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	<title>Overcoming Sexual Abuse &#187; dissociate</title>
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		<title>Microwave Healing: I Want To Feel Better NOW</title>
		<link>http://overcomingsexualabuse.com/2010/11/05/microwave-healing-i-want-to-feel-better-now/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=microwave-healing-i-want-to-feel-better-now</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 05 Nov 2010 17:02:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Patty Hite</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://overcomingsexualabuse.com/?p=1064</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[by Patty Hite It’s time to face the facts. We live in a microwave world. We want it done and we want it done now. If I can’t put it in the microwave, I don’t want it. Every once in a while I will take the time to stir and mix my ingredients, throw it [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-617" title="patty" src="http://overcomingsexualabuse.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/patty.jpg" alt="" width="200" height="283" />by Patty Hite</p>
<p>It’s time to face the facts. We live in a microwave world. We want it done and we want it done now. If I can’t put it in the microwave, I don’t want it. Every once in a while I will take the time to stir and mix my ingredients, throw it in the oven and wait a few hours for it to cook. But everyday, something is put in the microwave, a button is pushed, a few seconds later, we are ready to eat.</p>
<p>I find myself expecting this quick fix in every thing I do—my dishwasher, my coffee pot, my convection oven. I have alarms on my phone to remind me to take my pills, a button in my fridge to speed up the ice maker, and finger nail polish that dries in seconds.</p>
<p>This day and age is amazing. Everything is at our fingertips and ready to use straight out of the box. The one thing that isn’t attached to our “microwave way of thinking” is healing from sexual abuse. Although it would be nice to push a button and be done with it, it’s not going to happen that way. I tried. It doesn’t work. Healing takes one step at time and sometimes it seems like it takes forever to get to that one step.</p>
<p>I’ve tried to shorten the path to healing because I am always trying to get from point A to point B, the quickest way I can. I’ve tried everything I can to find a way, any way, but it just doesn’t work. There came a time when I had to quit trying to find the quickest way and just settle down for the long haul. I hated being bothered with it and I got so angry at times that I could have chewed nails. It’s bad enough I was abused and now, I had to relive it in order to heal. It’s not fair, I didn’t deserve it and I hate it, hate it, hate it.</p>
<p>Once I got over the hissy fits, I settled down again to dig in, ready to tackle the next flashback and trigger, never knowing when I would be going about my everyday business and then out of the blue, my body would shake and my heart would pound faster. Suddenly, I was standing in an imaginary fog and in another place because the memories were too consuming for me to absorb at that time and place.</p>
<p>I started carrying paper and pen with me at all times, to write down the things I was feeling or the memories that flashed, because I knew I would forget them by the time I got home. I would dissociate from the memories of the memories. And when I read my notes and I remembered the flashbacks, I pondered on it for days because I didn’t want to face it again. Those days were spent in torment because of the fear of revisiting my past. I couldn’t sleep, eat or carry on a conversation with anyone. My body shook, my mind ran a mile a minute and I could feel myself slipping away, trying to find a safe place to hide.</p>
<p>After many years of this, I finally said, “to hell with it” and realized that the best thing I could do was face it and dig in till it’s over. Instead of living in the fear of triggers, flashbacks and nightmares, I welcomed them. I had to admit to myself that fearing the unknown was worse than the abuse I lived through. I used to live in fear everyday from the abuse, and now I was living in fear of remembering the abuse. Enough is enough!</p>
<p>Although they’re painful, they are really only memories. I had already lived through the abuse. Everything I revisited has already been seen, heard and touched. I lived through the fear, the physical scars and the emotional ones. They can’t hurt me anymore. No one is going to physically invade my memories or my dreams. They are gone; they are not in my home. I am not that little girl nor am I that ‘valueless’ woman. There is no need to fear my healing. I can welcome it.</p>
<p>Instead of fighting it and being afraid of triggers, I had to get to the root of those things that crossed my life path and start to walk down the right path. I used to be so sensitive about things I read—things that would cause triggers. I desensitized my world to make it comfortable and trigger-free. I hid from my past and wanted to postpone my healing. I wanted my healing to be pain-free and thought if I waited long enough, it wouldn’t hurt as bad. But, it doesn’t go away and healing does hurt.</p>
