Dig Deep

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Deep Will I Dig

Sunday, March 29, 2020





Good morning all you self-reflecting Deep Diggers!


Just wanted to drop a quick post to let everyone know that I am working on my next proper blog entry.


In the meantime, I also wanted to let everyone know that I have been deeply exploring the ins and outs of my INFJ personality type like never before. I've known that I am an INFJ for at least a decade now. However, I've just recently begun to realize just how profoundly this has affected my views and interactions with other people and the world around me.


Because of this, I have added a subtitle to the name of my FB page (https://www.facebook.com/jjsbdiggingdeeper/) and my Blogger site: "An INFJ Journey." I wanted to include the INFJ piece in as it is essential to all of my experiences: Past, Present and Future. Yet, I wanted to maintain the "Digging Deeper" name as it captures my true heart and goal as it relates to my Ni (Introverted Intuition). i.e. Encouraging people to dig deep within the substance of their beings, reflect and get in touch with their true selves.


Thank again to all of you who have stuck around for this long.


Peace and Grace to you!


JimmyJames S B

Sunday, March 1, 2020

Drawn to Toxic Relationships



Image result for dying heart


Good day to you my Deep Digging Friends!

If you've been reading along, then you will remember that in my last blog post I wrote that I would be sharing regarding some breakthrough moments I've arrived at during the past year as I journeyed through the low crawls and high times of 2019.

Today, I write of possibly the hardest realization that I faced during this time.  It took me deep into the cavernous wounds of my childhood.  Some of which, I have yet to fully explore.

Some of you are aware of the wounds that I received from my mother when I was young.  While I've known since my teens that the way my mother treated me during my early childhood and preadolescence years had a significant effect on me, I did not fully realize the extent of this as related to romantic relationships until this past year.  Actually, it reaches beyond romantic relationships and colors any and all relationships I have and have had.  But this post is about romantic relationships, so I'll do my best to stay on track.

At the beginning of 2019, I found myself ending a toxic romantic relationship that I had been in for nearly all of 2018.  This relationship had kept my stomach churning the entire time I was in it, every minute of every day spent wondering if I would suddenly, without warning, be on the outs with my partner.  I have never been through anything quite like that relationship.  I'm not sure exactly how I stayed in it for so long, although I do have an idea of part of the why.  It relates back to my childhood.

You see, due to the negative interactions with my mother when I was young, I have abandonment issues that affect my relationships to this day.  This began to dawn on me in the weeks after I ended the toxic relationship I was in and became even more clear as I began to read about why people are attracted to partners who are toxic or bad for them.  I was surprised to find out that many people who suffer from childhood trauma (and that describes so many of us to varying extents) are actually often instantaneously and unconsciously attracted to people whose characteristics are extremely destructive to us in the context of a romantic relationship.  Focusing on myself here and digging deep within the earth of me, I see two areas where this plays out quite clearly.  First of all, we are often drawn to what we know.  We are comfortable in what we know.  Even if it's not good or healthy for our being.  As one of the many articles I read on this subject said, "Many of us pick partners who help us stay within our comfort zone, even if that zone turns out to not be all that desirable. People seek what is familiar. If our past was filled with feelings of rejection or inadequacy, we are drawn to scenarios in which we feel the same way as adults."  Are you addicted to doomed relationships - Lisa Firestone, Ph.D.  Wow!  Let that one sink in a little bit.  I certainly see that this has happened with me. It simply blows my mind to realize that even though I had childhood relationships that were filled with rejection and feelings of inadequacy and that I'm cognizant that I don't want to experience that in my romantic relationships, my subconscious is working against me.  Working hard!  Which brings me to the second area that I feel pertains to me in the area of toxic relationships:  Many of us choose romantic partners who have the very same characteristics as the caregivers we had during our formative years.  In essence, we are looking for another chance to succeed in getting the approval that we just couldn't manage to get when we were young.  Again... Wow.  And this ties into what are referred to as attractions of deprivation.  I'll most likely speak more of those attractions in a subsequent post but for now I'll just say these attractions are powerful.  VERY powerful.  And the way they work is quite sobering.  As one article puts it, we are often attracted to a person with a particular physical and emotional characteristic because that person triggers our insecurities.  These people  "... draw us in part because they embody the worst emotional characteristics of our primary caregivers! Even though we may be adults, we often have unresolved childhood hurts due to betrayal, manipulation, abuse, and neglect from our caregivers.  Unconsciously, we seek the healing of these wounds in our intimate relationships. But that means we're most attracted to people who can wound us in just the way we were wounded in our childhood! Our psyche seeks to recreate the scene of the original crime, and then save us by changing its ending. The child in us believes that if the original perpetrators—or their current replacements—finally change their minds, apologize, or make up for that terrible rupture of trust, we can escape from our prison of unworthiness. Our conscious self is drawn to the positive qualities we yearn for, but our unconscious draws us to the qualities which hurt us the most as children."  Recognizing Your Attractions of Deprivation

 I am now beginning to clearly see that the biggest draw that I have had to partners has been negative and has been a complex subconscious conflicting desire to be in the types of relationships that I know and am "comfortable" with while at the same time seeking to receive validation that after all, all of those negative things I have come to believe about myself are not true.

Now, just to be clear, realizing these things does not instantly flip a switch and mean that these attractions to unhealthy partners disappear.  Remember, these arise from deep seated and subconscious caverns.   Yes, my need for validation runs deep.  Fortunately, I'm also learning that there is a healthy form of validation.  A validation that lovingly confronts unhealthy tendencies while at the same time, highlighting and encouraging qualities of strength.  I'm so thankful to have found someone who can walk beside me both giving and receiving this healthy validation.

I know that what I have written about above does not apply to everyone.  I want to be clear about that.  This is a big world, made up of many individuals, each a unique snowflake.  I am just sharing about my journey as a way to profess my truth and to encourage others to contemplate their own attraction tendencies.


Thank you all for reading!

Until next time, Peace, Love and Grace to each of you Deep Digging Earth Babies!