As part of looking at our Man in the Mirror, we sometimes need to understand the emotionalmakeup that has transpired within us. Sometimes it is from past lives, and sometimes it is from this lifetime, or even a lifetime that is repeating itself from prior lifetimes. To recognize some patterns, it may be necessary to look at ourselves from the role in the family dynamic in which we started this time around. Seeing ourselves clearly in this light and how we have dealt with our dealings, so to speak, help us to unravel the patterns established and see ourselves in a clearer light. This is one of the steps we can take to gain control and understanding of our "emotional bodies", one of the four lower bodies that must come into the light for a true shift in consciousness to occur.
"Dysfunctional families are the product of an emotionally dishonest, shame based, patriarchal society based upon beliefs that do not support Loving self or Loving neighbor."
- Robert Burney
"The point that I am making is that our understanding of Codependence has evolved to realizing that this is not just about some dysfunctional families, our very role models, our prototypes, are dysfunctional.
Our traditional cultural concepts of what a man is, of what a woman is, are twisted, distorted, almost comically bloated stereotypes of what masculine and feminine really are. . . . . . .
When the role model of what a man is does not allow a man to cry or express fear; when the role model for what a woman is does not allow a woman to be angry or aggressive - that is emotional dishonesty. When the standards of a society deny the full range of the emotional spectrum and label certain emotions as negative - that is not only emotionally dishonest, it creates emotional disease.
If a culture is based on emotional dishonesty, with role models that are dishonest emotionally, then that culture is also emotionally dysfunctional, because the people of that society are set up to be emotionally dishonest and dysfunctional in getting their emotional needs met.
What we traditionally have called normal parenting in this society is abusive because it is emotionally dishonest. Children learn who they are as emotional beings from the role modeling of their parents. "Do as I say - not as I do," does not work with children. Emotionally dishonest parents cannot be emotionally healthy role models, and cannot provide healthy parenting.
Our model for what a family should be sets up abusive, emotionally dishonest dynamics."
(Quotes in this color are from Codependence: The Dance of Wounded Souls by Robert Burney)
Roles
In Dysfunctional Families
- column by codependence counselor
"There are four basic roles that children adopt in order to survive growing up in emotionally dishonest, shame-based, dysfunctional family systems.""As an adult the Family Hero is rigid, controlling, and extremely judgmental . . . . . of others and secretly of themselves. They achieve "success" on the outside and get lots of positive attention but are cut off from their inner emotional life, from their True Self."
"The scapegoat is the child that the family feels ashamed of - and the most emotionally honest child in the family. He/she acts out the tension and anger the family ignores. This child provides distraction from the real issues in the family."
"A lot of actors and writers are 'lost children' who have found a way to express emotions while hiding behind their characters."
Roles In Dysfunctional
Families
by Robert Burney
M.A.
"We have come to understand that both the
passive and the aggressive behavioral defense systems are reactions to the same
kinds of childhood trauma, to the same kinds of emotional wounds. The Family
Systems Dynamics research shows that within the family system, children adopt
certain roles according to their family dynamics. Some of these roles are more
passive, some are more aggressive, because in the competition for attention and
validation within a family system the children must adopt different types of
behaviors in order to feel like an individual." The emotional dynamics of dysfunctional families are basic - and like emotional dynamics for all human beings are pretty predictable. The outside details may look quite different due to a variety of factors, but the dynamics of the human emotional process are the same for all human beings everywhere. The basic roles which I list below apply to American culture specifically, and Western Civilization generally - but with a few changes in details could be made to fit most any culture. There are four basic roles that children adopt in order to survive growing up in emotionally dishonest, shame-based, dysfunctional family systems. Some children maintain one role into adulthood while others switch from one role to another as the family dynamic changes (i.e. when the oldest leaves home, etc.) An only child may play all of the roles at one time or another.
"Responsible Child" - "Family
Hero"
"Acting out child" -
"Scapegoat"
"Placater" - "Mascot" -
"Caretaker"
"Adjuster" - "Lost
Child"
It is important to note that we adapt the roles that are best
suited to our personalities. We are, of course, born with a certain
personality. What happens with the roles we adapt in our family dynamic is that
we get a twisted, distorted view of who we are as a result of our personality
melding with the roles. This is dysfunctional because it causes us to not be
able to see ourselves clearly. As long as we are still reacting to our
childhood wounding and old tapes then we cannot get in touch clearly with who we
really are.
The false self that we develop to survive is never totally false - there is
always some Truth in it. For example, people who go into the helping
professions do truly care and are not doing what they do simply out of
Codependence. Nothing is black and white - everything in life involves various
shades of gray. Recovery is about getting honest with ourselves and finding
some balance in our life. Recovery is about seeing ourselves more clearly and
honestly so that we can start being True to who we really are instead of to who
our parents wanted us to be. (Reacting to the other extreme by rebelling
against who they wanted us to be is still living life in reaction to our
childhoods. It is still giving power over how we live our life to the past
instead of seeing clearly so that we can own our choices today.) The clearer we
can see our self the easier it becomes to find some balance in our life - to
find some happiness, fulfillment, and serenity. |
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