<p>But healing hurt is different than the actual abuse—this hurt has better results. This pain frees me and I come away from it stronger. Instead of feeling weaker and more useless, I feel empowered. I love myself a little more each time and fear is further behind me. I welcome triggers now. I actually get excited because I know the end results. I celebrate and sometimes I do the happy dance. I can’t wait to tell my husband and share with others. Instead of dreading it, I’m excited about it. I can watch movies, read books, and hear stories about abuse with compassion instead of fear.</p>
<p>I used to hide how long I have been in the process of healing because I didn’t want to discourage others. I wanted to bring hope and encourage Survivors to heal, not make them feel like they will be spending the rest of their lives learning who they really are and learning to loving themselves. But I think it is vital to our healing that we understand there is no quick fix. I look at it as an attitude education class at the “Abuse Healing School.” The more I study, the better grades I get and the quicker I graduate.</p>
<p>I may not be able to push a button and heal instantly, but instead of looking for my faults, I am looking at how far I have come. I can think clearly, make decisions and turn off my lights when I go to bed. I’m not afraid to go out in public and my dissociation is far and few between. I love who I am now, and actually enjoy cooking the old fashion way. If my microwave did break&#8230;I would be okay.</p>
<p><strong>Related Posts:</strong><br />
<a href="http://overcomingsexualabuse.com/2010/04/19/preparing-to-heal-from-sexual-abuse/">Preparing To Heal From Sexual Abuse</a></p>
<p><strong><em>Patty Hite is one of five facilitators of Overcoming Sexual Abuse. A survivor of emotional, physical and sexual abuse, Patty has been tenaciously pursuing her healing for over thirty years. She’s a passionate advocate for all survivors and dedicates her life to inspiring emotional wholeness in others. As a former victim of spousal abuse, she’s delighted to find true love with her husband of ­­­­five years. She&#8217;s blessed with four children and six grandchildren.</em></strong></p>
<p><a href="http://overcomingsexualabuse.com/2009/10/11/my-story-by-patty-hite/" target="_blank">[read Patty's story here]</a></p>
<h2>  </h2>
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		<title>If I Didn&#8217;t Write, I Would Have Died a Long Time Ago</title>
		<link>http://overcomingsexualabuse.com/2010/10/06/if-i-didnt-write-i-would-have-died-a-long-time-ago/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=if-i-didnt-write-i-would-have-died-a-long-time-ago</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 07 Oct 2010 03:14:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Guest Contributions</dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[Libbe HaLevy]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://overcomingsexualabuse.com/?p=642</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[by Libbe HaLevy My abuse began when I was very young, pre-verbal. I repressed my earliest abuse in total amnesia, not even suspecting anything had happened. But from about age three, I became obsessed with words, language, meaning. Even before I knew how to put letters and words on paper, my imagination took situations around [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="size-medium wp-image-675 alignleft" title="Libbe HaLevy" src="http://overcomingsexualabuse.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/Libbe-HaLevy-199x300.jpg" alt="" width="199" height="300" /></p>
<p>by Libbe HaLevy</p>
<p>My abuse began when I was very young, pre-verbal. I repressed my earliest abuse in total amnesia, not even suspecting anything had happened. But from about age three, I became obsessed with words, language, meaning. Even before I knew how to put letters and words on paper, my imagination took situations around me and spun them into safe stories. My mind took me away from the home I was stuck in to “somewhere else,” and I lived more fully in this dissociative, imaginary world than in the physical world around me.</p>
<p>By four, I had a large vocabulary and made up elaborate stories about my dolls, stuffed animals and toys. I couldn’t wait to learn how to read and write, something my parents considered inappropriate before I turned six and entered first grade. Once I learned the rudiments of reading, I devoured books far beyond my grade level and began writing little stories for class.</p>
<p>When I was in about fifth grade, I secretly started writing for myself. I’d commit poetry, short stories, observations and thoughts to notebooks, then hide them behind the backs of radiators, under rugs, stuffed into drawers of desks that no one used. I sensed that it wasn’t safe to let my family know about the private comfort I found in what I was writing.</p>
