Project 1 of 12 - Free your true Self to guide your other subselves

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Q&A about False-self Wounds
and Wound-Recovery
- p. 1 of 2

Overcome the Biggest Family Hazard

By Peter K. Gerlach, MSW

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The Web address of this two-page article is http://sfhelp.org/qa/wounds-q.htm

        Links below lead to answers in a new browser window or a summery popup, so please turn off your browser's popup blocker or accept popups from this nonprofit site. Use the answers here to augment, not replace, other qualified counsel.  

        This is one of a series of Q&A topics that typical lay adults and human-service professionals need to know more about, for wholistic health and high-nurturance relationships and families. These topics and linked articles exist to reduce one of five epidemic personal and family hazards - unawareness and ignorance (lack of knowledge). 

       From 29 years' clinical research, I propose that another unseen hazard promoting most personal and social problems is psychological (false self) wounds from low-nurturance childhoods. Family Project 1 in this divorce-prevention site focuses on assessing for wounds and reducing them over time. The Project-1 guidebook Who's Really Running Your Life? - free your Self from custody, and guard your kids (xlibris.com, 2000, 2nd ed.) integrates the answers to the questions below and more.

       To get the most from these Q&A items, first review these slide presentations on (a) normal personality subselves, and (b) the unseen [wounds + ignorance] cycle that stresses many average couples and families. If you have trouble viewing the slides, see this.


  Questions you should ask about false-self (psychological) wounds

        Links lead to answers in these two pages and other pages. If you don't see a "top" link at the end of an answer, use your browser's "back" button to return here.

1)  What is a "psychological wound"? Are there different kinds of wounds?

2)  Where do these wounds come from?

3)  Do all adults and kids have these wounds?

4)  Does having these wounds mean a person is mentally ill, sick, or crazy?

5How can I tell if I or another person has "significant inner wounds"?

6)  What are the common effects of having significant wounds?

7)  What are personality parts or subselves?

8)  What is a true Self? Is it better than other subselves? How can I tell if my Self (capital
     "S") is leading my inner team of subselves?

9)  What is a false self, and why do I need to know about it?

10)  Does having an "inner family" of subselves mean I have "Multiple Personalities"?

11)  Can wounded people recover from false-self dominance and free their Self to harmonize
       and guide their personality (inner family)?

12)  How does inner-wound recovery relate to 12-step recovery from addictions?

13)  Is there any danger in recovering from false-self wounds? No!

14)  How long does wound-recovery take, typically?

15)  Is there a best way to reduce false-self wounds?

16)  What is pseudo recovery, and how can it be recognized?

17)  How does recovery from false-self dominance progress, and what are the typical
       benefits of true-Self leadership?

18)  Do I need professional help to reduce my wounds? If so, how can I pick a qualified
       helper?

19)  What do I do if my mate has significant inner wounds? My ex mate? A child I care  
       about? My parents or siblings?

20)  Why haven't I heard about inner wounds, subselves and wound-recovery before?

21)  Can you recommend any helpful books on wounding and recovery? Yes.

+ + +

        Also see these questions and answers about normal personality subselves. If you're skeptical about them, please read my letter to you, and try interviewing one of your subselves.

If you don't find your question there or above, please ask!


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Q1)  What is a "psychological wound"?

        In this educational site, a psychological, inner, or false-self wound is a specific mental-emotional-spiritual condition that inhibits an adult or child from living at maximum potential - in someone's opinion. This site explores the origin, nature, and effects of six identifiable, related inner wounds:

  • false-self dominance

  • excessive fears

  • over or under- trusting
  • excessive shame and guilt

  • excessive reality distortions

  • difficulty feeling and bonding

        False-self dominance (a disabled true Self) promotes the other five wounds. Disease, organic malfunction, and unawareness (ignorance) also hinder living at maximum potential, and may amplify false-self wounds. Recent research suggests that inner wounds stress the immune system, which raises susceptibility to illness and premature death.

        Personal wound-assessment, patient, self-motivated recovery and commitment to family-adult education can significantly lower this risk over time, and protect descendents from developing their own psychological wounds. For perspective on preventing wounds and their toxic effects, see this.

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Q2)  Where do these wounds come from? 

        Recent medical and clinical evidence suggests that normal people develop personalities composed of semi-independent parts, or subselves like the talented members of a sports team or orchestra. Each subself has unique traits, goals, and perceptions. Many biological and environmental factors shape which subselves dominate a personality, and cause current and chronic thoughts, feelings, needs, and behaviors. See this for perspective.

