed animal] that you can pretend to hurt, but it is not safe to hurt real people. If you can all agree with this, let's go further. Is this okay with you? If the personalities agree with this, the therapist may want to add that an adult personality will need to come back into the body at a later point in the therapy session in order for the survivor to get home safely. For example, after the client agrees to the above commitment, the therapist may say, Okay. We have X amount of time to find these personalities and talk with them. After this time is up, an adult personality needs to know that she or he will be able to come back into the body to get all of you home safely If you all can agree with this, let's go further. Is that okay with you? This statement is necessary to assure that personalities will be able to function as they leave the office and not feel overwhelmed If the personalities do not agree with these commitments, then therapist and client may want to discuss why. Hopefully, they can arrive at compromises that allow all personalities to have their needs met For example, a personality may not agree to these commitments because she is afraid the therapist will attack her if she lets another personality surface. This personality is probably a child who was attacked countless times and needs to be assured that the therapist is safe and nonviolent. In the cult, survivors were often tortured for remembering and telling. A great deal of time may pass before all personalities feel safe enough to remember details of the abuse. Phase Three: Abreaction As therapists and survivors continue to explore pieces of the memory-and as survivors more clearly recall the details of the abuse-survivors enter stage three of the memory process. In this stage, survivors recall the abuse as if it was happening right in that moment. As they feel all the emotions and see the images of abuse, they recognize that this is not the first time they have experienced these feelings and physical sensations. They know they are remembering events that actually occurred years ago. Finding out the truth of their past is the answer to all the unidentifiable pain they have experienced their entire lives. Therapists call this third stage of the process an abreaction. Survivors who experience abreactions feel as if they are right there, and the abuse is happening all over again. Here's how one survivor describes the process: When an alter has a memory, it is in flashbacks. We are back at that moment in time. We can see the people involved clearly; we can feel them, smell them, taste them, and hear them. We were able to stop our feelings from showing by locking the pain inside. Our body moves as though someone is hurting it. If we are involved in a rape, the body is pushed as though someone is on top of us having intercourse. The breath is knocked out of us. The whole body stiffens in defense. Sometimes there is spontaneous bleeding. There is intense fear. Now that the child alters trust the therapists, they can tell them what's happening and cry and ask for help, something they never did when it really happened. Nearly all the survivors in this study report a similar memory process. Often survivors find validation for the images they see during the memory of abuse. One survivor in this study said that after an abreaction, she found a scar she had never noticed before in the same place from which the pain was coming during the abreaction. Another survivor said she started to hemorrhage in the middle of the memory. The memories of some survivors are verified by other people who were abused at the same place and time. Some survivors visit the location of the abuse scene they saw in their memory and find it to be identical to the image they saw in their memory. Phase Four: Relief After an abreaction, survivors report feelings of relief. The struggle to stop the pain is diminished. They confronted the pain, and it passed. Survivors said they felt tremendous relief as they "let go of control of their bodies" and allowed the personalities that held the memories to emerge. Memories become easier to process as survivors are able to make the association between the trigger, the overwhelming feelings, and the surfacing of a ritual abuse memory. When they do not realize a memory is surfacing, they are unable to identify why they are feeling such powerful emotions. Their emotions feel out of their control. Throughout the healing process, it is essential for survivors to be aware of their child personalities who are suffering and need to be heard. Nurturing these children is an important part of the healing process. Letting these little children play or do something they deem enjoyable helps to remind survivors that there is more than just the pain of the memories. If survivors do not know what the child personalities want, it is useful to ask. If there is no answer the first time, just keep trying. It may take a while to find the personalities who feel safe enough to search for fun. Reparenting the inner children allows survivors the opportunity to take control of their lives. Since most multiples were abused by their parents, child personalities only know about unfair and cruel parents. These child personalities now have a chance to be reparented by the most kind and fair personalities in the multiple system. These children are able to have their needs heard. They are respected. These inner children give survivors the lives rooted in their hearts that they thought were lost forever. Reparenting the inner children is about being the best parent you can possibly be to yourself. For survivors, the most rewarding part of healing is developing a relationship with themselves. They learn to understand the feelings and behavior of alter personalities. Supporting these alter personalities may be difficult at times, but eventually all personalities are able to have a voice. They are finally heard. Allowing certain personalities to speak may cause a great deal of anxiety in survivors, as they hear the contradictions in their thoughts and behavior. Core beliefs