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#he is uninterested in a good grade in therapy (talking about his emotions)
zahri-melitor · 1 year
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I don’t get why people are always harping on about the Bats (especially Bruce) needing therapy.
Bruce has had PLENTY of therapy. You’re all also complaining about the outcomes of it right now (possession by Zurr-En-Arrh).
But seriously, off the top of my head, random forms of therapy Bruce has used:-
Sensory deprivation tank (Batman 156 aka Robin Dies at Dawn, Batman…136 revisit in the current plot)
The Thogal Ritual (52 and Batman 673, where Bruce just goes and sits in a cave for a while to meditate on life and death)
That time he hypnotised himself into forgetting he’s Batman (Transference, GK 8-11)
Getting gassed and requiring motivation to live (Batman 112)
Designing Zurr-En-Arrh as a backup personality (Batman RIP, Failsafe)
Punching his problems (see…most comics)
I am sure there are plenty more too.
But Zahri, hypnotising yourself to create split extra personalities isn’t a recognised form of mental health treatment!
Did I say this was positive mental health treatment? No. I said it was therapy. It’s all shit Bruce has done to his brain over the years.
Stop trying to turn poor Dinah into a therapist (there are at least a dozen named therapists all over DC that haven’t even turned evil - including the current Power Girl & Omen therapy team if you insist on a superhero), and start admitting Bruce HAS tried plenty of ways to deal with his problems. They’re just not board certified ones and they’re mostly hilariously dangerous to both Bruce and those around him.
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merskrat · 3 years
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I’m literally living in such a state of anticipation just waiting to see what is going to come of this situation with my dad. He asked me to reach out to my brother, who is 16, and made it sound like everyone in the family has ignored him and that’s the reason he doesn’t want to visit us anymore. That didn’t really ring true to me, because I know that once my grandmother had to physically take his tablet away from him and force him to come out of his room just to get him to interact with the family just the smallest amount. I talked to my cousin, who I would trust with my life, about it and what he said basically boiled down to “I have been trying to befriend him for literal years, but he is so rude and so uninterested in doing anything other than playing games on his tablet that I gave up a long time ago.” I guess once my grandfather asked him if he wanted to help him feed the birds and my brother was like “why would I want to do that?” I emailed my dad because I didn’t want to get emotional about this over the phone, and told him about how blatantly disrespectful my brother is to all of us and how confused I was that he had been raised so differently than me—allowed to completely isolate himself by staring at a screen all day when I wasn’t even allowed to have a gameboy and was allowed about three hours of computer time a week. My brother has never been made to leave his (very narrow) comfort zone like I was. I performed musically, took sailing lessons, horseback riding lessons, etc. I was not given the option to back out of these activities even if I had wanted to, and I am a better person for not being allowed to isolate myself in my room reading books.
This made me delve into my stepmother and her emotional abuse, how I feel that she has turned my brother against our family because that is what she tried to do with me when I was a kid. I remember finally getting really upset about what she was saying about my grandparents and her response was that she “should have known I wasn’t mature enough for adult conversations.” A LOT of repressed memories are coming to the surface. How she said that my sister was going to be a trophy wife when she grew up...she was five. How she got so angry when I threw up during Sunday school once, even though it was in the bathroom, and I cleaned it up and went back to she wouldn’t miss the service. How when I asked her, in tears, for help with my OCD and she called me a hypochondriac and a liar and told me to go to my room. I guess the reason she “knew” I was lying is because once I complained about chest pain and when a doctor listened to my heart and said nothing was wrong they just...never followed up. Now I recognize that I was having chest pain from anxiety. I told my dad about how my basic needs were not being met when he was away during the week working. My stepmother never gave me lunch money, and if she did it was never more than a dollar left on the table, and I wasn’t allowed to wake her up in the morning under any circumstances. My friends had to buy me food and generally took turns getting me lunch, until the principal caught on and asked me if everything was ok at home. I lied to cover for her because I knew that I would be in trouble if the school called. She adopted me when I was ten, but would only be in my life for three more years after that. Everything was fine between us the summer after eighth grade and I happily went to the island to stay with my grandparents for the summer and to see my friends. My dad went back up for the weekend like he always did, and found that my stepmom had taken her car, the cats, all of her stuff, and my infant brother half way across the country to Minnesota. So he went, trying to save his marriage, and I stayed, honestly happy to be left behind and not having to be the new kid two years in a row. She completely cut off contact with me.