        Each psychological wound comes from one or several dominant subselves. For example, excessive (vs. normal) fears usually come from hyper-reactive Scared Child, Worrier, Pessimist, and Catastrophizer subselves. When such subselves rule and disable the wise true Self (natural leader), they comprise the person's "false self."

        The degree and frequency of anxieties and fears depend on how often such subselves disable the resident true Self and control the other active subselves. False-self wounds seem to come from kids not getting their developmental and daily needs met well enough in their first four to six years, perhaps starting in the womb. Initial inner wounds are reduced or amplified by how well a child's wholistic developmental needs are met through puberty and late adolescence.

        Caregivers who (a) are significantly wounded themselves and (b) aren't well aware of and/or responsive to, dependent kids' normal and special needs, risk unintentionally promoting development of a dominant false self and related psychological wounds in their vulnerable dependents. Recent research suggests that this inexorably raises their children's risk of long-term emotional and physical illness and premature death.

        If you doubt that normal (vs. "crazy") people like you are controlled by dynamic personality subselves, read my letter to you with an open mind, and try interviewing one of your subselves. To learn more about your inner family of subselves, see this.

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Q3)  Do all adults and kids have false-self wounds?

        Since every infant and their mosaic of evolving needs is unique, even the healthiest parents can't nurture (fill kids' needs) "perfectly." That suggests that

  • the nurturance-level of any child's environment ranges from very low (wounded, unaware, neglectful caregivers) to very high, so...

  • each of us - including you and any mate and children - has (a) an array of dynamic subselves, and (b) minor to major false-self wounds.

        The question is not "Do I have psychological wounds?" but "What wounds do I (or my mate or child/ren) have, and how much do the wounds affect our wholistic health, our family's functioning, and our life-productivity?" A vital implication: being psychologically wounded is normal, and does not warrant shame or guilt!

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Q4)  Does having these wounds mean a person is mentally ill, sick, diseased, or crazy?

        Human sickness, disease, and illness mean being infected by germs and/or organically impaired. Having significant false-self wounds does not mean you (or anyone) is sick or ill. If crazy means "thinking and acting very differently than social norms," then having inner wounds is not "craziness" because "significantly wounded" is our social norm!

        "Crazy" people's wounds and behavior are excessive compared to normal woundedness. A powerful implication is that most (all?) non-organic "mental illness" is really a symptom of false self wounds. That suggests that reducing "mental illness" should focus on retraining and reorganizing dominant subselves, and freeing the wise resident true Self to guide them in all situations. Inner-family therapy provides an effective way to do that. See this for more perspective.

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Q5)  How can I tell if I or another person has "significant inner wounds"?

        Each false-self wound causes distinct behavioral symptoms. For example, excessive (vs. normal) shame often causes people to avoid eye contact, the pronoun "I," deserved success, healthy relationships, and to discount merited praise. Once you learn their symptoms, wounds become very apparent from observing the way an adult or child behaves (or doesn't).

        To make this more real, scan these 42 common behaviors that imply significant false-self dominance - i.e. dominant Guardian and young Vulnerable subselves who distrust and often disable the resident true Self. See the Project-1 checklists for typical symptoms of each wound, and this article about assessing for them.

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Q6)  What are the common effects of having significant wounds?

       Personal and social unawareness and denial of false-self dominance and related wounds promotes far-reaching personal, marital, family, and social effects - including epidemic psychological and legal divorce. Follow the links for perspective and practical options to reduce these effects. To prevent false-self wounds and related unawareness, see this series.

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Q7)  What are personality parts or subselves?

        Advances in computer and radiographic technology in the last generation make us the first people to see living brains at work. What PET brain-scans show is that normal "thinking" and reacting to environmental changes causes many separate brain regions to activate (process information) and exchange neuro-chemical signals at the same time. Each region provides a special function, like each player in an orchestra or sports team does.

        What we experience as a single event ("I chew-taste-smell-swallow the pizza") is really a web of sub-events processed by different parts of our brain like a network of minicomputers. We're unaware of  this web operating, and which subselves control it. Some neural networks process sensory information more effectively (accurately and productively) than others.

        From this, it appears that our personality subselves are semi-independent brain regions interacting together below awareness to cause our individual perceptions, thoughts, needs, and behaviors. It's now well documented that some people have "multiple personalities." They act as though there are several "different people" in the same body.