of certain personalities are questioned by other personalities. In time, however, survivors develop compassion for each personality. Personalities are respected. They are allowed to change their minds and make mistakes. In the end, everyone is recognized and heard. USING MULTIPLE PERSONALITIES TO HEAL FROM RITUAL ABUSE Multiple personalities is not only a creative way to survive a childhood which was awful, but it's also a very creative way to heal. And I think if you use multiplicity as part of your healing process and work with it rather than against it, then you can actually experience multiplicity as a healing thing. M. M., Healing Hearts[4] Multiplicity originally enabled survivors of ritual abuse to live through highly traumatic situations. Multiplicity also offers gifts for survivors as they heal from the abuse. Survivors remember many memories of severe trauma with the same intensity of feeling they experienced at the time of the abuse. By working with the multiplicity, adult survivors recover these memories at a pace that doesn't overwhelm them. Multiples can also learn to develop internal support that helps them survive this painful process. A Word to the Survivor: Multiple to Multiple A wonderful thing happens as you take the time and energy to meet and speak with inner personalities. You start to see your own innocence and feel the feelings you were never allowed to express. You find the parts of yourself that are sweet and the parts that are powerful. All of your parts make up an incredibly unique, creative individual who did everything in her or his power to survive. You start to see your own uniqueness and feel warmth and compassion toward yourself. You may even fall in love with yourself, which is a remarkable experience when you realize that all these cute, lovable, powerful things inside of you are really you. As you discover alter personalities, it may prove useful to keep some sort of a map that outlines relationships between personalities and the characteristics of each that you believe are important. Be creative. It is your system, and you know best how to express what needs to be said. Allow the personalities to speak, and feel them. Let them communicate with you. Communication allows personalities to talk to each other about what they think, believe, and feel. Some techniques you can use to communicate with personalities include journaling and allowing parts to write back and forth; coloring or drawing the memories or images personalities want to share; or actual communication within the mind that allows parts to engage in discussions. There are many ways to communicate with alter personalities. You may find that communication already exists between personalities, but you were not consciously aware of it. It is essential to find the most comfortable form of communication for each personality. Systems can be very intricate and specialized. Some say that there are as many different multiple systems as there are multiples. Trust what feels right to you. Here are some questions that may prove useful as you meet each alter personality: o What is your name? (not all personalities will have names) o How old are you? o When were you born? o Why were you born? o What needs of the overall system did you meet at the time you were born? o What needs do you meet now? o What happened before and after your birth? o How do you feel about yourself? About other parts in the system? o What do you know about our life and what happened to us? o Who else do you know or talk to in the system? o What do you need from the rest of the system? o How do you feel about the outside world? o What can we do to help you? to make you feel safe? o Do you perceive yourself as related to any other personalities? o What do you look like? o What do you hate? o What do you love? o Is there anything important that you need to tell me? It may be particularly frightening to begin communication with certain personalities, if you know that what they will share may hurt you. These personalities may hold painful memories. They may resent you or may be angry at you. They may want to hurt someone you love. Nevertheless, these personalities are altered states of yourself that have been extremely abused and need the support, love, and understanding you never received. Take it slowly, and do the best you can. You may be able to make deals with them. If you can't communicate with a personality because you need to do something else at that time, try to explain why the job that needs to be done is important. You may even realize that what you thought was important can wait, and you can now take a little time out and listen to what is going on inside. Generally, if you treat personalities with respect, they will be respectful in return. The group as a whole may want to design guidelines that enable each other to be heard. You can have family meetings each night to discuss the hardships of the day or to decide what you need to do tomorrow and who is going to do it. This may feel uncomfortable initially, but it is remarkable how much anxiety is released once you acknowledge alter personalities. This makes sense once you consider that these personalities are altered states of yourself; they influence you and they are with you at every moment. The system can assign different personalities to different jobs to make each day run more smoothly. Find out what each personality likes to do. You can view the system as a large family or commune-helper personalities meet responsibilities and get work done, nurturer personalities hold babies who are crying and in severe pain. Babies may also like to be with protector personalities, who can hold their hands or give them tough-guy lessons. It is important to remember that each personality has something to offer another personality and the system as a whole. The trick is to find out what that is, and to make up for lost time. The process is unique to each multiple system, and I encourage survivors to use the cooperation tactics that work best for them. Personalities may be hostile and angry if they