“When a boy grows up in a “dysfunctional” family (perhaps there is no other kind of family), his interior warriors will be killed off early
“When a boy grows up in a “dysfunctional” family (perhaps there is
no other kind of family), his interior warriors will be killed off
early. Warriors, mythologically, lift their swords to defend the king.
The King in a child stands for and stands up for the child’s mood. But
when we are children our mood gets easily overrun and swept over in the
messed-up family by the more powerful, more dominant, more terrifying
mood of the parent. We can say that when the warriors inside cannot
protect our mood from being disintegrated, or defend our body from
invasion, the warriors collapse, go into trance, or die. The inner
warriors I speak of do not cross the boundary aggressively; they exist
to defend the boundary. The Fianna, that famous band of warriors who
defended Ireland’s borders, would be a model. The Fianna stayed out all
spring and summer watching the boundaries, and during the winter came
in. But a typical child has no such protection. If a grown-up moves to
hit a child, or stuff food into the child’s mouth, there is no
defense—it happens. If the grown-up decides to shout, and penetrate the
child’s auditory boundaries by sheer violence, it happens. Most parents
invade the child’s territory whenever they wish, and the child, trying
to maintain his mood by crying, is simply carried away, mood included.
Each child lives deep inside his or her own psychic house, or soul
castle, and the child deserves the right of sovereignty inside that
house. Whenever a parent ignores the child’s sovereignty, and invades,
the child feels not only anger, but shame. The child concludes that if
it has no sovereignty, it must be worthless. Shame is the name we give
to the sense that we are unworthy and inadequate as human beings.
Gershen Kauffman describes that feeling brilliantly in his book, Shame,
and Merle Fossum and Marilyn Mason in their book, Facing Shame, extend
Kauffman’s work into the area of family shame systems and how they work.
When our parents do not respect our territory at all, their disrespect
seems overwhelming proof of our inadequacy. A slap across the face
pierces deeply, for the face is the actual boundary of our soul, and we
have been penetrated. If a grown-up decides to cross our sexual
boundaries and touch us, there is nothing that we as children can do
about it. Our warriors die. The child, so full of expectation of
blessing whenever he or she is around an adult, stiffens with shock, and
falls into the timeless fossilized confusion of shame. What is worse,
one sexual invasion, or one beating, usually leads to another, and the
warriors, if revived, die again. When a boy grows up in an alcoholic
family, his warriors get swept into the river by a vast wave of water,
and they struggle there, carried downriver. The child, boy or girl,
unprotected, gets isolated, and has more in common with snow geese than
with people.”
―
Robert Bly,
Iron John: A Book about Men
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