I also told my dad about the blog post I found later that year, written by her and read by many people in the community in which I lived, about how difficult it was for her to have a mentally ill daughter. I find it really interesting that my brother is so mentally ill that he can barely function, but she has not taken to the Internet to make his mental illnesses known to his community and to try to garner sympathy. I asked him to please imagine for a second how that made me feel to find that and read it.
It seemed incredibly obvious to everyone in our family that once she had her own biological child that she didn’t feel the need to continue to have a relationship with the adopted one, and even maybe that she manipulated the situation to make sure that it would just be the three of them from that point on. My brother was only a year old when she took off, and she left less than a week after I went to the island. As a child I didn’t want to say this out loud to anyone. I didn’t want to risk sounding jealous, insecure, immature, etc. But as an adult I don’t mind saying it, because that’s what happened. It honestly just shows how truly manipulated my thoughts were, to the point that I didn’t even want to acknowledge the reality of the situation, for fear of it being spun to make *me* look bad/more mentally ill.
He has said that both of them are waiting for me to make the first move in reestablishing a relationship. He said that my brother doesn’t want to switch rooms in their house because of the mural I painted on his wall. I reminded him that she has always been the one who established whether or not a relationship existed. At the end of what basically ended up being a manifesto of all of the ways she had torn our family apart, I said that I might be willing to reestablish contact with her if she started to take accountability and go to therapy. I also said that I would try to reach out to my brother but that it might be difficult for us to have a connection because he is almost an adult, is set in his habits, and if I’m right, she has been filling his head with awful things about our family like she did with me when I was a child, the only difference being that he has been under her influence for much longer and that she actually was able to isolate him from us, and use emotional incest to manipulate him into believing whatever she wanted him to believe (I did not use that term in the email to my dad because I know it would immediately make him, or anyone really, defensive because of how disgusting it sounds.)
My dad couldn’t email me back from his tablet but texted me what basically amounted to “I’m sorry I haven’t been a better parent. You have given me a lot to think about.” I have never felt so awful and so validated at the same time. He probably went back to their house from the island (where he works) last night, and I’m just wondering what is going to happen, if she is going to manage to manipulate her way out of any responsibility once again. My grandmother warned me not to criticize my brother if I cared about my relationship with my dad. I really felt all of this needed to be said though. My dad is away from his son during the week, so god only knows what she says and does during all that time that he is away. When he used to bring my brother to the island, he would bring him during the week and go to work, so he has no idea of how my brother interacts/doesn’t interact with us. I don’t know, I don’t know how she could spin any of this to make herself look good.
I told him, “I want you to be happy,” and he responded “I’m happy that you’re doing so well.” Idk, that kind of just broke my heart because it sounds like he just feels that happiness is off the table for him at this point. Every time we talk he’s like “I wanted to go do x but your mother and brother don’t want to, so we’re not.” And it just makes me sad af because I remember how much fun we used to have going to Maine, the Renaissance fair, tours of caverns, the beach, etc, and his wife and child would rather stare at a screen than go do something fun with him. Like we didn’t have a ton of money growing up and I’m sure they still don’t, but what money my dad did make he spent on experiences for us as a family.
So yeah...just waiting to see what’s gonna happen now.
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Take Back the Night Speech
It is a widely known and accepted statistic that 1 in 4 individuals will be sexually assaulted in their lifetime. Perhaps more concerning than this data is just how desensitized to the fact we have all become. When I was in 6th grade, a member of my family was sexually assaulted. Her experiences destroyed her. She struggled with depression, substance abuse, and couldn't maintain relationships with anyone around her. What’s worse is that no one knew. She hid the story of her assault out of fear; fear that she would be attacked for coming forth with the truth; fear that her story would be thought of as a lie. When my family member became the 1 in 4, I thought that I was safe -- the 1 in 4 had happened and I was destined to go through life without dealing with the agony that survivors of assault are met with.
