“I've got another confession to make,
I'm your fool,
Everyone's got their chains to break,
Holding you,
Were you born to resist or be abused?
Is someone getting the best, the best, the best, the best of you?
Is someone getting the best, the best, the best, the best of you…”
“Best of
You,” The Foo Fighters
Years ago, these song lyrics resonated with me, a survivor of
abuse and bullying.
“Is someone getting the best of you?”
That IS the million- dollar question.
As someone who has been in recovery from these traumatic
experiences, looking at things, within the safe confines of therapy, I have
seen my life play out like those lyrics sing. And I have learned, yes, indeedy,
I AM a Foo Fighter.
Not a bandmate of Dave Grohl’s. No, rather, I am Foo: Fawning-Over-Obligation.
I am battling daily with this recognition, as I am learning more about the
abuse I survived.
The Fog:
Within, especially, Narcissistic abuse recovery, there is a
trusty acronym, “FOG,” often used to differentiate between a healthy and
an unhealthy relationship. Distilled to its simplest explanation, typically,
any relationship that contains fear, obligation, or guilt is not seen as a
healthy, safe setting.
I have been in many foggy situations in my life. Yes, fear is
dominant; yes, guilt was also a suffocating force, adding its own misery to my
life.
I can expound on both fear and guilt for days, especially
concerning the abuse I have survived. But what has gotten more of my attention
within the last few years has been that of “obligation.”
Obligation is a different animal, perhaps, more nuanced,
confusing, and complicated than fear or guilt. We can tap into and understand
the reasons we are afraid or guilty. But obligated?
Why Obligation, in the first place?
Obligation: We learn it.
We are taught what we should and should not do, since
childhood. It’s part of making sure we, as children, are “brought up well.” We
are good citizens, well-mannered, pleasing, and reflecting well on our parents
and the other assorted adults around us. Most adults do not want to be regarded
as people who create or tolerate hellions, demons, or rabid animals when it
comes to children who are in their care. It’s not a good look.
So, the instruction lessons of obligation start as soon as we
learn to walk and talk. The adults decide we need to learn how to be obligated,
so that we can be perceived as polite and make it in the world.
And, in darker extremes, if our family system is abusive,
obligation is taught, so that we learn how to keep a secret, protect the abuse
and the abuser perpetuating the harmful behavior, and meet the needs of the
toxic entity. It is in that toxic entity’s best interest, not ours,
to train the impressionable children on how their “no” is wrong, especially
when it comes to displeasing an adult. “Yes,” being subservient, agreeable,
manipulated, and quiet are the much-preferred responses. If children are
“successfully taught” how to be obligated to another person, they are more
easily controlled.
And this is what some people desire when it comes to the
response of another person. Being easily controlled.
Obligation: We live it.
Feeling obligated, therefore, often feels normal and natural
for us. We do it because it’s “right;” it’s expected of us.
Plus, many of us believe this obligation is “love.” We want
to love and be loved. Obligation, in our minds, is the necessary tool to achieving
that love.
How many of us from abusive families have believed, at some
point, that our situations are “normal?” Everyone screams at each other.
Everyone threatens, hits, and punches. Every family has terror
and unpredictable chaos as a baseline environment.
This is “normal.”
Obligation is part of that normalcy package. It’s “normal” to
do things we don’t want to do because family wills it so. It’s normal to feel
pressured to go against our conscience and intuition because “it’s best for the
family.” It’s normal to deny, suppress, and reject ourselves and who we truly
are because “the family will not like it.”
Acting in this manner can be the path of least resistance,
and many of us have learned that taking that path can spare us from getting
hurt or violated more. We want to avoid further pain. So, we learn that
obligation, at lest in the short-term, can keep us safe and alive.
Survival. Obligation is survival.
Obligation: We love it. (We need it).
Survival, through obligation, is about protecting ourselves
from more than just another in the family. Sometimes, it protects us…from us.
Ah, tricky. We don’t always want to face ourselves, do we? We
don’t want to admit to ourselves that we can love having the excuse to be so
much in survival mode, that we never ask and answer, for ourselves, the basic
of questions, like “Who am I?” and “What do I want?”
If a prehistoric caveman is running for his life from the
Sabretooth Tiger chasing him down, this is not the best time for thoughtful,
meditative self-reflection. NO! You and I had better RUN! If we don’t, we’re
going to DIE! Existential and luxurious questions of identity and purpose can wait
when it come to immediate life or death. Now, let’s get away from the tiger
already!
Many of us prefer and choose, on some level, to stay in the
fight or flight state of emergency because that’s less scary than facing the
truth and discovering who we truly are. If we’re constantly in crisis, we
cannot actively stop and change. Our lives can still be predictable, even as
they are miserable, unhealthy, and unsafe. At least, they are familiar.
And we don’t want to admit the truth: we love the familiar.
Obligation can, therefore, keep us safely entrenched in our familiar
surroundings. No fear of the unknown for us.
We know this monster. And that’s comforting to us.
We are a freedom fighter.
Why be a Foo Fighter then? Why fight against City Hall?
If you and I love the familiar so much, are scared of what
freedom looks like, why fight against that at all? Why not just accept?
I believe there is something within each of us that demands
self-choice. Without choice, there is no freedom.
Obligation, at its most toxic, strips us of choice, in
glaring and subtle ways.
One of my favorite scriptures, especially as I try to clean
up the mess of being a people pleaser…
“Simply let your 'Yes' be 'Yes,'
and your 'No,' 'No'; anything beyond this comes from the evil one.”
Matthew
5:37
“OWN,” Not Obligation:
Is someone getting the best of you and I? Does it have
anything to do with our over-developed sense of obligation? Do we feel like you
constantly “owe” someone, even if it costs us dearly?
Baby steps of healing can start when you and I start to ask
and answer what we truly own. Maybe some of us have never contemplated that
concept. “You mean it’s not all my fault?” That may be the first
question we need to ask and answer for ourselves.
And here’s the short answer; no, it isn’t.
Obligation can dominate our lives, however, if we
intrinsically believe everything is our fault, translation, our responsibility.
Job. Duty. Lot in life. Role and function.
Whatever the semantics, it all comes back to how we give,
even to the point of giving out, and how we self-sacrifice.
Recently, I learned a succinct healing principle that has
served me well: self-care FIRST!
Who would have thought that taking a shower, exercising,
eating healthy, getting sleep, and saying “no” first were all so mercenary? But
they are! Part of the fight over obligation for those of us susceptible
to it is to fight, fight for ourselves.
That is where our true obligation lies.
Copyright
© 2022 by Sheryle Cruse
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