Category: Emotional Mastery

  • What Is Enmeshment?

    What Is Enmeshment?

    Welcome back! Today we are talking about enmeshment: what is it? It’s not something most people are aware of – perhaps you’ve never even heard the term.

    So let’s dive right into it.

    Enmeshment is a parenting style that’s mischaracterized as loving and loyal. In reality, there are elements of psychological and emotional incest in enmeshment.

    This gets perpetrated through the behaviors and communication styles of the parents, as well as actions. It’s similar to codependence, but there are some key distinctions.

    In an enmeshed dynamic, the parent uses the child for intimacy, companionship, romantic attachment, advice, ego fulfillment, and/or emotional release.

    The key is the parents are completely unaware they’re doing this. They are also completely unaware that they struggle with unmet emotional and psychological needs, broken from their own childhood trauma.

    Society and media have not educated us on what healthy parenting looks like – it’s not the parents’ fault. We aren’t blaming; they just didn’t know. If you find in this article yourself or your family, don’t beat yourself up. It’s widespread. Give yourself grace but take ownership.

    It will allow yourself to heal.

    These parents do not see the harm they are imposing. Many see themselves as wholly devoted and self-sacrificing in their child’s best interest.

    They don’t realize they’re using their child to satisfy their own needs. This happens most commonly in single-parent households and in households where the partners aren’t getting along.

    Let’s move on to some of the characteristics:

    I’ve zoomed in on 17 of the most prevalent traits with examples. First, I encourage everyone to get a copy of The Emotional Incest Syndrome by Dr. Patricia Love.

    Don’t shy away from the title – there is excellent information in that book so tackle it.

    1. Over-involved parents. Their lives center around their children even into adulthood. They feel lost and lonely if their children are gone.
    2. They will lament when the child grows up – they are losing the romantic connection they developed.
    3. Parents who have few friends and/or little support.
    4. Parents who know too much about their child’s personal relationships, activities, and problems.
    5. They demand to be included. A prime example is a mother I know who spent the first week with her daughter at her college! That’s severe enmeshment.
    6. Parents who share too much personal information create feelings of unhealthy dependence. This happens most commonly when they lament to the child about their spouse or ex.

    Children are not developed enough to handle all of that emotion

    1. It’s very abusive. When I was little, my mom once told me she “took me for granted.”
    2. That’s the first memory I have of my mom enmeshing with me, where I felt a massive responsibility towards her.
    3. Parents whose self-worth depends on the child’s success and accomplishments.
    4. This is the classic screaming parent at the little league game. Sometimes they are trying to realize their unmade dreams through the child.
    5. This ties significantly with the recent college admissions scandal – horrific abuse. My father used to say to me.
    6. “you’re the easiest of all the kids.” The book mentioned above details a comment that it is an “unconscious device” meant to relieve the parent from the “burden of parenting.” Underneath is an ultimatum.
    7. The parent isn’t able to handle the needs of the child. Dr. Love also details these phrases to bolster the parent’s ego – it makes them feel like they are a good parent and thus a good person.

    Parents who don’t encourage them to follow their own dreams and impose their goals onto the child.

    1. They pick the activities, schools, careers, friends, all of it. They subtly or directly criticize a child’s independence. “Why do you want to live there? It’s so far from us.” Or “Fine, go out. I’ll be fine by myself.”
    2. There’s a subtle bind to keep the child there. Children owe us nothing .
    3. we chose to have children. Enmeshed parents think their children owe them something – they don’t. Our job is to create an emotional environment to let them become what they want, not what we want.
    4. Parents who expect their children to still follow their rules, even into adulthood, accept their morals and values.

    How many secrets do you have from your parents because you know they won’t approve?

    1. You’re sacrificing your own belief system to make your parents happy.
    2. Parents that shun the child if they don’t be and do what they want.
    3. Incessantly worried parents. They’re always worried their child will get hurt, not letting them do anything.
    4. Frequently, the parent is scared, and yet the child is excited! Nothing terrible will happen in most instances
    5. Allowing the child to get a scraped knee and learn from the experience is far better than acting out of parental fear.
    6. Parents spoil their children or take care of them financially. I have a client with a horrific case of abuse
    7. This woman came to me in her late 20s has not had a real job. She would rack up huge bar bills, and her mom would pay for all of it, no questions asked.

    Mom was an alcoholic and needed someone to drink with .

    1. Bad habits were OK. If my client tried any self-care like a yoga class, the mom would threaten to cut her off. She used finances to keep her daughter close to her.
    2. Thankfully this woman has made incredible progress, and remember you always can too.
    3. Parents react with anger if their adult child tries to set limits or boundaries of any kind. Parents who respond angrily to this article would be a prime example.
    4. An opposite-sex parent criticizes their child’s partner or competes with the partner for love.
    5. They’ll do anything to prevent you from feeling closeness with your partner. They’ve made you a surrogate spouse .
    6. my mother did this to me, wanting me to be her emotional support system. My mother also sexualized our relationship . she’d comment on how I look, say I was “gorgeous,” and it was said with lust. This is covert sexual abuse. She never touched me physically, but my mom’s comments and looks were indirectly sexual, which is still abusive.

