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I think to some extent that's what everyone does, but people who have gone through traumatic events, especially ones that go on over time, become experts at it. Even the parts you do show to people aren't really you. After awhile you run the risk of becoming like an onion...a bunch of layers surrounding nothing.
For me it's been easier than I'm sure it is for victims of sexual abuse, but I just found one or two constants about myself, things that were true to me no matter what, and not just a small, probably distorted part that I wanted people to see. For me they were politics and music. These are the two most basic and honest things about me (which is why I talk about both so much). There's nothing phony in either one, and that keeps me grounded to myself, if that makes any sense. In other words, these aren't just layers, they're the core. And I think we all need to find that in ourselves before we can really accept who were are move on.
I don't mean this in a "write down all the good things about yourself" kind of way that a therapist might talk about. It's not a matter of finding what's good or bad in you, it's about finding what's constant, and then accepting it either way. If it's a good thing all the better. If it's bad then we can work on it.
I can't imagine how hard this is for you to talk about. I never spoke about anything until a few years back, and I never dealt with any physical abuse of any kind. Talking does help, but I had to hit rock bottom before thinking to look upwards. So, hard or not, I'm glad you're trying. :hug:
And I think this post perfectly illustrates the dangers of posting high. It probably makes less sense than the reasoning behind filming Jaws 4.
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