lb_lee: A happy little brain with a bandage on it, enclosed within a circle with the words LB Lee. (Default)
[personal profile] lb_lee
If you've been in any plural community, probably the most common question you've seen is, "Am I plural?" Pretty sure it's true for other relevant communities as well.  I figure this is a common part of reassessing yourself on any front--you aren't sure, you think about it a while, then you decide one way or another and move on.  In this capacity, doubt helps you find certainty, far more than if you just plowed in without ever questioning yourself.

But what happens when doubt plagues you for far, far longer?  When that is a doubt you can never, ever appease or move on from?

Well, in that case, I find myself wanting to ask, "What purpose does the doubt serve?"

Denial is crude and it is fragile, but it can also be super-effective.  Don't want to deal with something?  Well, now that something no longer exists!  Hurray, problem solved!  Most people realize that ignoring the dirty dishes in the sink doesn't not actually make them go away, but if whatever it is isn't physically there, attracting flies in their kitchen, it's way easier to dismiss.  Would recognizing you're plural mean you have to do something about it?  Well, that's scary and requires life changes, sooooo claim you're not plural!  Claim nobody's plural!  Anyone who says otherwise is lying, delusional, or brainwashed, and surely that will never, ever bite you in the ass.

With plural doubts in particular, I think the denial also protects from guilt.  Back when I was a violent screamy ragebaby in the system, I didn't have to be guilty about it, because nobody was real!  Realizing I was multiple, and existed, meant having to go, "Oh my god, I was such an asshole," making amends, and actually changing myself into a decent human being.  Obviously, that was a lot to take in, so it took me longer to come around to being multiple, even though I insisted that my reasons were pure emotionless logic.  Sneak had nothing to feel guilty over, so pretty much snapped to accepting zer existence right off the bat; ze had no face to save, in that circumstance.

Plurality doubts can also just be a distraction from even deeper, scarier problems.  In this case, plurality just becomes a symbol for something else.  Is there trauma in your life?  Don't want to look at it?  Well, if you're not plural, then OBVIOUSLY you're not traumatized, hurray, problem solved!  Or say, maybe your system reflects gender dynamics that make you suuuuper uncomfortable, but if you were singlet, you could just ignore all that!  Or maybe there's that one headmate who calls into question your own religious beliefs, and denying the headmate becomes a way to avoid those niggling worries. (After all, where do you think that old evil demon alter phenomenon came from?  Headmates often become symbols for the things we don't want to deal with.)

The denial becomes protective, the equivalent of your brain whispering, "Shh, don't look at that.  Everything's fine.  Nothing to worry about.  Shhhhhh."

As we've aged, we've grown to find the "shh, don't look at that" to be a huge red flag.  The whole purpose of doubt, in its best form, is to make you question yourself, look hard, and find clarity.  Doubt that DISSUADES you from questioning and looking, that's obviously not doubt in its best form.  That's clearly something more dubious, something that thrives on avoidance.

So, what is it that you want to avoid?  And is avoiding it really going to protect you when things go wrong?

--Rogan

Date: 2018-09-20 12:41 pm (UTC)
starfallhaven: a black-and white illustration of a boy with messy black hair and a black leather coat with a white mask covering his eyes on a stark red background. (Katsuhiro)
From: [personal profile] starfallhaven
We get denial these days mostly for new people. In fact, it's kind of become a running joke in our household, and our partners do it too. "So is that [new person] or are you still in denial about them?" Or "I'd say it was [new person] but I'm in denial about it." As funny as it can be to make it into a joke, it really isn't. It makes it really unpleasant for the new person to be told they don't exist.

We don't know how to shake it. I'm sure it stems from Artemis still being ashamed of being multiple. The rest of us are better about it, but when it's someone we don't want other people to know about, we can be pretty bad about it too.
Edited Date: 2018-09-20 12:42 pm (UTC)
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