Posted by JennyR on July 1, 2001, at 11:51:08
There were some postings recently about love, and some of us who don't feel the love we think we should toward spouses and others we're supposed to love.
I don't feel what I think I should toward my husband and parents (though I'm very maternal with my kids).
Then I was thinking about what I've read about depression, how it is not merely sadness, but an inability to feel. Which would explain why those of us with depression perhaps don't feel love strongly. That the flattening across the board includes problems with loving.
But then I wonder why I feel so much toward my therapist. Not beyond the boundaries, but within them, I feel a great deal toward this man who is kinder to me than anyone has ever been. So then I feel maybe it's not that I lack the capacity.
Maybe it's that I never was treated like I mattered much to these people, for whom everything always had to be on their terms, for whom my thoughts and feelings never mattered much.
Then in doing a search, I'm not even sure what I started out looking up, I started finding all these sites about "attachment disorder." Mostly it related to kids adopted from Roumanian orphanages, or kids bounced around foster care here. They have trouble attaching, loving, because the early consistent mother-baby bonding in the early years was absent or substandard.
They then appear to have a lot of what I see in myself - appear charming outwardly, but can't attach on a meaningful level. They have things I don't, like no conscience, but still there are similarities in the indifference to people you are supposed to now love.
Which sort of fits with the environmental approach to looking at depression. Early losses or inadequate early caregiving.
Now I have this therapist who gives me what the early caregiver is supposed to give a baby - mirroring their feelings, total responsiveness, total empathy, consistency. And so here, with him, I can attach and bond strongly. Then I get scared because I'm not used to feeling anything strong for anyone (other than my kids). And I know its because I don't let anyone have much power over me. Which is also like the distrust I was reading about in the attachment disorder stuff ( though 99% of it dealt with kids).
I was raised by natural parents, but in a very unloving household. So I am just thinking out loud here, but maybe depression is a mini form of attachment disorder. And yes, medication/biological/neurotransmitter aspects have a role, and genetic predisposition. Just food for thought.
poster:JennyR
thread:6971
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/social/20010628/msgs/6971.html