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Child Emotional Abuse (2017 Rerun)

[Rerun] Dr. Kirk Honda talks about child emotional abuse.

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December 9, 2017

The Psychology In Seattle Podcast ®

Trigger Warning: This episode may include topics such as assault, trauma, and discrimination. If necessary, listeners are encouraged to refrain from listening and care for their safety and well-being.

Disclaimer: The content provided is for educational, informational, and entertainment purposes only. Nothing here constitutes personal or professional consultation, therapy, diagnosis, or creates a counselor-client relationship. Topics discussed may generate differing points of view. If you participate (by being a guest, submitting a question, or commenting) you must do so with the knowledge that we cannot control reactions or responses from others, which may not agree with you or feel unfair. Your participation on this site is at your own risk, accepting full responsibility for any liability or harm that may result. Anything you write here may be used for discussion or endorsement of the podcast. Opinions and views expressed by the host and guest hosts are personal views. Although, we take precautions and fact check, they should not be considered facts and the opinions may change. Opinions posted by participants (such as comments) are not those of the hosts. Readers should not rely on any information found here and should perform due diligence before taking any action. For a more extensive description of factors for you to consider, please see www.psychologyinseattle.com

Child Emotional Abuse (2017 Rerun)

Comments

So much of this resonates with me. Honestly my childhood was mentally horrific & now I’m working on judging people better & having better relationships bc I seem to see red flags as green flags (in potential relationships) & in some way my perception of things they’ll say is a bit off, but it’s so hard to work through the gray area of these types of relationships (for me) like I love to joke around and keep a light hearted vibe & say that I joke with a love interest, well, as time goes on, they’ll end up calling me the joke name as a nickname or something? …..but it started as a joke….? So, it’s hard to come back to them being upset since I’d allowed it before. …..Like idk where the line is for me to say, “that’s too far” or to determine if someone truly does or doesn’t care about me….. ugh …friendships and love interests have been the most difficult for me on my mental health journey. (If you can do any videos on……whatever this is with relationships that would be awesome!)

Jessica Davis

Hello! Sorry, it's an unrelated comment but have you considered reacting to the ultimatum: South Africa? There's one person who I'd love to see you react to. Also, I'm from South Africa so it would just be interesting for me🙈😂 I'm enjoying your videos on sister wives btw😋

Rosanne Bjorkman

Thank you, great content. I guess the difficulty about defining emotional abuse is that the victim ‘decides’ whether it felt abortive or not. I can imagine scenarios where this might feel abused but weren’t. For example, I was once accused of being abusive because I entered the same room as someone who disliked me, and the person claimed it made them feel uncomfortable. They felt abused, even though I had rarely even spoken to them.

Vaughan Dutton

I got yelled at work this week :/ I didn't care about the yelling. I was late to the meeting, so got exposed to a part of it (I'm happy to find out my tardiness was a factor.). It felt like abuse, but I'm already thinking "Game on, what else can I do to piss this guy off?" It's still complicated though. I cried a lot this week. Never in public. Probably some others (who also got yelled at) did too. I talked to the guy who yelled at us. I think he likes me in his narcisistic way, which is soo soo sad. A lot ot talk, zero connection. Talking to him made me feel abandoned. Plus, I think I will lose a friend over this. She likes this guy's management style, and when I talked about what happened, she told me to calm down. This is also a pattern of mine. Once again, I made friends with a woman that is attached to a male abuser. I cried the most when I realized I have to let go of this friend to survive work. The friendship is kind of over for me. All this made feel very lonely and abandoned. This is all an outcome of this manager yelling at me.

GO!《cɛn


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