Lesson 1 of 8  - free your true Self and reduce false-self wounds

Wound-assessment Checklist

Check Your Family Tree
for False-self Clues

By Peter K. Gerlach, MSW
Member NSRC Experts Council

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        This is one of a  series of articles on Lesson 1 of 8 in this Web site - (a) free your true Self to guide you in calm and conflictual times, and (b) reduce significant false-self wounds. It is one of 12 checklists which give you a way to assess if you or someone you care about is...

  • ruled by a false self,

  • carrying up to six related psychological wounds, and...

  • denying the wounds' toxic impacts on you and any kids and prized relationships.

        This worksheet assumes you're familiar with...

        After 30 years' clinical research, I believe that assessing for and healing from psychological wounds is the keystone Lesson that promote long-term family health and success. Do all the wound-assessment checklists before drawing any conclusions, to offset the odds that a protective (fearful) false self will skew your results on two or three checklists.

     Basic Premises

            Read these out loud, slowly, and notice any thoughts and feelings as you do...

  • Some families provide higher nurturance (fill more true physical + emotional + spiritual + mental needs) for kids and adults than others.

  • In a significantly low-nurturance environment, kids' emotional/spiritual development can be slowed, distorted, or blocked. Most such kids automatically develop a personality ruled by Young and Guardian subselves to survive, but don't thrive. Long-term, their wholistic health and longevity is at risk.

  • My professional experience with over 1,000 typical Midwestern-U.S. client-families since 1981 suggests that over 80% of typical divorcing-family and stepfamily co-parents seem to be domi-nated by a false self - and they don't (want to) know it (denial) or what it means.

  • Family trees of significantly-wounded people have specific traits (or more of them) than trees of unwounded people. Some traits (below) are symptoms of early-childhood caregivers' wounds, and others are traumas that cause such wounds.

  • Because of parents' unawareness and psychological wounds, low-nurturance childhoods tend to reproduce and spread down the generations, until a courageous adult breaks their denials, and intentionally stops the ancestral cycle via intentional personal recovery.   

   
 Checklist Directions

        Take a true-Self check: "I feel a mix of centered, grounded, peacefiul, alert, awake, "up," "light," focused, purpseful, resilient, realistic, compassionate, serene, calm, strong, and clear, so my true Self is probably leading my inner family." If you don't feel such a mix now, expect skewed results from this work-sheet.

        Get a large piece of blank paper, like two 8.5" x 11" sheets taped together on the long edge. On it, draw your three or four-generational family tree. Draw this diagram large, for you’ll be making notes all over it. Put names by each symbol. Include all the DNA-related (living and dead) people you know of in your family, and those of your current mate, their former mate (if any), and your former mate (if any).

       Reserve at least 45" of undistracted time. Honestly and thoughtfully, note on the diagram each pro-bable or sure instance of any of the traits below. The more time and care you take, the clearer your re-sults will be. Stay clear that this wound-assessment worksheet is about growing your compassionate awareness, not about blaming anyone!

        The table of traits below is illustrative, not comprehensive. If you think of ancestral traits that aren't listed, include them. "Chronic" below means "repeated." You may wish to spend several days or weeks researching your family tree to fill this worksheet out. Option: make this a group project with one or more interested relatives.

        If you think an ancestor may have had one of these traits but you aren't sure, add it to your diagram with a question mark. The wound-traits and traumas are organized in these groups:

  • Child-related traumas and symptoms,

  • Relationship traumas and symptoms,

  • Health-related traumas and symptoms,

  • Behavioral wound-symptoms,

  • Social, financial, and legal trauma, and...