<p>I’d been imagining myself for years as a character in westerns, usually a hermit or the adopted daughter of an Indian chief. This character always feared society, avoided it, and never seemed to have a birth family. The men in my stories were kind, sexless father- or brother-figures who saw and respected my secret pains. I never reached a happy ending, just moved from one set of western characters to another when I tired of a plot line.</p>
<p>At twelve, I took my favorite story parts and wrote a script for “Bonanza,” then a popular TV western featuring a father and his three sons. I actually showed this around to classmates and family members, proud of my work. But I didn’t understand why it upset my mother, or why she refused to help me get it to people who might buy it for TV. Ultimately, when the cast of the show changed, I didn’t know how to change my script to match their new needs, and so put it away.</p>
<p>As an adult, I worked professionally in the broadcast and film industries, as a freelance writer, and playwright. I was known for quirky works unafraid to look at the dark side of sexuality and human relations. An award-winning play and my first musical both featured female characters who had been sexually abused or were on the verge of it. Still in amnesia about the abuse, I simply considered it a strong plot device but felt no personal connection with the subject matter. I continued to write poetry for myself, some of it filled with powerful, dark imagery I didn’t understand, but which felt right.</p>
<p>I entered Recovery at thirty-four by attending 12-Step meetings that addressed sexual abuse. Suddenly, my writing became a lifeline. As I found myself triggered by the information shared at meetings, I raced home to write in the journal I’d started in my early twenties. I used this obsessive, daily writing to draw out the emotional toxins being released by my new memories and the healing process. I asked myself tough questions, puzzled through long free-associative answers, recorded life-changing breakthroughs in words, words, words. By virtue of my ability to touch type over a hundred words per minute, I could sit at my typewriter in the middle of a full-blown breakdown/breakthrough and narrate my pain with my fingers even as I sobbed and screamed. Words became the poultice that drew out and transformed my inchoate pain into solid statements of the truth I’d locked away as unacceptable to my psyche.</p>
<p>I did all the recommended Recovery writing exercises: letters to my younger self, future self, perpetrators, other family members – some of which I actually mailed; descriptions of my childhood homes; daily journal entries; gratitude lists; sub-dominant hand writing. I hammered out my Recovery like a blacksmith at an anvil, forging words with heat and sparks and rage and tears, tempering what I needed to say until it rang like a finely crafted sword. Words became my power, my strength, my allies, my friends. I saw the alphabet as sub-atomic particles capable of being organized into explosive devices that changed my world and had the potential to help others do the same.</p>
<p>And then I let those words out into the world. A play I wrote about incest and Recovery, SHATTERED SECRETS, ended up running 2-1/2 years in Santa Monica, California, and being published and produced internationally. Everywhere it appeared, survivors found and used it to empower their own healing. My articles on incest recovery were published in national magazines, survivor newsletters, duplicated for use in hundreds of Recovery meetings. I used my words to address the international media at a press conference that landed me on “60 Minutes” and debated the falseness of “false memory syndrome” on Los Angeles TV. Language, words, writing and delivery of that writing fired an activist response beyond my ability to predict.</p>
<p>With time, I was able to appreciate the true nature of my earlier writings and how they’d helped me survive the abuse I did not then remember:<br />
• The “Bonanza” script featured a young girl who thought she’d murdered the old man she lived with after he came home drunk one night and started to attack her (no wonder my mother did her best to sink it!);<br />
• A collection of my darkest poetry, which I’d labeled “You Should Be Afraid of This Book,” revealed itself as coded descriptions of abuse I was not, at the time of writing, strong enough to consciously remember;<br />
• The incest themes of both a play and a musical revealed themselves as true representations of my relationship with my brother.<br />
Through writing, I’d been relieving the pressure of repressed incest memories on my psyche before I even knew that pressure was there. Again, I state this and mean it: if I did not write, I would have died long before I found the ability to heal from my abuse.</p>
