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Safety and The Lizard: The Essay — 38 Comments

  1. Dear Al,
    I have been directed to your site and have lurked around reading your stuff – find it thought provoking. I especially relate to the 'lizard' brain – mine's pretty big and dominating I think.
    Here is my dilemma – I want to heal myself and recognize within myself a tendency to withdraw and not engage in relationship. My serious relationships are few (5 total) and apart from the 2 marriages only lasted around 6 months. I grew up in single parent family and did not get healthy emotional input in all sorts of ways. I have been in personal therapy twice in the last about 10 years – but don't seem to have managed to change much. Right now I am figuring the most damaging and painful episode from my childhood is being in hospital at around 18mths/2-ish for a bad impetigo infection. My mother was told to not visit me because it would upset me too much, and so I was there for maybe a week or so – I've read the Bowlby stuff and realize that potentially that was very damaging. My mother remembers me being totally withdrawn with her – refusing to go to her for several days and then being very clinging for many weeks so I think it hit me badly although I have no conscious memory.
    At 21 I married the boy I had dated from aged 19 – and about the 3rd boy I had dated for more than a few weeks. Various difficulties (not a fulfilling marriage for either of us) and finally I left when my kids got to their teens.
    8 years later re-marry a man who seems to really adore me and quickly discover I'm in trouble. 3yrs in I find masses of sadistic pornography, membership of a swinger site. I panic, I get obsessional checking up on him and I research stuff. I get us to a therapist who is also a psychologist.
    We undergo an assessment because I highlight concerns about some sort of cognitive dysfunction – I suspected some sort of autism. I am told my husband has narcissistic personality disorder. We attended some therapy sessions – what I learned from those and from doing internet research was extremely discouraging so I chose to leave and get a divorce. This all sounds cold and factual – actually at the time I am extreme emotional turmoil.
    Here is my problem – was leaving really the only sensible thing to do? I still get little pangs of hope that maybe he could change. A lot of this is around my own feelings of inadequacy – goes in 2 directions. Could I have done more or been more effective in the relationship? And on the other hand – how come I picked someone so damaged and damaging? Just how screwed up am I that I made such a bad choice 2nd time around? Would staying have given me an opportunity to heal myself at the same time as helping him get more real? I know he is in pain himself and sometimes I can see it.
    I am now 60 years old and on my own again. I feel so discouraged and lonely with very little sense of a possible future as part of a couple.
    I chose to marry #2 not because I was madly in love but because he seemed to really adore me and I thought it was my chance to build a relationship on solid foundations of common interests and values.
    This is long enough already – what is your opinion of relationships with some-one who has a personality disorder – is getting out the healthiest response? and what about the person who has gotten involved – where can I learn about relating healthily if I am on my own.
    I do have three grown kids – very loving but I wonder how badly I screwed them up and they maybe aren't the best people to practice healthy relating on.
    I'd seriously value your opinion.
    A Friend

    Al Responds
    Dear Friend,
    A great letter, and thanks for sharing so much. Sounds like a lot of pain there, for you, for a long time. Also sounds to me as if you have had lots of confusion, conflicting advice, for a long time. And congratulations for “surviving” to 60. I am 66 this year and sometimes just stop and shake my own hand for having had the courage/stubbornness/wisdom to keep going. Therefore, my hat is off to you.
    Now, let's look at the problems. I can only speak for myself and share my thoughts. I hope they will be useful to you.
    You give me some clues about yourself and those I wanna grasp. I believe that the place to start out is with “who we have become,” and then we learn to add on to ourselves missing pieces, missing skills we missed. This also forms my beliefs about how to be nurturing to our children – the ones we have brought into the world and all who are looking up to us.
    You picked up that Lizard piece well, I think. I found it useful. One thought is when you say it is “pretty big,” I respond, “thank God, or you might not have survived.” I love the idea that the Lizard (my lizard) is boss of my life. If it feels taken care of, it sleeps, and I can live peacefully. If it feels threatened, it takes over.
    Now, one big mistake about dealing with our Lizards seems to come from our childhood. As kids, we “expect” that our parents will keep us safe. That is their job. I think nature’s plan for us, over time, is to take on the responsibility (from our parents) of keeping our Lizard relaxed.
    However, many of us were not made safe by our parents. They could not do it. And so, rather than having time to learn how to keep our own Lizards calm, we continue in adulthood to seek “others” who will take care of us and our Lizards. But in this way we become dependent and “victim” to their clumsiness, their human foibles, their stupidity, even their cruelty. We believe we are safe if we find someone to take care of us.
    I don’t think this works and I believe our Lizards really don't like us trying it. Our Lizards want their closest neighbor, our cortexes, to be sources of safety. That way, they, our Lizards feel safe no matter what the outside world is doing, and no matter what memories of past terror comes up.
    So the trick is to train/educate your cortex to take care of your Lizard on a 24/7 basis and not be dependent on others. For me this started with me learning about Boundaries – really a thinking person’s guide to taking care of your Lizard. Good boundary skills mean a relaxed Lizard. I suggest you become an expert in Boundaries. (See my paper on Boundaries for the Individual).
    From the vantage point of being a “Boundary expert,” I believe you will be much more able, especially if you have assistance, to look back on your history (the source of lots of wisdom), find your mistakes, learn from them, apply new skills and share them with your kids and others.
    From that vantage point also, I think you will reconsider the “labels” that some have given you and your partner(s), labels you collected over the years of confusion, trying to find out how to get “better.” I am used to the idea that you settle down with someone equally dysfunctional, and so I am used to thinking that if my partner has a “psychiatric label,” I wonder what is mine. I believe those labels are only useful to point toward the “way out of the problem(s).” I bet if I took an average person and looked carefully at their life, I would “justify” every label in the psychiatric book for them, at some time or other. I am also used to the idea that everyone always has at least one personality disorder. 🙂
    “How come I picked someone so damaged and damaging?” Tis a great question and I believe the answer is something like, “Well, that is normal. It is what the Imago is all about. One always picks one’s worst nightmare – someone as bad as me.”
    Was it the sensible thing to do?” Wow. What a great question! I wonder what mountain I could climb, what holy place I could visit, what state I could get into that would let me answer that question. I'm sorry to share that “I don't know the truth.” I experience that decisions, like yours, can only rationally be evaluated by YOU some years after you've made them. And even then, the evaluation can only be a) how glad I am (a scale of -10 to + 10) that I made that decision, and b) what did I learn from that decision? I can never know whether it was “right.” (See Master/Slave)
    Therefore, I ask how glad are you to have made that decision and what did you learn from it?
    I suggest you keep burrowing around in my website. Here are the papers in order I think you might want to have read, after you have read them.
    Boundaries for Individuals: The Essay good starting place.
    Map of Relationships: The Essay – general framework
    MASTER/SLAVE, Two World Problem: The Essay – clarify the issues of “truth” and “reality”
    The Power of Passivity which may end up being your favorite guide in getting out of where you have come to be.
    Good luck and God Bless.
    Al