  • Other traumas or symptoms 

 Typical Family-tree Symptoms of False-self Wounds

Child-related Traumas and Symptoms

  • Miscarriages; stillbirths

  • Elected or forced child adoptions

  • Unplanned or unwanted pregnancies

  • Death of an infant or young child

  • Minor kids feeling responsible for, and regularly parenting, younger children and/or disabled adults

  • Orphaned children; foster parenting

  • Unusual imaginary companions

  • Serious bullying by older children

  • Child kidnapping or abduction

  • Attempted or completed abortions

  • Major birth defects or birth traumas

  • Parental sterility or infertility

  • Chronic stealing, lying, or vandalism including fire-setting

  • Suspected or sure parental neglect

  • Excessively harsh child discipline

  • Emotionally or physically absent caregivers

  • School suspensions or many transfers

Relationship Traumas and Symptoms

  • Chronic physical abuse*,  Attempted or actual battering or torture

  • Chronic verbal or emotional abuse*

  • Attempted or completed suicide

  • "Enshrining" or "erasing" dead or absent family members or other loved ones

  • Stalking or other sexual (or other) harassment

  • Divorces or never marrying

  • Excessive suspicions, jealousy, or distrusts and paranoias; family secrets

  • Cross-dressing (transvestitism ); sex-change operations; or recurring fantasies of same

  • An inability to bond and/or to tolerate true intimacy; dying alone; "no family or friends"

  • Associating love with pain, subservience, material things, and/or dependence

  • Suspected or confirmed incest, rape, or other sexual abuse*

  • Spiritual abuse*; excessive terror of hell, Satan, demons, sinning, and/or damnation

  • Attempted or completed murder

  • Excessive sexual promiscuity, aversion/s, addictions, or dysfunctions

  • Unexpected or accidental death of loved ones, specially involving violence

  • Marital affairs or bigamy

  • Marital separation and/or family desertion

  • Prolonged or repeated emotional cutoffs  ("not speaking" to close kin or key friends)

  • Excessive social isolation

  • "Mystery ancestors" (i.e. little is known of them)

Health-related Traumas and Symptoms

  • Chronic eating disorders - e.g. anorexia, bulimia, bingeing, obesity, food addiction, phobias, or fetishes

  • Hospitalization for "nervous breakdown"; "shock" and/or psychiatric treatment

  • Addictions to activities, substances, causes, relationships, and/or moods (e.g. excitement or arousal)

  • Dependence on medications for sleep and/or mood-control

  • Chronic exhaustion without clear medical or other causes

  • Traumatic body injury or loss of a limb or organ - including sight or hearing; major disabilities

  • Chronic major muscle tics or spasms; 

  • Severe chronic migraines or allergies

  • Chronic self-neglect - e.g. poor diet, little exercise, and/or ignoring dental, eye, or other medical care and check-ups

  • Hypochondria - obsession with personal health or fitness; terror of "germs"

  • Chronic sleep disorders - e.g. insomnia, nightmares, night sweats, TMJ

  • Chronic digestive or colon disorders - e.g. nausea, ulcers, colitis, "heartburn"

  • Self-mutilation, including body piercing and unusual or excessive tattooing

  • Chronic physical and/or "mental" illnesses and/or "mood disorders"

  • Incurable life-threatening diseases - e.g. AIDS

  • Sex-change fantasies or surgery; Open or private cross-dressing

  •  

Common Behavioral Symptoms of False-self Wounds

  • Workaholism (regularly working 55+ hours per week with few or no vacations)

  • Obsession with personal or household cleanliness, neatness, and/or hygiene

  • Inability to focus; excessive "mind- wandering" or "mind-churning"; "Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD)

  • Chronic apathy, "laziness," or depression

  • Excessive psychological wounding; 

  • Multiple Personality Disorder (now Disso-ciative Identity Disorder);

  • Unusual "mood swings" or chronic bizarre behaviors

  • Major phobias, delusions, and/or reality distortions; Reported "schizophrenia"

  • Chronic anxiety or rage attacks; Teeth-grinding

  • Obsession with the occult, spirits, devil worship;  paranormal phenomenon; witchcraft; and/or voodoo;

  • Excessive emotional nmbness ("headi-ness") or volatility

  • Rabid atheism or excessive spiritual piety, "penances," and/or self-harmful missionary zeal

