something about my therapist

I realised that I haven’t been posting anything at all. It kinda goes against the motto of this blog, which is to post whatever comes into my mind without protest or planning, really.

And best if it’s in one go. So here’s something:

In one of my latest sessions I was told that I had a “black room” inside myself. This was after I had described to her when I had lived in the basement as a child, with my parents. It was damp. The conditions weren’t that great. There was an evil Hong Kong person who was in charge, good with the British owners, who seemed to make our lives miserable but whom my dad had to answer to anyway. I digress.

Anyway I have apparently internalised this place inside of myself, even though I’m no longer 7-11 (I moved out when I was 11 with my mum to a much posher, 4th floor flat smack in the central district of London (I kind-of miss it).

So what is the black room and how does it affect myself and my personality today?

Home is other people

When i was growing up, i didn’t understand this.

Sometimes I find stories that are similar to my own. This one, where the person grew up in a religious cult, is not that dissimilar to mine.

What is it that is similar about being in a cult and my family? Is it the boundaries where you are not allowed to step outside the box and define who you really are for yourself?

dark daddy

Who is the man who I’m constantly attracted to?

Don Draper has a drinking problem, and his drinking problem is supported by his partners. It’s only because they support this drinking problem that they are even in the relationship in the first place.

I had a friend who when I ate lunch with at a Cantonese restaurant told me that my attraction to the dark types will disappear once I’ve made my peace with the archetype- which probably means, my father.

But why is the darkness so sweet and so tempting? falling into it feels delicious. And what are the times and reasons that we fall into it, willy-nilly?

georgia/beijing

currently watching the Netflix series Chef’s Table, This Georgian woman went back to Georgia after moving to NYC with her parents when she was 11. Her parents thought that things would be better in New York, but somehow she changed her mind.

For a long time she wondered what she was doing there; in Georgia, where the pace of life was slow.

But she discovered something that she wouldn’t have discovered if she’d stayed in New York.

It’s more difficult being back in Georgia- it’s backwards, people don’t understand it. It’s constantly on her mind, too.

dirt

so during the coronavirus i had an online therapy session yesterday.

she explained to me the feeling i had of being dirty, where did this feeling come from?

the wall street journal had called China ‘the sick man of Asia’ during coverage of the Coronavirus.

all of this sickness seems to have melded into me.

what happened when i was a child, which meant that showing someone something of myself would lead to myself being abandoned? my mother was here visiting her mother in Jinan just after the Spring Festival. I knew the virus was starting but didn’t warn her not to come (how could I do that? I’m not psychic) and she came anyway.

over a week or more of panic and closeness where we were in daily contact i thought we had gotten close. It turned out maybe we hadn’t, because when she skipped over Beijing during a time of my most unhappy and perhaps fearful time she had decided not to see me. Then i had three crappy days when i thought i had been infected by the virus. (when i hadn’t)

What was it that had happened which meant that i had to hide a part of myself, where if i told her how i really felt, i would be abandoned, taken away, rejected, that primal fear of being rejected.

Oh, and did I say that I am a magnet for this kind of person?

Add title

A greasy page of my diary from April 11, 2015

The first part of this reads:

“Apparently it is very safe to fly. On the way back it is better than going. When you think about it flying is kinda crazy, a little tube going through the air. aI have the habit of writing things down during the flight. I have been flying international routes yearly since I was seven; the average journey has been ten hours. What unconscious impact has this had for the last 21 years.”

old diary entry that i found in my inbox

The Diary entry of its entirety is here:

Diary today July 22 2014Today I read a weixin post from a “Beijingren” account, the blog post was roughly called “Stories of my grandpa and me” or “the two of us–grandpa and me” it was a long post separated into two parts. Taking about an hour to read each, if read carefully.  I spent the evening crying, I couldn’t believe the parallels in the story. At the end of each section–he was brought up by his grandfather, unlike me, was really abandoned by his mother, who didn’t want him after the divorce, and his father took his sister and relocated to the South. So in a colloquial style that he puts down his life as a child with his granddad. At the end of every section, he would say: “He was 88, I was 16”  Or “He was 99, I was 27.” And the unfairness of having 72 years between them. The way he wrote it though was colloquial, and the way he described sleeping in the same bed with his grandpa (as had I!) and how his grandpa would tell him all the stories of people who lived in the hutong; including the crazy woman who went crazy because her husband left with their child. And the other stories and people. The colloquialism is that he usually falls asleep, and doesn’t realise that he is falling asleep, and sorta takes this old person for granted. 
I remember that I had just had a maxiao and putting the fingers and hands on my face and how much it stung, on the unders of my eyes, and underneath each nostril. I was crying hard. Because the guy was describing from the age of a couple of years to the age of 28, which is a long time. The grandfather gets older and older, and he goes to live with his dad when he is 12, and his granddad visits, and he comes back during the new year. And he goes abroad to study and gets older, and you don’t realise how much time has passed, but they’re probably still essentially in the messy, real relationship but also a relationship that’s not especially deep. It’s written playfully, and it feels playful, but the years have passed. Maybe essentially we don’t change, and  

trust and ill-trust

There are so many facets to trust in this story, in this society.

This is one thought (of many) that I had, which is when my family lied to me about my grandfather dying, all trust with them kinda broke.

It is one thing to forgive them, and another to worry about it and then go back and constantly get that trust broken and re-broken.

understanding

I realised this today biking on the way to the outlets mall here in Beijing.

That unless my family felt a sense of superiority, there is nothing else.

Where did this impulse come from? What is wrong with being average or just adequate?

And how has this dictated our entire family and its structure? And is this the reason why nobody shows weakness?