Guest guest Posted September 14, 2010 Report Share Posted September 14, 2010 My therapist told me an interesting story today. She said that if you put a bunch of crawdads in a bucket, they will realize they are going to die and not try to escape, even though they can. So, then, one or two will try to crawl out. And guess what happens? the other crawdads grab it and pull it back into the bucket. No escape for you, crawdad! She said families are like crawdads. They will do anything they can to pull you back in to the bucket of death. Wow, that's really sick. But true. Thoughts? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 15, 2010 Report Share Posted September 15, 2010 You know, I see another facet to your sister's behavior. I was doing some reading about ADD/ADHD several years ago, and was stunned to learn that some adults with this condition (which is an under-stimulation of the executive function area of the brain) will stir things up so they can stimulate their brains - so, like a little kid running around instead of sitting and focusing on the math lesson, these adults create drama - or go find some drama - to keep their brains stimulated. That made SO much sense to me, because my mom (who probably has some ADD as well as BPD and a host of other issues) will mire herself in problems, and if everything is going smoothly for her (which happens rarely!) - she goes out and finds somebody else who's stuck in a crisis, and adopts them. Then she'd call me up and tell me I " had to " assist her in helping that person. So even when I bent over backwards to pay Nada's bills, file her insurance papers, clean out her hoarded junk - there was always another big emergency - and sometimes it involved total strangers. She's like a fireman who is also an arsonist, looking for conflagrations so she can maintain a high level of excitement instead of forcing herself to change the oil in the firetruck! I have to wonder what your sister is getting out of this role. She's self-identified as the family Saint (doing what the rest of you refuse to do), and the family guilt-monger as well (telling you that you HAVE TO host a bbq? What's that about?) - swooping in to save the dysfunctional sibs, time and again, and trying to pull everyone else into the soap opera. It must be feeding a need, somehow. It could also be allowing her to ignore any issues she has on her own. If there's always a crisis, she has a perfect excuse to ignore the need to go to the gym, get a better job, deal with a child's learning problems, mow the yard, fix her marriage - whatever it is. So I don't think you have to feel sorry for her, or feel guilty for refusing to play along. You're right - she may eventually see the light. Or not. Either way, this is something she's CHOOSING to do. > > > > My therapist told me an interesting story today. > > > > She said that if you put a bunch of crawdads in a bucket, they will realize > > they are going to die and not try to escape, even though they can. > > > > So, then, one or two will try to crawl out. And guess what happens? the > > other crawdads grab it and pull it back into the bucket. No escape for you, > > crawdad! > > > > She said families are like crawdads. They will do anything they can to pull > > you back in to the bucket of death. > > > > Wow, that's really sick. But true. > > > > Thoughts? > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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