  • several to many of these symptoms

  •  

Social, Financial, or Legal Trauma

  • Failure to graduate from one or more schools or colleges

  • Church excommunication, defrocking, or scandal; Legal disbarment; Loss of professional license or tenure;

  • Personal or business bankruptcy; Excessive gambling and/or debts; or excessive hoarding and/or fear of poverty and debt;

  • Flunking a grade; Being "held back"

  • "Unreasonable" or chronic legal suits

  • Homelessness / Chronic poverty

  • Chronic job losses and/or unemployment

  • Traumatic family or public humiliation

  • Religious, social, or political fanticism or notable bigotry - e.g. Ku Klux Klan, Skin-heads, anti-government "militia"

  • Committing major crimes; Arrests; Jail terms; Court martial and/or dishonorable discharge; IRS trouble

  • Concentration-camp internment; Religious, ethnic, and/or political persecution; Local warfare, rioting, bombing, or military invasion;

  • Serious cult or gang involvement

  • School, organizational, or military censure, sanctions, disbarment, or expulsion;

  • dwelling complaints or evictions;

  •  

Other Traumas or Symptoms

  • Human-service occupation/s: e.g. clergy / law / welfare casework / mental health / medicine / education / consulting / etc.

  • Reported or known animal sacrifices, torture, or entrapment;

  • Vehicle, boat, or plane accident or wreck;

  • Serious injuries from animals, fish, reptiles, or insects

  • Major natural disasters - e.g. floods, epidemics, droughts, tornados, fires,  earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, tidal waves, mud slides, hurricanes, plagues,...

  • Mugging, personal robbery, dwelling break-ins, blackmail, extortions;

  • Kidnapping, torture, and/or molesting of a loved one

  •  

       Deciding what is an "excessive" trait in an ancestor or relative is a subjective decision. To improve the objectivity of your research here, ask knowledgeable others (e.g. other kin, close family friends, in-volved health professionals) to reality-check your opinions about the existence of any trait you’re unsure of. The more traumatic the trait, the more intense a reaction you'll probably get.

       The common thread among these family-tree factors is that they may have resulted from, and/or promoted developing a protective false self in young children. This in turn causes mixes of excessive fears, shame, dis/trust, rage, reality distortions, and possibly difficulty feeling and/or bonding with other people. These common false-self wounds hinder healthy wholistic growth, and promote relationship, work, financial, and legal problems; "failures;" and a downward spiral of chronic self-wounding experiences over time.

        Significantly-wounded children usually grow into adults unaware of their wounds and false selves. They tend to choose wounded partners repeatedly, or they never form a committed relationship. Two wounded parents tend to unconsciously reproduce a low-nurturance home, which fosters false-self wounds in their kids, and passes the unseen cycle down the generations. Awareness and patient, self-motivated recovery from false-self dominance can stop this toxic bequest.

Alert: if you are significantly wounded, you're likely to unconsciously minimize or deny some or many of these family-tree traits. Also, traumas or traits like these can be (shameful) family secrets - and you may never have been told about them.

        In general, the more of these items someone's parents and/or other ancestors had, the higher the odds that significant false-self wounds passed on to the next generation. Keep in mind that some of these items are traumas that may or may not promote wounds, and some are wound-symptoms that promote traumas and more wounds. Also note that this is not an exhaustive list.

 "Scoring" a Family Tree

       As with the other wound-assessment worksheets, there is no research-based yardstick or scale that I know of to help reliably measure your results from this one. The more of the traits or events on page 1 that appear in an adult’s or child’s ancestry, the higher the odds they got too little emotional/spiritual nurturance (worksheet 2) in their early years, and automatically developed a dedicated false self to survive.

       We all have some of these ancestral traits and traumas. Watch for clusters of them among several members of a particular generation. My clinical guideline is: if there are probably or surely five or more of these factors in a person's current and past two generations, they’re probably significantly wounded (con-trolled by a false self). I know of no credible research that validates this (yet) - but see these research summaries on kids from "risky families" and most "mental-illness" starting by age 14.

