Is it Possible ??? Continued
Picking up from last post…..so for example, Ian (not his real name) has been in therapy for a while. One particular session, Ian comes into the office very upset. It seems that he has started a new affair with a co-worker, which is not his first or even unusual for Ian, however this one (we’ll call her Sue) is putting more pressure than any of the previous affairs. Pressures such as commitment and expectations for a full fledged relationship. Ian is very stressed since his wife knows nothing about it and he is afraid that Sue will go public which will hurt his family as well as his career.
When asked to explore the on-going urge in him to pursue new illicit relationships he explains very precisely that growing up the only love he received from his parents was as a reward for success in school. His father never sat down and played with him. His mother never snuggled. Hugs, kisses, or any physical touch was rare. Ian developed an emotional memory that tells him in order to receive love he has to be successful. He excelled in his studies and quickly rose up in the world of business until becoming a CEO of a very large company.
Ian gets married and has three young children. He believes that he has a perfect family. He says that he loves his wife and children, but that he doesn’t know how to be affectionate with them. His “flings” are similar to the rewards of his youth – a burst of affection that lasts a short period of time. As his parents are now deceased every time he experiences success in work he immediately looks to “gift” himself with affection – these flings.
He is very aware of all of this as he explains that he has a “hole in his heart” and that he constantly feels that it needs to be “filled up” and the only way he knows how to do it is by starting a new affair. All the while recognizing that this will not fill the hole in his heart, but will give him his momentary “burst” of feeling loved and appreciated.
Here is his cycle which is imprinted into his emotional memory – he accomplishes something, he receives his reward which is his fling and he carries on to the new success and the reward that follows. Through therapy he has become fully cognizant of the cycle that has become embedded within him, yet at this time he is unable to stop this cycle.
What needs to happen to make him capable of uprooting this cycle? Is uprooting a well-embedded cycle possible at all?
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