  2. Thank you for replying to me.
    OK. I like that “But I prefer to a) hear its warning and b) choose a wise way of dealing with the situation I am facing.” The way I understand this is instead of fleeing, freezing, submitting or fighting, is to train the Lizard to take more time in assessing if I am in life-death situation or not, time to think things through, when my life is not in danger, because I would know if it was. Am I on the right path to understand your idea? I completely agree with you that one should never ignore his-her Lizard, it is what kept us alive since the evolution. My problem is to recognise and trust myself enough to know that 1) I will be ok 2) I will recognise that my boundaries have been crossed and 3) I will know what to do about it to fix it. My reflex reaction for the 3) above is to leave the relationship. That is a very strong reaction in me. But even when I have left relationships, I sure find someone to give me the opportunity to deal with the same problem all over again.
    When I think of this: “to train your cortex into taking care of your Lizard, rather than letting your Lizard rule your cortex”, I see a huge amount of work to retrain myself, my reactions, to whatever I find violates my boundaries, which I must say are very weak. I love your writing about boundaries, which has always been an issue for me. I am used to let people cross my boundaries and do nothing about it at the moment, to keep silent about it, then to just flee or completely swept things under the carpet and let resentment built. I think I must have shut down a part of me that was telling me to keep safe, instead, I ignored it. I think I know where it comes from. I have a lot of work ahead of me. Yes, I have to work on fixing that lie-manipulation problem, without getting stuck into strong old patterns. What a challenge! A great positive one!
    Thank you.

  3. Darn glad you are engaging with this topic. Let's see if I can clarify. The way I see it, the Lizard is all about survival, even when survival is not at stake. The Lizard's reactions (Flee, Freeze, Submit, Fight) are frequently crude, panicky, frenzied, and often not the best “thing to do.” I like the idea that we want to set aside “Reaction” and become more “Reflective” about how to solve a situation.
    I think the Lizard gives us crude and immediate clues in a situation it thinks is dangerous and which may be. I think one should never ignore one's Lizard. But I prefer to a) hear its warning and b) choose a wise way of dealing with the situation I am facing.
    When I speak of “fooling” the Lizard, I am referring to getting a bit of reflective time – time to come up with a healthy and long-term solution to the situation.
    I once worked with a member of the U.S. Special Forces who had been trained to kill extremely quickly. His Lizard was on edge most of the time and his hands were quite lethal. He told me that “My first reaction, the one that comes on me in the first 4 seconds, usually involves quite a bit of destruction.” We talked about inserting a bit of pause into his reactions, settling his Lizard down.
    I think the goal is to train your cortex into taking care of your Lizard, rather than letting your Lizard rule your cortex.
    I think if you find your partner is telling lies, or you think they are manipulating you, that should “never” be ignored. Get to work on it, but the wise response is probably not Fleeing, Freezing, Submitting or Fighting. Go to work on fixing the problem.
    Good luck.

  4. Hello Al,
    Not too sure if this is the way to ask a question about this article: Safety and The Lizard: The Essay. In any case, here is my question, as I feel challenged by this concept.
    At the end of your article, you give a quick fix: to confuse that lizard. I think I understand the goal of this: to make one feel safe with your partner, so your Lizard won’t react so much in a panic mode as the chances are it’s reacting passionately to the 95% history part of that person. If you find yourself with a partner with whom you have not felt safe for many reasons such as being lied to or manipulated over and over by that partner (yes, I do understand that this partner may lie because he does not feel safe himself to tell the truth), isn't it kind of dangerous to confuse your own lizard should you be in a relationship with a partner who chooses to be manipulative? That partner may do a lot of these caring behaviours so your lizard do get confused and then does not become aware when there is danger/unsafe situation? Isn’t it training your lizard to not go in panic mode when it should?
    I probably did not understand the concept fully. Please explain. Thank you.
    Minou

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