have been ignored for most of your life. If other parts hated them or were ashamed of them, they may feel resentful and not want to take part in any process that may help all of you. At such times, it is important to remember the enormity and the injustice of your ritual abuse experience. Many, many times, these personalities are right. You are right. Give the personalities all the things that were never given to you. They were violently violated, and they need someone-they need you-to understand. In time, you will feel closer to your personalities. As you start using tools to develop cooperation within the system, you will feel better each day. You may even stop perceiving differences between them and you. Your beliefs and their beliefs are the same. You feel what they feel. The congruency in thought and emotion is miraculous. Meeting personalities and uncovering memories requires an intense commitment to listening and understanding all parts in the multiple system. Personalities often hold all the horrible, awful feelings you were never allowed to feel as a child, and they bum with pain as a result of it. For this reason, as the memories and feelings surface, it is ideal to have supportive individuals around you to help you reach into the depths of your pain; outside people who are able to listen to what your parts need to say and are not afraid of them or their experiences. This may be the most difficult part of recovery-finding people with whom your personalities feel safe; people who will listen to all of your experiences without attempting to discount or minimize your feelings. This frustration and lack of support may justifiably cause you to be sensitive to other peoples controlling behaviors to minimize your pain and experience. You may also become furious at society for its mistreatment of victims. You may feel isolated in your suffering. But you are not alone. Remember, other survivors are out here right now, going through the same process. Keep looking until you find someone outside of yourself who can hear the truth and be there for you. Overcoming Self-Destructive Impulses It is not uncommon for survivors to experience extreme selfdestructive and homicidal impulses as memories surface. At this time, it is important to remember that you are not to blame for what happened, and you deserve to remember and recover your own life. You are experiencing normal reactions to a very abnormal, abusive experience. Being reminded of your own worth may help lessen the drive to act on these self-destructive feelings. Sometimes it is because of a surfacing memory that you are experiencing such moments of depression and self-destruction. Ride the feelings out. Don't give in and hurt your own body. You've already come this far. Things are going to change. Remember, you are not to blame for what happened to you, and you deserve to remember the abuse and heal. The Rewards of Healing Healing from ritual abuse is about learning to live with what happened to you. it requires you to feel the feelings people never allowed you to express. In order for you to find out your true feelings, you must listen to your alter personalities. As you communicate and cooperate with your personalities, their distinctiveness will become less apparent. In time, personalities may no longer be separate from the person you are in your daily life, a process called integration. When you integrate, you know what your personalities think and feel without having to ask. It is my opinion that integration is not a goal of healing, but rather the result of it. In fact, maintaining integration as a goal may actually hinder healing if it encourages certain personalities to remain silent in order to please other personalities or their therapist. The healing process is not as simple as regurgitating memories over a finite number of years. What you have now is the chance to learn more about yourself and to reach inside and find a rich, whole world that can give you back your life. Memories are only part of the process. Discovering what is really important to you, and finding your strengths and your own place in this world, are only some of the rewards you receive for undertaking the long and hard process of healing. Even though the new communication between alters is usually accompanied by horrible childhood abuse memories, multiples have a unique opportunity to act as a support system and nurturer for themselves. Personalities can help one another, hold one another, and work in their internal environment to create a world inside that feels comfortable and supportive to everyone. The process may appear long and tedious, but the rewards are well worth it. pps. 51-73 --[NOTES]-- 1. Colin Ross, Multiple Personality Disorder: Diagnosis, Clinical Features, and Treatment (New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1989), 220. 2. Frank Putnam, Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Personality Disorder (New York: The Guilford Press, 1989), 203. 3. Ross, Multiple Personality Disorder, 113. 4. Cooperation Versus integration (1989) and Maintaining Functioning and Avoiding Collapse During Recovery (1989). Videocassettes avail-able through Healing Hearts (1989) (see Resources). --[cont]-- Aloha, He'Ping, Om, Shalom, Salaam. Em Hotep, Peace Be, Omnia Bona Bonis, All My Relations. Adieu, Adios, Aloha. Amen. Roads End Kris DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soapboxing! These are sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright frauds is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply. Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector. ======================================================================== Archives Available at: http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/ ======================================================================== To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email: SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED] To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email: SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED] Om