<p>I believe that for survivors of childhood sexual abuse, writing is not optional. Without words, we are trapped in the powerlessness of early childhood with no way out. It&#8217;s no accident that the true &#8220;incest taboo&#8221; is for the victims to talk &#8212; and write &#8212; about it. I consider writing a necessary healing tool, one that is free, readily available, and ultimately empowering not just in the moment but as a record of one&#8217;s personal journey. It need not have literary merit or even be in proper English; indeed, much of my most healing early work consisted of incoherent rage rants that deteriorated into scribbles and stab marks. The important thing is to use words, writing, scribbling, to get it out of you. Release the toxins through whatever language you can find. When words fail, scrawl, scribble, cry, scream (into a pillow, please!), and do what you need to in order to keep on getting what is in you out onto paper.</p>
<p>Then, when you are out of the heat of creation, find at least one safe person with whom to share what you have written. Read it to your therapist, a Recovery buddy, or find a safe writing workshop focused on survivors and our issues to read your truth in a community of others who will understand. I led workshops like that for years and watched the growing health, healing, strength and understanding of the brave women and men who dared to write and speak their truth.</p>
<p>The more truth put into words and released into the world, the greater the peace and power of each survivor. As each of us heals, we become part of a movement to break the cycle of abuse and pass healing on to others who still suffer. The true history of sexual abuse survivors and the impact on our world is just now starting to be written. We need all your stories to understand the truth of our own. I encourage you to have the courage to put your truth on paper/screen.</p>
<p>Whatever you decide to do, remember always: You are not alone, it was not your fault… and yes, it is possible to heal.</p>
<p><strong>Related Posts:</strong><br />
<a href="http://overcomingsexualabuse.com/2010/10/12/writing-is-my-friend/">Writing Is My Friend</a><br />
<a href="http://overcomingsexualabuse.com/2010/10/14/writing-my-power-tool-for-rebuilding-after-abuse/">Writing: My Power Tool for Rebuilding After Abuse</a><br />
<a href="http://overcomingsexualabuse.com/2010/10/14/paper-is-my-safest-friend/">Paper is My Safest Friend</a></p>
<p><strong><em>Libbe S. HaLevy, M.A., CAC is a Life Action Coach and an incest survivor with 25+ years of healing. She provides coaching for sexual abuse survivors, leads online writing workshops, and by late 2010 is launching the information/community-building site, </em></strong><a href="http://www.IncestSurvivorHealing.wordpress.com  "><strong><em>Incest Survivor Healing</em></strong></a><strong><em>.  She worked on the Childhelp National Child Abuse Hotline, spoke about incest on “60 Minutes,” and her award-winning play </em></strong><a href="http://www.WriteYourBrainsOut.com/ShatteredSecrets"><strong><em>SHATTERED SECRETS</em></strong></a><strong><em>, about survivors in Recovery, ran 2-1/2 years in Los Angeles and was produced internationally. </em></strong></p>
<h2>  </h2>
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		<title>Getting Real: Can Our Survival Roles Help Us Find Our True Selves?</title>
		<link>http://overcomingsexualabuse.com/2010/07/29/test-diablogs/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=test-diablogs</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 30 Jul 2010 00:17:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>osa</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://overcomingsexualabuse.com/?p=328</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[By Christina Enevoldsen, Bethany Ruck &#38; Penny Smith I live close to Beverly Hills, the plastic surgery Mecca, where the question is, “Are they real?” I&#8217;m also a few blocks from where the Academy Awards and many film premieres are held, where celebrities smile for the cameras and wave confidently to the fans, yet we [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By Christina Enevoldsen, Bethany Ruck &amp; Penny Smith</p>
<p>I live close to Beverly Hills, the plastic surgery Mecca, where the question is, “Are they real?” I&#8217;m also a few blocks from where the Academy Awards and many film premieres are held, where celebrities smile for the cameras and wave confidently to the fans, yet we know many of them are shy, quiet and prefer solitude. It’s not always easy to determine what’s real and what’s not. Bethany Ruck, Penny Smith and I sat down to try to sort out the real from the not-so-real in our own lives.</p>
<p><span style="color: #333333;"><strong>Christina:</strong></span><span style="color: #333333;"> For as long as I can remember, I’ve faced the challenges in my life as someone else. I’ve worn an internal costume of someone stronger and more capable. One I used often was a pioneer woman, able to brave the many hardships of the American frontier. Channeling a pioneer spirit made me feel stronger and braver.</span></p>
