Childhood Trauma Left Me Feeling Worthless and Depressed

I was in eighth grade when my mother picked me up at school, telling me that she was leaving my father. I never knew how much your life could change in one day. It turned out that she had already rented a house and had been slowly moving in. I ended up living with my dad, and my mom said we would talk all the time, but we really didn’t. Even though that was the worst year of my life, I actually have a hard time remembering most of it. All I remember is crying myself to sleep every night I was missing my mother so much. I felt worthless, like I wasn’t good enough. My dad also was depressed and developed bipolar disorder. I also felt abandoned by him because all he did was hide in his garage because he was depressed himself. It was extremely lonely. It’s hard to live a life feeling like you’re not wanted. In my teens, I felt depressed and suicidal. I became very cut off from the world. I did not hang out with friends, I did not date, and I did not do anything involved with school. Now I am 20 years old, still a virgin, still depressed, have social anxiety, and when I see alcohol I am so tempted to just drink until I can’t no more. Even though I don’t drink now, I just have a strong feeling that one day I will be an alcoholic; when things start getting bad, I just want to drink. I guess I’m just seeking advice on what to do? I’ve never seen a counselor or a therapist. —On the Wrong Path

Thank you for your question. Boy, oh boy were you put through the wringer. My heart ached to read of your experiences. I suppose the short version of my answer would be to see a therapist soon as you can, if only for the reason that you mention suicidality from your teens and depression today. This is not to be alarmist, but depression is something you don’t want to go unaddressed for long, more a sign of trauma than any “character issues.”

Clearly, your mother’s traumatic flight and your dad’s withdrawal left psychological scars that now need attending. This is not to blame anyone; the tragedy of mental health issues (you mentioned your father’s depression) is that those afflicted often end up passing on their condition by creating, as the authority figure in the home, a psychological mood or atmosphere of depression, anxiety, etc., which children are liable to absorb. They don’t call them the “formative years” for nothing. These wounds are passed along from generation to generation until someone has the courage to say “enough” and get some professional help. The good news is that you are young and in an excellent position to get help, and in so doing, start life over again and find contentment and purposeful living. Your experience, believe it or not, can be a vehicle for compassion and empathy for others down the road.

I am a fan of author and psychoanalyst George Atwood, who says in his excellent book The Abyss of Madness that, to paraphrase, people become depressed when depressing things happen to them. There are so many ways in which your trauma would upend anyone’s psyche. The most common question people ask me is, “Is this normal?” I usually say I gave up on normal a long time ago. Also, we therapists can relate to the childhoods and suffering of the people we work with more than we sometimes let on.

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Yet another wounding occurs when the abandonment pain is not acknowledged or permitted to “exist.” A depressed parent may withdraw for self-protection and neglect the child, who cannot help but take it personally. Of course, as a young adult you now want to drink alcohol and blot it all out. What happened was wounding indeed, but not only were you alone with the abandonment, but you also had no one to even acknowledge or help you cope with its scarring legacy. Thus you were in the impossible situation in that you couldn’t have or not have these feelings; the terrible loneliness you experienced was compounded by not having a caring witness to empathize and help bear your very understandable feelings—a kind of solitary confinement.

You sound like a psychologically resilient person who survived a very difficult upbringing, who cares enough to do something about it now. I would encourage you look for a therapist who understands the kind of trauma you experienced, someone who is willing to be patient with you as these injuries to selfhood—which, actually, you seem to have borne quite nobly or you wouldn’t even be writing—begin to heal. Consuming vast quantities of drink or drugs is understandably tempting, but I encourage you not to. In the end, it will only erode your self-esteem and, in a sense, repeat the abuse by neglecting the hurt that needs a safe place for healing. You’re worth the effort (even if it doesn’t always feel like it). Thanks again for writing.

All my best,

Darren

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