    People who feel each other’s emotions.

    1. This is the classic “empath.” That’s just a new buzzword – it really means the person has no boundaries, is severely codependent, and enmeshes quickly.
    2. They can be happy, but if someone negative or in pain comes around, they immediately drop. This could be a child to parent or vice versa.
    3. Usually, it’s the child becoming the parent’s emotion. This creates the “empath.” That used to be me! It took massive work to stop doing it .
    4. it’s not healthy. Genuine empathy is excellent, but it doesn’t mean we get sucked in. We shouldn’t lose ourselves. We must heal from our abuse to grow from this.
    5. Genuine empathy has boundaries – We don’t become, absorb or take on the sadness and pain of others.
    6. Parents that expect the adult child to call them daily or frequently visit.
    7. They’ll expect the child to drop their plans and revolve around the parent. If the child doesn’t, the martyr will come out of the parent.
    8. Parents that make the child the scapegoat or conversely make the child the “golden” child. Sometimes it’s both .

    you may be in limbo and never know which it truly is.

    1. Neglectful parents. This happens in single-parent households when parents need to work and aren’t there. Or the parents have an addiction, and the children are left alone. It forces the child to become an adult far earlier than expected.
    2. Parents that sexualize their children, like the example I gave earlier. Unfortunately, I see this happen a lot – “Daddy’s little girl” and “Mommy’s little boy” is an unhealthy romantic dynamic.

    I could go through hundreds of more traits – there are so many more. I implore you, if you feel you have gone through these or are doing these things, please read the book mentioned above by Dr. Love.

    You will learn much about yourself and perhaps why you are struggling in relationships. Every parent does a level of this to their child . we all can know. Part of the recovery process is to gain knowledge to develop skills that become tools.

    I believe if you are reading this, you want to love your child as best you can. Unfortunately, we haven’t been taught the most loving ways, but we can learn now.

    If you believe you experienced this type of parenting and want to gain the knowledge, skills, and tools to heal your codependence, I have created masterclasses that will empower you to do so.

    Enjoy The Journey!

    Kenny Weiss

    Learn more here:

     

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  • How To Feel Worthy

    How To Feel Worthy

    Today I’m going to look into where the feeling of unworthiness comes from. what it teaches us about ourselves, and how we turn it around into worthiness.

    I will be laying out this process in full disclosure:

    “stolen” from Dr. Gabor Mate. He and I are kindred spirits. He does a great job of laying things out beautifully, and I encourage you to look him up.

    While I’ve talked about all these concepts before, I will use his model because it’s effective and ultimately matters if you get great information.

    Before we start,

    I will give you a quote as a frame of reference – it will help you absorb the depth of what I’m going to discuss and make it more palatable. From A. H. Almaas,

    “Your conflicts, all the difficult things, the problematic situations in your life are not chance or haphazard.

    They are yours. They are specifically yours, designed specifically for you by a part of you that loves you more than anything else.

    The part of you that loves you more than anything else has created roadblocks to lead you to yourself. You are not going in the right direction unless something is pricking you in the side, telling you.

    ‘Look here! This way!’ That part of you loves you so much that it doesn’t want you to lose the chance.

    It will go to extreme measures to wake you up; it will make you suffer greatly if you don’t listen. What else can it do? That is its purpose.”

    This ties in with my entire belief system. Any “bad” situation is a gift.

    We are going to start with five questions that help you discover where this unworthiness comes from:

    1. What’s a recent time where you were upset with someone? Focus on it.
    2. What were your feelings at the time?
      What did they do?
      Apparently, this individual was unwilling to do anything.
    3. Are there other alternative reasons why they wouldn’t do it?
    4. What does this teach us about ourselves?

    To illustrate, I will give a story from my own life, from my second marriage.

    We were going through a difficult time – my ex-wife developed an emotional affair with a coworker. I requested we talk about it with our counselor.

    As I laid out my thoughts and feelings and told her it needed it to stop, she said it was my issue. She said I was codependent and had to get over it.

    She said she’d do the counseling for six months, and if I still struggle, it’s on me. What was my emotional reaction? Rejection, hurt, anger, frustration, neglected, unheard, unseen.

    What does it mean that she wouldn’t do these things for me? I felt unlovable and unworthy.

    I thought if this person cared, they would change! For me. Are there any other reasons? Besides me being unworthy? Of course.

