Many people are familiar with the term "the dinosaur in the living room" (some call it 'the elephant,' or other similar names). What this is a reference to is something which some people learn in childhood, and tend to carry with them throughout their lives; on the opposite side of the spectrum are those of us who did not learn it, and have never "caught on."
The dinosaur in the living room is about pretense. For children whose home environments consist of abnormal situations, such as a parent who is extremely abusive, or a parent who is in a general state of drug or alcohol intoxication, as a child lacks mature coping skills the only way he or she can function in such a situation is to ignore the problem, to pretend that it is not there, that it does not exist. Before people started to overuse and misuse terms like 'in denial,' it was spelled out much more clearly.
The catch is, when youngsters who had to resort to pretense to cope in their childhood environments grow up, the lucky ones seek help, but many others are never able to leave "the dinosaur" behind. When Dr. Brown speaks of "normal responses to abnormal situations," it says a lot that there are so many people-- usually women, but not all-- who truly do not know if their responses are normal or not. They have spent so much time with the dinosaur of pretense that they doubt themselves when their gut-reactions tell them that something is very wrong.
As someone who had the opposite type of background, I personally have a bit of difficulty relating to "how people get to be that way." In my own childhood environment, nobody beat anybody, nobody used drugs or alcohol at all-- so there was no 'dinosaur' to learn 'denial' from. In other words, I never got the hang of pretense-- how to be in a bad situation but "act as if" all were well.
What are normal responses to abnormal situations? If someone intentionally wrongs you, you are "angry;" if you are in danger or threatened, you are "afraid;" whether you actually express these things or not, these feelings are the normal-- and appropriate-- ones for the circumstances. Those of us who did not have childhoods of pretense are usually fully aware of how we feel, and why, and its appropriateness to the situation; others, who are not as fortunate, continue in the trap of believing that they must be dishonest with themselves and with others in order to survive.
Dr. Brown addresses the issue of normal responses to abnormal situations, because one of the main tactics of a "dangerous" person is to attempt to weaken a woman by asserting that her "normal responses" are actually abnormal. He will attempt to convince her that she is crazy, unbalanced, or unstable, when her response to being threatened is fear, when her response to being wronged is anger.
Needless to say, if a woman in such a situation continues to carry the dinosaur from her childhood, her chance of a life free of this type of abusive domination is bleak unless she gets the help that she deserves. If this sounds like you, you can start here:
Published by C.
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