<p><span style="color: #333333;"><strong>Penny:</strong></span><span style="color: #333333;"> I&#8217;ve done the same thing since I was a little girl. I’d pretend I was a pioneer or an immigrant, especially an Irish immigrant because I have so much Irish in me and I was always reading about the hardships they went through. Or I was a slave girl, somehow enduring things that were too difficult or scary for me. Someone brave and strong.</span></p>
<p><span style="color: #333333;"><strong>Bethany:</strong></span><span style="color: #333333;"> Mine was a tough girl, someone you wouldn’t want to meet in a dark alley— one that you wouldn’t mess with because you know she’s going to fight back. Even if I wasn’t wearing my leather jacket, boots and heavy eyeliner, I’d be a tough girl with my attitude, the way I’d strut down the street or hold myself or the way I’d talk. Even in social situations, when I didn’t feel comfortable I’d be reserved and act snotty in a way that kept people away from me and made me feel protected. </span></p>
<p><span style="color: #333333;"><strong>Penny:</strong></span><span style="color: #333333;"> I can relate to the tough girl mask, too. I am quiet and mild-mannered most of the time but I acted tough even when I was crying inside. I used to use a mask when I had to walk through the ghetto of Oakland everyday to my bus stop. I was totally freaked out inside but outside I was all tough girl. </span></p>
<p><span style="color: #333333;"><strong>Christina:</strong></span><span style="color: #333333;"> Another role I played was a captive in a prison camp. I’d play that role even though I wasn’t even in a dangerous situation. One of the main times was when I was facing deadlines in my business. It was exhausting work but I knew if I pretended to be in a life threatening situation with cruel guards pointing guns at me, ready to shoot anyone who showed signs of weakness, I could go on.</span></p>
<p><span style="color: #333333;"><strong>Penny:</strong></span><span style="color: #333333;"> Yes, anytime something came up that I didn&#8217;t think I could do—like giving a report in front of the class—I would imagine myself as someone else who was comfortable with public speaking and could do it well. </span></p>
<p><span style="color: #333333;"><strong>Bethany:</strong></span><span style="color: #333333;"> I always felt a fake though. When people would say, “Oh, my God, you’re so strong,” I didn’t understand how anyone could say that when I felt like everything I was doing to be strong was a facade. That was very confusing.</span></p>
<p><span style="color: #333333;"><strong>Penny:</strong></span><span style="color: #333333;"> I felt like I was falling apart on the inside even though I had the appearance of strength.</span></p>
<p><span style="color: #333333;"><strong>Bethany:</strong></span><span style="color: #333333;"> Wearing the tough girl for so long made me think I was really her. I put myself in some bad situations because I thought I would be safe. I was unrealistic about my own safety because I had a false sense of security. I was actually more vulnerable because I made unwise decisions. </span></p>
<p><span style="color: #333333;"><strong>Penny:</strong></span><span style="color: #333333;"> It got me into some scary situations, too. After doing it a few times, I thought I really could handle those things. One time, I got off work late and instead of waiting for a ride, I took the bus and had to walk through this bad part of town where all the drug dealers were out. When I got home they told me I was crazy. </span></p>
<p><span style="color: #333333;"><strong>Bethany:</strong></span><span style="color: #333333;"> What I faced was very similar. I saw how much the facade did not protect me. It hurt me because people thought I was a bitch. I was so closed off and unapproachable. That’s the only way I knew to protect myself. It’s like what I did to try to protect myself from the sexual abuse.</span></p>
<p><span style="color: #333333;"><strong>Christina:</strong></span><span style="color: #333333;"> I relate it to my abuse, too. The abuse told me I was powerless and the effects showed me how weak I was. The shame trained me to put myself down so it was hard to recognize the good, strong qualities I have. I had to see them outside of me.</span></p>
<p><span style="color: #333333;"><strong>Bethany:</strong></span><span style="color: #333333;"> One day I realized how much of a facade I presented to the world and I cried because hardly anyone knew the real me. I was hiding myself. Now, I’m finding my own confidence and strength to stand up for myself. As I’ve internalized that part of me and sorted through the parts of tough girl that I want, such as her ability to fight back. I can still access those things, yet filter them my through wisdom and discernment.</span></p>