    She had her own needs and wants. She had spent her childhood in poverty.

    so maybe it was an opportunity for her to get everything she wanted. Perhaps she was seeing her morals and values change. I could go on and on with these alternatives. And none of them have anything to do with me. The reasons almost always have nothing to do with you. We can pick the situation to learn about ourselves.

    Here are seven questions to help you navigate what it may be teaching you about yourself:

    1. Do you see we are reacting out of our perception of what reality is, not what reality truly is? My perception was I was neglected, but that wasn’t reality. My ex-wife was right; I was codependent.
    2. Do you see that we always choose the worst possible outcome in all these situations – one that says we are unworthy? This is because we choose a false reality.
    3. Do you see this process is automatic for all of us? We don’t think about it. It just happens! We immediately choose to be unworthy and neglected.
    4. That is trauma, a traumatic response from childhood. It shows how detached from reality we are. We keep reliving the trauma we never healed.
    5. Do you see this means we still do not believe we are worthy? Or worthy of being cared for? Again, it goes back to our childhood.

    Do you see it shows a lack of compassion for ourselves?

    1. Again, we are choosing the wrong reality that tells us we aren’t worthy. We always make it about ourselves and lack compassion.
    2. Do you see it shows we still have access to our true nature and authentic self, no matter how unworthy we feel? We can recognize as we go through this that our authentic self knows that we are the ones doing this to ourselves. Meaning we can heal it and get unstuck. We create the problem for ourselves and are stuck in the perception created for ourselves in childhood.
    3. Do you see it shows us that the problems in our life are there to heal us?

    Read through the quote again and think through the situation with my ex-wife.

    Do you see the reason I picked my ex-wife? It was to break me. The divorce and the withdrawal almost killed me. It was pricking me in the side, like in the quote.

    But, what was ultimately killing me in my life? The myriad of traumatic things in my childhood. And the one thing I wasn’t willing to let go of “control.”

    Finally, I realized the only way to survive was to let go of control and not know what would happen. That single choice was the final piece for me.

    Do I still shame myself? Of course! We all do. The journey never ends, and you don’t want it to end! These moments are a prick in my side to remind me to have compassion and love myself.

    That’s why we pick these people. That’s why these things happen in our lives. They bring us back to our worth.

    The three steps to regain worth are:

    1. We have to stop seeing these things as problems and instead as learning opportunities.
    2. Recognize whenever we feel unworthy that it’s just trauma from childhood. We all experience it.
    3. Choose to learn how to heal from childhood pain and change those subconscious messages replaying in these situations that make us the problem.

    We can all access our authentic selves. We don’t have to carry that pain anymore and making these choices guarantees access.

    Are you on the Journey to reclaiming your authentic self? I have developed masterclasses to help you achieve just that. TAKE A LOOK!

    Greatness U
    Guiding You To Be The Greatest Version of Yourself!

     

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    If you prefer audible, this is FOR YOU!!

    The Complete Emotional Authenticity AUDIBLE Journey!

     

  • “CLINK”…Another Quarter In The Bucket!

    “CLINK”…Another Quarter In The Bucket!

    Sometimes the fact that I specialize in helping people overcome fear can be a curse. The old “ignorance is bliss” doesn’t apply. Having awareness means you tend to run headfirst into your own perfect imperfections.

    It was recently a typical morning with the usual people trying to merge or change lanes going slower than the pace of traffic. The quintessential “defensive driver,” who, because of their fear, is more often than naught the cause of the accident. Dammit, where is ignorance when you need it?

    Let me explain.

    See while I might be right about defensive drivers, I also know about judgment. Whenever we judge someone, it is because, in some area of our life.

    we feel inadequate and imperfect. It is a piece of ourselves we don’t want to acknowledge or heal. For example, on this day, I was trying to get to an appointment on time.

    For me, being late is a sign of disrespect, so it really triggers fear in me.

    But, instead of facing that fear, I became enraged that my view on how others should drive (you should accelerate past the trouble, not slow down, it can’t hurt you if it is behind you) isn’t the same as those I am writing about.

    The potent mix of powerlessness and inadequacy coalesced into a rage that exploded as I heard myself hurling obscenities as another “defensive driver” nearly hit me.

    Here is the positive side of what I do. When I start acting in extremes, especially anger, I know the issue is within me and NOT the other person.

    Anger is always a smokescreen for fear. It is basically the fight portion of “fight, flight or freeze.” Fear is where the truth lies, and it is what we hide and defend the most.

    Whenever fear is awakened, we are either feeling the fear of rejection or inadequacy; in other words, we don’t believe we have the knowledge, skills, or tools to achieve something or the fear of powerlessness.

    In this case, since I can’t get them to do what I want, I might be late. I feel powerless and inadequate to change it!

    Instantly I started asking myself new questions. Why is this bugging me? Why am I letting these strangers have so much control over how I feel?