When I was raped on February 28th, 2014, I finally understood the pain. The confusion. The suffocating emotions and distress that became all too familiar to my relative.
My freshman year at St. Lawrence was awful. Hailing from Illinois, I was immediately out of place. I had trouble making friends and often felt ostracized. I knew next to nothing about upstate New York, or the East Coast in general. The excitement I once had for new experiences and traveling to school quickly turned into discomfort and a strong desire to be accepted. Joining the swimming and diving team was the very best thing I did during my first year, not because I loved the sport, but because I had somewhere to be every day between 4 and 6, and concrete dinner plans every night.
When I was invited to go out one Thursday by some of my teammates, I immediately agreed. I hadn’t been out in a while and thought drinking with the team would be a good way to meet new people and diminish some of the stress that accompanies Bio 101 and college life in general. After drinking a few shots in a friend’s dorm room, our party was broken up by security. Luckily, we were invited to another party at one of the nearby theme houses on campus. It was there that I continued to drink, trying to keep up with those around me and prove myself as more than just the freshman girl from the Midwest. It was also during this time that I met a sophomore boy. He put his arm around me as we spoke at the party, and I thought nothing of it. When I later asked him where the bathroom was, this boy led me up the stairs, kissed me, and waited for me to return. We went into his room with a few friends, his arm still tight around me as we talked about our favorite songs. I finally began to feel like I was connecting with people at St. Lawrence. I found people who liked the songs I liked, who had similar interests, and even a guy who seemed interested in me.
As it got later, friends left for their own rooms and the boy began to kiss me. He took my shirt off and reached to unbutton my pants, but I immediately felt uneasy. He was acting aggressive, asking me to do things to him that I didn't feel comfortable doing. When I told him “no,” and that I wouldn’t have sex with him, he continued to ask. I denied his advances and got up to leave after receiving a text from a teammate asking if I wanted to walk back to the dorms together. However, when I reached for my coat, the boy suggested I stay. After all, it was cold out, and really pretty late, and couldn't I just sleep in his room? I thought about it, remembering my drunken state and earlier discomfort, but all of this was overshadowed by his coaxing and the fact that I truly thought I had found my niche.
I set strong boundaries, telling him for a second time that I was not interested in sex. I was there to sleep, not sleep with him. I crawled into his bed and fell asleep with all of my clothes on. I’m not sure how long I was asleep or what was done to me during that time, but I awoke to the feeling of weight on my legs and the boy on top of me. He had taken my clothes off and was having sex with my lifeless body. It took me a moment to process what was even happening. When I panicked, pulled away, and began to cry, he looked at me, annoyed, and asked, “Can I at least finish?”
These words still echo in my mind. I hear them when I’m trying to fall asleep, and on nights when I can’t. I hear them when my old favorite songs come on, before I panic and turn them off. I still feel him on top of me, his weight making it difficult to move. I’m not sure what I said next or how I got out of his room, but I do remember him asking if he had done something wrong — as if having sex with a person who had denied consent multiple times and was unconscious was some sort of blurred line.
When I made it back to my room that night, I tried to tell my roommate what had happened. She seemed unfazed and uninterested. It felt like no one was listening to me. I had no one to tell. Though I didn’t know what to call it, I knew something terrible had happened to me. I felt disgusting. I hated my body. I hated the fact that I even had a vagina or anything that anyone would ever want. I hated myself and my surroundings and the very idea of being alive.
I’m not sure what I would have done or how I would have taken the steps that I did after my assault without the help of my sister. Although I felt silenced and isolated from everyone in my vicinity, I knew that Sydney would help me. When I got ahold of my sister and told her what had happened, she consoled me and drove from Waterville, Maine to Canton, New York faster than I thought humanly possible. In the meantime, she told me to go to the emergency room.
