Monday, April 10th 2017 (Bully and Attack – Part One)
I'm waiting on the bus so that I can make the trip to my own town this afternoon for my session with my clinical psychologist when I am approached by a young woman. She's asking if I have a light so that she might ''enjoy'' a cigarette while she waits. This is the first time this has happened to me since I stubbed my last one back in early February. It's nothing special – it's just interesting, that's all. But let's get to the session I had with my clinical psychologist later in the afternoon. I mention to him that I've been to ACA meetings (Adult Children of Alcoholics and Dysfunctional Families).
Dr. Bacon – ''Could I just ask what prompted that? Because you said you weren't going to AA meetings for three months so I was just wondering....''
Stevie – ''A new meeting just happened to start up last Saturday and I got the invite so I went. Everyone in her phone would have been asked to try to get the numbers up, get a little group going and a little money coming in, so I went....''
Dr. Bacon – ''Can I just ask about that? Can I just ask what your thinking and reasoning around going there, saying that you were taking a step back from going to AA but then going to this, just so that I can sort of get a sense of where you're at.''
Stevie – ''Lots of different reasons, it's something different, Lindsay wanted to go, there's.....I saw someone from AA today, well I say he's in AA but in truth he came for a few weeks and then never came back. I worry when that happens. I don't care about those who are in it for the long haul but I worry when too many new people pop in and then disappear, like they are almost spying on us for a little while without actually committing to being one of us. ACA seems to have a better group in this way.''
Dr. Bacon – ''I'm just really unsure about the decision making behind going to that....''
Stevie – ''I don't know. I just thought I'd check it out.''
Dr. Bacon – ''What were you hoping to get from it do you think?''
Stevie – ''Maybe a part of me knew that around fifty per cent of the members at that fellowship also go to AA meetings and so I wanted to touch base with some of them.''
Dr. Bacon – ''Was there a sort of sense of needing to do that?''
Stevie – ''No, there was a sense that I was actually cheating with my ninety day abstinence thing....I don't know.''
Dr. Bacon – ''I think that there's maybe something important there that we might want to tap into....''
Stevie – ''Don't you think that maybe you're just overthinking it?''
Dr. Bacon – ''Possibly, that's a possibility, but it seems to me that part of your original decision in having that ninety day clean break was so that you could establish a life separate from that kind of identity, that section of people and the community in a way, and then this – and the way you put it is that it's not quite AA so it's not quite breaking the rules but doing a little bit of that anyway, it just seems like a mixed message to me about what you're actually looking for at the moment.''
Stevie – ''Looking for how?......''
Dr. Bacon – ''I mean satisfying some need that we all have. I guess that one of the things I'm wondering.....there's probably more than one reason why people get something from the meetings they attend.....social contact, structure, validation, all of these things that are important to making it a success – but you were talking about separating from that, with a clear idea in your mind about why you were doing that, but I'm wondering if part of what you're attempting to do here is where it becomes relevant for us and our work, is actually attempting to satisfy some psychological needs.....and I just think that's worth pointing out because if that's true, recognising that doing this is an attempt to satisfy a psychological need is extremely important for us to understand because satisfying our psychological needs is at the heart of this Schema Therapy approach, and seeing that our psychological needs have gone unmet in the past is what we think causes problems in the first place, and so understanding how we're meeting our needs in the moment, how conscious we are of them, how aware we are of them, and what we're doing to meet them, is really the crux of what we're trying to do here.''
Stevie - ''…..''
Dr. Bacon – ''So I'm just wondering if cutting yourself off from AA, for the reasons you've previously explained, you've cut yourself off from some of your psychological needs being met and that this is an attempt to satisfy them again?''
Stevie – ''It's possible – the meeting takes place in the very same room as the Tuesday night Step meeting.''
I'm thinking that we're spending too much time talking about this ACA meeting but is my impatience here related to my not wanting to perhaps accept the point he's pushing? AA meets some psychological needs I have and by not going I am cutting myself off from having them met? It would explain a lot. I did go to two ACA meetings recently (although to be fair they did only just start up and I was invited) but after fifty odd days away from the fellowship I award myself a goal the other day in my match against them. Was this goal just a diversionary tactic? It terrifies me that this whole time I've been away from the rooms that some of the daily faces I had got to know have been in a meeting every single day I've been away. No one can say it is in any way positive recovery. It's total and utter dependence!
Dr. Bacon – ''All our behaviours are motivated internally to some degree where it's as simple as the urge to eat, sleep or procreate, or whether it's something more complicated in terms of psychological needs that have to be met, ultimately our behaviour is motivated, it's driven by something..''
Stevie – ''Well I hope it isn't something I've criticised some members for ever since I sobered up.''
Dr. Bacon – ''What's that?''
Stevie – ''There are a few people I've known in AA since I started going who I think go for reasons that are very sad. They go to meetings every single evening, and there's a reason I think that they go and it's not the reasons they say that they go, and I hope it isn't the reason I went to the ACA meeting on Saturday, and that is it's because they're old, and when we get old we get lonely and I just hope that that wasn't why...''
Dr. Bacon – ''Why would that be such a bad thing?''
Stevie – ''Because I'm too young for that. I already have problems about getting old and I think that if I go to meetings more often it makes me feel older. AA is a beautiful thing in theory but its founders could never have predicted the way it would be abused by its members. Old people going to meetings because they're lonely? That's fine, but don't hog the limelight! People who want a safe place away from drink for an evening but who don't have their hearts set on ever being sober? Agan – cool, just don't tell us that you're there to help the new guy when he comes through the door.''
I like this though. This idea that everyone in AA goes to the meetings because they have some unmet psychological needs going on which motivates them to attend. Dr. Bacon finishes this half of our session by mentioning something I take as being filled with great hope for the future:
Dr. Bacon – ''What we're identifying here is a need asking to be satisfied, and I'm not at all saying, and I want to be clear here, this is not to say that attending meetings is the inappropriate way of doing this, more important I think is to try to figure out what this need is, and we're not going to be able to figure that out today, that's going to be a much longer term discovery that we'll have to make, but what it's telling us is that getting that need met is really important, but what is it? Knowing what it is matters, you know!? But whatever it is I think there's a sense that AA was meeting it for a while but wasn't meeting it fully or adequately for you to want to take a step back from it, that's just one perspective.
Stevie - ''…..''
Dr. Bacon – ''The other thing I wanted to talk about today.....was.....to give a little feedback about the questionnaires that you completed. You'll remember that we were looking at modes.''
We were. The Detached Protector being one we covered in the greatest detail.
Stevie – ''It seem like we're going down the Borderline Personality Disorder route, would that be accurate?''
Dr. Bacon – ''Well, at the end of the day a diagnostic approach is very different to what we're trying to do in psychology. We tend to think that we all have these modes, they're intrinsic human qualities, it's just that we all have different combinations of these modes to different degrees and with different intensities if you like. What's really important is the modes, and the patterns that these modes create in your life.''
Stevie – ''Okay.''
Dr. Bacon – ''So – when I scored the Schema Mode Inventory that you completed it gave some results that gave what we were thinking but also some things that we had overlooked which I think would be interesting to have a look at.''
He whips out a little diagram.
Dr. Bacon – ''One of the modes that we hadn't talked about, and one that came out as one of the strongest, was this mode.''
He points to one he's drawn on his diagram marked ''Bully and Attack.''
We decide to have a look at that for the second half of the session.
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Stevie
Done with the first half.
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