Can You Trust Your Own Perceptions?
If you’re familiar with the psychological term
“transference,” you probably associate it with a client in therapy transferring
certain feelings onto their analyst. Yet, the meaning of transference is a bit
broader and refers to a redirection of emotions, often that originate in
childhood, onto someone in the present. As one article on MentalHelp.net put
it, “Transference is a very fundamental process that human beings are
constantly doing for better and for worse.” Because this is not a conscious
process, it can be very hard to wrap our head around the fact that the
projections or assumptions we make about others have a lot to do with something
that isn’t even happening in the here and now.
As human beings, we’re designed to believe our own
perceptions. In our relationships with other people, we tend to always trust
our own opinion or think we’re right. However, if we were to take into account
that some of our emotional reactions are based more on what happened to us than
what’s happening to us, we might be a bit more humble. So much of the filter
through which we view ourselves and the world around us has to do with our
early life and the adaptations we made to our specific surroundings.
Humans are adaptive creatures. As kids, we adjust to our
social environment as part of our survival. Our sensory pathways start to
develop as early as three months before we’re even born. The first six years
are a critical period in which we lay down many neural circuits of our brain.
Events that occur in this timeframe can therefore shape how reactive we are and
how triggered we’ll be into different states later in life. Because of this,
any early adversity we experience heavily influences how we process the world
around us.
Our attachment style with key figures in our formative years
become internal “working models” we develop of how relationships function, thus
influencing how we perceive or experience interpersonal connections throughout
our lives. We may grow up questioning if others are trustworthy or if it’s safe
to express what we want. We may feel ready for people to turn on us. We may
start to see the people closest to us in our adult lives as being similar to
people in our family. Our early attachment patterns can skew our reality and
distort the ways we see others, believing them to be more critical, rejecting,
controlling, possessive etc. than they actually are.
Our early childhood relationships not only affect our
perceptions of how we’re being treated, but they influence how we treat those
around us. Misperceptions based on our past help explain how worked up we get
when certain words or expressions set us off. Each of us has triggers that are
built in us based on our early childhood experiences. These little triggers can
lead to large reactions.
We can all think of a friend who went off track all of a
sudden, whose reaction seemed to have little to do with reality, but it’s much
harder to notice when we ourselves are overreacting or misperceiving. However,
getting to know our triggers can help us identify when our reactions aren’t in
sync with what’s going on in the moment. For example, if we felt neglected as
kids, we may have the tendency to mistakenly think we’re being disregarded as
adults. We may easily find reasons to feel slighted or rejected. If we grew up
in an erratic or intrusive environment, we may be quick to distrust or wary of
commitment. Depending on our specific pattern or trigger, one little thing a
person (particularly someone close to us) does can be blown way out of
proportion, stirring up intensity from way back in history.
The projections we make onto people in our lives can affect
everything from our relationships to our parenting style to our careers. We may
project feelings from our childhood onto our own kids. If we felt deprived in
our early years, we may view our children as feeling denied and compensate by
overindulging them. If we felt left out in our original family, in our adult
relationships, we may perceive our partner as rejecting every time he or she
chooses to do something without us. If we were often insulted as kids, we may
view our boss as being critical of us by reading into his or her comments or
facial expressions. In each of these cases, we aren’t really seeing the current
figures in our lives for who they really are but through a filter of our own
expectations.
Of course, it’s valuable to have confidence and trust
ourselves. But there are certainly times in our lives when our perspective is
clouded by negative overlays from our past and by our own internal critic that
casts doubt and criticism on all we do. So, the question becomes how can we
separate these overlays from our real point of view? By learning how we may be
distorting people in our lives, we gain insight into our history and our
patterns of thinking. The more we can understand how our past informs our
present, the more we can shed the undesirable layers or emotional baggage that
may be having a negative impact on our current relationships.
One clue as to whether or not we’re reacting rationally to a
real-life situation or being triggered by old feelings is to notice those
moments when our mood suddenly shifts or a pang of emotions overwhelms us. It
may feel like a switch has been flipped on or an alarm has gone off in our
minds. Apart from our immediate emotional reaction, if we notice ourselves
finding hidden meaning in other people’s words or behaviors or if we start
building a case or feeling victimized, shamed, cast aside or disrespected, this
may be a time to dig deeper into why.
We should think about whatever sparked this reaction: a
certain question from a co-worker, an absentminded comment from our spouse, a
small defiance from our child. Instead of assuming that the co-worker doesn’t
listen to us, that our spouse is being critical or that our child is out of
control, we may want to consider that something else is going on inside us that
has little to do with them. We tend to be extra sensitive to ways of being
treated that hurt us in the past. We may even be looking for or misinterpreting
interactions to fit in with an old way of feeling or seeing ourselves that,
though painful, can feel comfortable in its familiarity.
My point here is not to insinuate that all of our current
reactions are merely reactions to our past. It’s simply to offer a new way of
looking at the world that can help us make sense of some of our perceptions
that may be off and to alter our behavior accordingly. This is why I tell
people it is so important to fully feel and make sense of our childhood. It is
a gateway to living our lives in a way that matters to us, free from the less
desirable overlays of our history. It can help us distinguish any paranoid,
suspicious, critical, insecure thoughts from our true point of view.
Ironically, to do this we may have to be a little more humble and accepting of
the notion that our point of view isn’t always accurate. We’ll have to accept
that to see the world the way it is, we have to let go of the way it once was.
See you all tomorrow.
Buh-bye.
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