As I sat in the waiting room of Canton-Potsdam hospital, representatives from organizations like Renewal House came to visit me. I was asked to tell my story upwards of 10 times that day, still attempting to process all of its parts myself. I was told to fill out forms and complete surveys so that my story could be “entered into the system” and “added into the yearly rape reports.” I had become a statistic. My humanity was stolen from me and replaced with a number. A percentage. The rape kit took over 4 hours to complete. I have never felt more alone in my entire life. My parents were over 1,000 miles away and the closest people I had were questioning me like reporters looking for a story that would sell. The pelvic exams were made more uncomfortable as nurses produced a digital camera to take photos of me, legs spread, more strangers’ hands touching my weak body. I was made to decide whether or not I wished to take medication that might destroy my liver, but would also prevent venereal disease. I was told to bend over as I was administered a shot in my ass that would subsequently make me vomit for hours. I was touched and examined and pricked and questioned and this son of a bitch back at school didn’t think he had done anything wrong. No, you may not finish.
Though I was scared and entirely numb to my experiences, I knew I had to speak up about my rape. I had to be the voice that my family member could not find. I had to get the justice that so many never have the chance to receive. I had to make sure that this individual would never do this to anyone else and that no other freshman would have to decide between a liver or a venereal disease while her parents sat at home wondering if their child was okay.
The backlash of my speaking out began in the one place I thought I was safe — St. Lawrence’s judiciary board. The Special Hearings Board on campus is one that is dedicated to dealing with allegations of sexual assault and overseeing the punishments for such actions. Despite the fact that I approached the school only three days following my assault, my case was not heard for three months. I walked through the student center, into Dana Dining hall, to therapy at the health center, and ran into this boy everywhere. I spent more hours sleeping than I spent awake so that I wouldn’t have to relive that night or pretend that I was alright. And then I didn’t sleep, out of fear that I would wake up the way I did last time. Suffocating. Silenced. “Can I at least finish?”
When the date of my trial finally arrived, one of the school’s judges commented on the amount of alcohol I had drank that night, being overtly judgmental and surprised that I had remembered anything -- As if I should have expected this to happen to me when I chose to drink. When I confided in a friend about what had happened, she said it was alright and I was “lucky it wasn’t a real rape.” As if the only way to be raped is by being maliciously beaten. A portion of my attacker’s statement claims that although I did not give verbal consent, my body language told him I wanted it. I was unconscious.
The summer before my sophomore year, a boy I hardly knew messaged me saying he was sorry for what he heard had happened and asked me to tell him everything that I remembered. I refused, and as it would turn out, this student was trying to use my words against me. He was attempting to take my story, twist my words, and create a case of self-incrimination so that my now expelled rapist could return to campus. I trusted no one. I was told I was looking for attention. I was told I drank too much. I was even told that I had a sleeping disorder that made me hallucinate the entire event. I was told so many times and in so many ways that I was wrong, that I had made a mistake. I was told so many times that I was the one lying that I started to believe it. I began to second guess my decisions and even felt bad for my attacker. I actually believed that I was at fault — that maybe kissing him had been consent enough.
This is why I have remained silent for so long. I’ve become so timid about breaking the confidentiality of my own situation out of fear that others, like the friend of my assailant, would attempt to convince me that what I had done was wrong. That appealing to my institution in hopes of ridding our campus of someone who could cause others the same pain I felt, was a mistake. I, like many other survivors, truly came to believe that what I had done was unjust because others had told me so — that maybe this boy didn’t actually hurt me and I was being dramatic. But it’s all bullshit. I am able to stand up here today and say with confidence that I did the right thing. My experiences are real, no matter how many people try to invalidate me. I still get glares from people who were there that night, who know bits and pieces of my story, who still think that I am in the wrong, who don’t realize what was done to me.
I was stripped of so much. I had no self esteem, no reason to even be awake or truly living most of the time, but I’m still here, and I’ve overcome. I was naïve to the fact that assault can happen to anyone, and naïve to the fact that not everyone would believe me when it did. Although these things have happened and I’ve seen and felt and heard and endured what I have, I am stronger for it. I am a survivor of sexual assault, and I’m here to take back the night.
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