    What am I getting out of that? Why is such a small thing affecting me so intensely? That was the question that stuck.

    Immediately I saw a picture of a bucket hanging by a rope. With each small instance of anger (fear), I was basically throwing a quarter in that bucket instead of dealing with it.

    It’s a bucket we all carry, one in which we throw tiny deposits of fear in, until one day, like Niagara Falls, it cascades down upon us.

    The confrontation we avoid, CLINK!

    The phone call we don’t want to make, CLINK!

    The chocolate we sneak that sabotages our diet, CLINK!

    The drinks we have at night, CLINK!

    The tv show we watch instead of talking with our kids. CLINK!

    The feeling we try not to feel, CLINK!

    The “I can break my morals and values this one-time” CLINK!

    Like forgetting something on a grocery list. Big deal, we say, “I’ll get it next time.”

    CLINK, another quarter in the bucket!

    The next thing you know, we’re screaming and yelling at the traffic, our spouse, our kids…..We know we shouldn’t be shouting, we know that we shouldn’t be so upset, but we can’t help ourselves.

    WE HAVE TO SCREAM; WE HAVE TO YELL; WE HAVE TO GET IT OUT. WHY CAN” T I STOP MYSELF,”

    we think. The more we yell, the angrier we get at ourselves! None of this makes sense.

    “WHY AM I SO UPSET, THIS IS INSANE!” This is too big of a price to pay for such a small thing.

    WHAT THE HELL JUST HAPPENED?

    The accumulation of all of those “Clinks” has snapped the rope. The bucket now hurtling down upon me. I am in a shower with 40 different heads in the walls, floor, and ceiling.

    Everywhere I turn, I come face to face with all of that fear. Like trying to take a sip from a firehose, I am blown wide open. Each droplet became a symbol of my anger and frustration for ignoring the fear I didn’t want to face. I may be screaming at them, but in reality, I am yelling at myself.

    When the torrent ceases, I slump gutted and exhausted—my insides floating down the drain.

    Who knows now when it started? When did I first say,

    “I’ll get it next time!” CLINK!

  • Why People Bounce Their Leg

    Why People Bounce Their Leg

    The short answer that the experts won’t tell you: It is a response to unhealed trauma.

    If you claim you have a lot of energy and get it out by bouncing your leg, you aren’t entirely wrong. But this “energy” is likely a form of PTSD. That bouncing is stored trauma we haven’t released. It shows up in our bodies and has been proven scientifically many times over. There are great books by Bessel Van Der Kolk (The Body Keeps the Score) and Peter Levine, who wrote (In an Unspoken Voice) who are both experts in PTSD, that looked into this phenomenon.

    Specifically, a part of the brain is meant to act like a gate that closes and opens as we process information. In the case of the bouncing leg syndrome, the gate is stuck open. While, that part of the brain has been flooded by an experience or series of experiences that were too overwhelming to process. That trauma creates the gate open “stuck” position. Whether it is a bouncing leg, nervous tick, having to count things, cracking our knuckles…while, all are a sign of unhealed trauma.

     

    In the bouncing leg, the movement goes into the leg specifically because the lower body can be an extremely emotional place. While, it’s how we move and get around. With PTSD, we’re stuck and don’t want to move forward (walk). So we bounce our legs. It’s a metaphor for,  “No, I’m not going to move. I’m not going to let this go. I’m not ready to.

    People Detached

    Many people are detached from it and likely don’t even realize they are bouncing their legs. While, a suggestion would be to look introspectively as the urge arises and ask, “what am I really feeling right now?”

    You may say, “it’s just energy.” Is it energy? Or is it fear? Most will notice feeling anxious. While, emotion from the past has not been healed and this is the body’s way of alerting us that we need to address the painful moments from the past we have attempted to ignore, suppress, repress, minimize or deny.

    I also did this video to help you heal the trauma that creates the need to bounce your leg.

    Enjoy The Journey! ??

    CLICK THE IMAGE TO LEARN MORE

    Are You Ready to Break The Chains of Fear and PTSD Achieve Your Dreams?

     

    Fear is a natural human emotion. But it doesn’t have to hold you back from achieving what you want in life. Instead, you can learn how to use it as fuel for success rather than letting it keep you stuck in place.

    This class will teach you everything about fear that no one else will tell you – including how to conquer any anxiety or fear quickly and easily with the right tools.

    It also includes new perspectives on anger, rejection, and self-sabotage while, that will transform your life forever!

    You deserve the best possible version of yourself – one who lives without fear or self-sabotage holding them back from their potential!

    Let me show you how to take control of your emotions and start living an empowered life today! I’m here for you every step of the way.

     

    While, Sign up now for this empowering master class so we can help make your dreams come true!

    The sooner we start the journey together, the sooner your dreams will become reality!