        Your responses to the other Lesson-1 checklists will validate or refute your findings here. "Signifi-cantly-wounded" means the person you assessed will probably

  • unintentionally pass on significant wounds to their descendents,

  • avoid genuine commitment, or repeatedly commit to wounded partners, and

  • replicate low-nurturance (toxic) relationships until they...

  • commit to some form of effective personal wound-healing.

       Assigning any of these worksheet traits to an ancestor is a subjective decision. Deciding what "ex-cessive" is in any family member is an opinion. To improve the objectivity of your research here, ask knowledgeable others (e.g. other kin, close family friends, involved health professionals) to reality-check your opinions about the existence of any trait you’re unsure of. The more traumatic (read terrifying, agon-izing, or shameful) the trait, the more intense a reaction you'll probably get.

Alert: if you are significantly wounded, your governing false self is likely to minimize or deny some or many of these ancestral traits. Also, some of these traits may have been shameful  family secrets, and you were never told about them.

       Each of these family-tree factors or several together may have promoted excessive fears, shame, dis/trusts, hurt, confusion, rage, or anxiety in family kids of that generation. Whether that happened depends largely on whether family adults (a) were knowledgeable and aware enough to nurture the kids and themselves effectively at the time. 

        If they didn’t, these reactions may (vs. will) stunt healthy wholistic growth in minor kids. This pro-motes later relationship problems, "failures," and a downward spiral of chronic self-wounding experiences over time. Effective personal wound-recovery can stop this cycle, and promote restoring control of a chaotic personality to the person's wise true Self, over time. See Lesson 1.


 What Now?

  • If you’ve filled out all the wound-assessments and you believe you are at least a moderately-woun-ded survivor of low childhood nurturance, then use the materials in Lesson 1 to implement a per-sonal wound-recovery plan over time with appropriate professional and other help. People in real (vs. pseudo) wound-recovery usually keep such plans as a  consistently high priority.

  • If you feel your current partner is probably or surely ruled by a false self, discuss this concept and worksheet with them. Ask them to self-assess, using these Lesson-1 worksheets or equivalent. If s/he balks, postpones, pooh-poohs doing so, or vehemently disagrees, honestly re-examine why you’re in a primary relationship with this person.

Note: until a significantly-wounded person hits true (vs. pseudo) bottom, you can't persuade or force them to break their denials or want to start personal healing. Commonly, hitting bottom happens in midlife. Some wounded people never do. ...

  • If you filled out one or more of these assessment worksheets focusing on an ex mate and you conclude that s/he probably or surely was or is significantly wounded, then ...

    That suggests (vs. proves) that you probably are too, because wounded adults and kids (i.e. their ruling subselves) seem to unconsciously choose each other - repeatedly; and...

    If you co-raised kids with that partner, those children are probably struggling with especial needs  and early versions of false-self wounding. That’s added incentive for you to learn about such woun-ding and effective recovery from it. For more perspective, see this and this

       Survivors of childhood deprivation and trauma often unconsciously commit to the wrong people, for the wrong reasons, at the wrong time.  Two wounded partners are at major risk of major relationship con-flicts and stress, and sequential breakups - specially in typical stepfamilies. And they're likely to re-create a low-nurturance environment for them and their minor kids despite vowing not to.

        Your minor kids mutely depend on your family adults to protect them against such massive loss and trauma - again

+ + +

       These wound-assessment worksheets can’t conclusively "prove" low-nurturance childhoods and related psychological wounds. Together, they can provide clear, suggestive evidence that there may have been such. The high personal and co-parental stakes here merit getting an informed professional opinion, rather than relying solely on your (subjective) Self.

Resources

    • Self-study Lesson 1 - asess for false-self wounds and reduce any you find;

    • Helpful books:

     Notes / Thoughts





 

        Pause, breathe, and reflect - why did you read this article? Did you get what you needed? If not, what do you need? Who's answering these questions - your true Self, or someone else?

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Updated  September 05, 2010