<p><span style="color: #333333;"><strong>Christina:</strong></span><span style="color: #333333;"> I’m finding my confidence and strength, too. I realized that the roles I’ve &#8220;put on&#8221; aren&#8217;t really external; they are internal and something I &#8220;pull out&#8221;. I drew from a strength I didn&#8217;t know I had. I admired it elsewhere, yet I only connected with it because it was something I already owned. Maybe it was undeveloped or unrecognized, but it was mine. I wore it like a lie, but it’s really the truth—it felt fake, but it showed me a part of who I really am. </span></p>
<p><span style="color: #333333;"><strong>Penny:</strong></span><span style="color: #333333;"> It&#8217;s so true what you say that all these things are part of us&#8230;they&#8217;re facets of ourselves. We have these inner strengths and this is the way that we&#8217;ve drawn on them when we&#8217;ve had to. If it wasn&#8217;t ours to begin with, we wouldn&#8217;t be able to use it. No matter how developed of an imagination we may have, we can&#8217;t actually turn ourselves into something that we&#8217;re not. Maybe someplace deep inside of me I am a good public speaker. Lol.</span></p>
<p><span style="color: #333333;">I remember one winter in South Dakota as a teenager coming upon a terrible car wreck. My friends and I were the first ones on the scene and none of us knew what to do. I was so scared but something inside me took over. I sent someone for help. Then, I headed for the overturned car on its top in the snowy ditch. On my way, I found a man lying tangled in the barbwire fence that the car had gone through. He had been thrown out and I could tell was hurt quite badly. I stopped, spoke to him, called for the others to bring a blanket for him and continued to t</span><span style="color: #333333;">he car. The car was on its roof and there was a man trapped behind the steering wheel. He was struggling and I told him not to move. After leaving a couple of friends there with orders to keep him talking, still and to not let him fall asleep, I went back to the man in the fence. I managed to get him untangled, to tie jackets and whatever I could get to stop the bleeding, piled anything I could on him to keep him warm and kept him awake until help finally came. The ambulance personnel actually asked if I had been trained in emergency response. </span></p>
<p><span style="color: #333333;">I was the quietest, shyest one of the bunch, but when faced with trauma, I was the only one able to respond. I have often thought about that and wondered why. It was truly like I became someone else&#8230;.someone competent and able&#8230;two things I never saw myself as. So, yes, it makes sense that we do have these unplumbed, undeveloped strengths inside of us that we&#8217;ve been able to call upon when needed.</span></p>
<p><span style="color: #333333;"><strong>Christina:</strong></span><span style="color: #333333;"> The more I looked back on the things I accomplished while I was playing a role, the more I saw evidence in my own life that I actually did have those qualities. It wasn’t a pioneer woman who accomplished those things in my life. It was me. I saw what I was capable of. They were very real qualities I had, yet hadn’t recognized, acknowledged, or developed. Once I did start to see that, it started to feel natural and real, like me. It didn’t feel fake anymore. I didn’t have to put on those roles, they weren’t separate from me anymore; they were parts of me. </span></p>
<p><span style="color: #333333;"><strong>Penny:</strong></span><span style="color: #333333;"> As I&#8217;m getting to know myself, I&#8217;m realizing that I need my coping mechanisms less and less. I see myself more as someone who can deal with things head-on rather than someone that has to hide behind a mask to survive. As I become more self-aware some of these things sort of take care of themselves. Maybe it&#8217;s because I am seeing more of my inner strength as belonging to me and not something that I have to &#8220;pretend&#8221; or &#8220;put on.&#8221; </span>The roles are indications of who we really are, so that helps us to get to know ourselves better.</p>
<p><span style="color: #333333;"><strong>Christina:</strong></span><span style="color: #333333;"> </span>Once we see ourselves for who we really are, we don’t have to live in fantasy. The reality is that we do have power to do something about the things that we’re intimidated by. We can improve our public speaking skills, we can take self defense courses, we can say no to dangerous situations, we can improve our social skills. We aren’t vulnerable and helpless anymore. Acknowledging the power we have gives us other options so we don’t have to rely on facades.</p>
<p><strong>Related Posts:</strong><br />
<a href="http://overcomingsexualabuse.com/2010/09/30/how-can-i-%e2%80%98be-myself%e2%80%99-if-i-don%e2%80%99t-know-who-that-is/">How Can I &#8220;Be Myself&#8221; If I Don&#8217;t Know Who That Is?</a></p>
<p><a href="http://emergingfrombroken.com/the-real-problem-with-being-fake-by-christina-enevoldsen/">The Real Problem With Being Fake</a></p>
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