        This supports the idea that all personalities are composed of "parts" or subselves. Multiple personality disorder [now called "Dissociative Identity Disorder" (DID) by psychiatrists] is the extreme case of normal adaptive "personality splitting" (dissociation) into parts. Some degree of splitting seems to occur in every child's early years. Significant dissociation [false-self takeovers, or meltdowns, breakdowns, losing it (control),...] can occur to anyone in extreme traumas and crises.

        Like individual talented players in an orchestra or athletic team, every subself has its own values, traits, perceptions, limitations, and function (role) in the personality. As an orchestra can be in or out of tune, multi-part personalities can range between chaotic to disorganized to harmonious in normal and special situations.

        So a vital question is "Which subselves dominate my 'inner family' of subselves in calm and conflictual times?" To appreciate the marvelously rich, dynamic inner crew that comprises you, study this and these common questions.

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Q8)  What is a true Self? Is it better than other subselves? How can I tell if my Self (capital "S") is leading my inner team of subselves?

        Nature seems to provide normal infants with a subself whose undeveloped natural talents are...

  • coordinating (leading) other personality subselves effectively, and...

  • using acquired knowledge and available information to make wise (health-promoting) short and long-range decisions.

Just as some people are more effective group leaders than others, your true Self (capital "S") is innately skilled at inner-family leadership than other subselves. S/He and other Regular subselves become wiser and more competent as you gain life experience.

        As each player contributes to the overall function and quality of an orchestra or sports team, your Self is not "better" (more powerful or worthy) than any other subself. Each subself is uniquely valuable, and has its own talents and limitations.

        See this for more perspective on your excellent true Self, and how to tell when s/he's leading your (or anyone's) dynamic team of other subselves.

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Q9)  What is a false self, and why do I need to know about it?

        In this nonprofit Web site, a false self is one or more subselves who distrust and disable or take over your true Self, and affect your thoughts, emotions, body functions, needs, and behaviors. False selves originate in early childhood, when the true Self is undeveloped and doesn't know much about the world. To survive, children must depend on their caregivers' ruling subselves.

        Ideally, their adults are guided by their true Self most of the time. Judging by our U.S. divorce rate, homelessness, obesity, abortions, suicides, "mental illness," bulging jails, drug epidemic, and other social problems, most kids are raised by well-meaning adult false selves. When a false self dominates a personality situationally or chronically, the person's behavior exhibits traits that indicate significant inner wounds.  

        "Growing up" (true maturation) can be seen as the slow process of...

  • the resident true Self developing (a) wisdom (how the world "works") and (b) its innate leadership skills over 30 or more years, and...

  • your other subselves gradually learning to trust and depend on the leadership of your Self and other Regular parts, rather than on caregivers, teachers, hero/ines, and friends.

        I suspect very few co-parents and human-service professionals are aware of our normal subselves so far, so they leave this vital leadership-transfer to chance. The social, cultural, and environmental implications of this unawareness are profound, and steadily dominate our media headlines. 

        For more perspective on - and common symptoms of - typical false selves, see this.

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Q10)  Does having an "inner family" of subselves mean I have "Multiple Personalities"?

        No. Media headlines and programs have sensationalized the tragic psychological condition that used to be called "Multiple Personality Disorder" (MPD) - now called  "Dissociative Identity Disorder" (DID). Like most people, do you automatically associate this condition with craziness or mental illness

        Having a multi-part personality now appears to be normal. The great majority of us adults and kids have an active team of subselves silently shaping our perceptions choices, and behaviors. Psychiatrists guess that ~ 5% of Americans suffer the extreme inner-family disorganization that causes DID behaviors. Most (all?) of these sufferers report massive childhood neglect and abuse - i.e. very wounded caregivers, and very low family nurturance.

        Mental-health workers specializing in "dissociative mental disorders" repeatedly report lasting reductions in DID behaviors over time. This implies that with awareness, skilled guidance, and encouragement, our reactive, disorganized subselves can change toward more inner harmony. Project 1 in this site offers a proven, effective way to do this over time, called parts work.

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Q11)  Can people reduce false-self wounds and free their true Self to lead?

        Yes. As a professional Inner family-systems therapist for over a decade and from my own wound recovery since 1986, I have witnessed scores of courageous women and men confront and reduce their inner wounds, and live more serene, productive, Self-guided lives. I've heard similar results from dozens of other members of the Internal Family Systems Association (IFSA).

        I've also met hundreds of troubled adults who hadn't accumulated enough pain, weariness, and despair