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Section: Recognize Abuse
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Step Away from Double Binds
Double binds are used to display power and gain control over others.
They occur in daily life and also in extreme abuse.
Victims often feel confusion, rage, and despair at their entrapment and
apparent lack of options.
You can effectively counter double binds by taking a step back and
releasing your feelings, fully describing the situation, and choosing
among many courses of action.
A double bind is technically defined as a situation where:
- Explicitly, if you do some Action, you'll be punished
- Implicitly, if you don't do that Action, you'll also be punished
- If you bring up the contradiction, you'll be punished
- You can't leave the situation
Medical double bind
For example, some doctors use their position of authority to put their
patients in
victim-blaming double binds.
- If you go to the doctor with serious symptoms, you're told
you should have come in sooner.
- If you go to the doctor with mild or vague symptoms, you're labeled
hypochondriac or drug-seeking.
- If you point out the contradiction, you're labeled uncooperative.
- You still need medical care.
Countering double binds
If you're feeling trapped, rageful, or despairing, you may be
experiencing a double bind. Take a step back from the situation and find
some time and privacy to release your feelings. After that, you'll have
more clarity to look at your options.
The first step in countering a double bind is to write down each part
as specifically as you can, including conflicting commands, punishments,
consequences of naming the contradiction, and inability to leave the situation.
If you notice that some part of the double bind is missing, that's great!
You have already found a possible exit from the trap. Past experiences of
double binds can lead to
feelings of helplessness even if the current
situation doesn't meet all the conditions.
Accommodation and escape
Once you've described a double bind, there are many options to address it.
Each situation is different,
and one or more options may apply at different times.
- It's not you. Remember, there's something wrong with the
situation, not with you.
- Question the statements. Is it true that you'll be
punished?
- Redefine punishment. To a child, withdrawal of approval feels
intolerable. An adult can find other sources of approval.
- Change the focus. In some cases, you can productively direct
attention outside the double bind. In the medical example, you
could say, "Let's focus on present symptoms and ways to treat them."
- Meet your own standards. Since all choices lead to punishment,
make the the choices that meet your own approval.
- Look for allies within the situation. In the medical example,
are there supportive members of the doctor's practice?
- Ask for help. Name the problem to outside witnesses or
authorities. Stay aware of your own power as you ask for help, rather
than sliding into a
Victim/Rescuer position.
- Get external support. Seek out people and activities that help you feel
strong and resilient.
- Walk away. It's a big world. Have faith that you can get your
needs met in abuse-free ways. Keep looking for and creating those ways.
You might try one solution and then another, finding your own
Middle Way between
accommodation and escape. Perhaps you'll tolerate a difficult doctor until
you hear of a more sympathetic doctor across town.
When you couldn't break free
Double binds are used in ritual abuse and torture, where the victim
does not have the power and resources to break free. Faced with contrived
choices between harming others and being harmed themselves, victims do their
best to survive the chaotic, arbitrary environment. Domestic violence
can follow this pattern as well.
Once away from immediate danger, survivors struggle with feelings of
guilt and helplessness. It can bring relief to analyze the double bind and put
responsibility for the outcome on the people who created it. Grieve for
the helplessness of the past, and think of positive actions to take in the
future. With time,
self-forgiveness becomes possible.
Internal double binds
Sometimes we carry internal double binds. For example, someone healing from
domestic violence might say:
- If I have many PTSD symptoms, then I'm broken and worthless.
- If I have few symptoms, then the abuse wasn't that bad.
- Once I notice the contradiction, it does bring relief.
- It is hard to escape my own beliefs.
This case is only a full double bind while the contradictory beliefs
remain unconscious. Once the double bind is articulated, it loses its force.
Questioning the beliefs and getting external support
can often help with internal double binds.
Tool for oppression
Double binds are familiar to anyone lacking power in our society.
- Children are threatened with punishment for telling about abuse or bullying. If they don't tell, the abuse continues.
- Women can be penalized in the workplace both for lack of assertiveness and
lack of femininity, with no approved middle ground.
- African-Americans naming racist words and actions are told to "watch
your tone" no matter how gently the racism is pointed out.
Tool for healing
Noticing and countering double binds can help you heal from past abuse,
step away from abuse in the present, and handle petty power games in daily
life. You can also bring awareness to any contradictory expectations you
have of people with less power around you.
Learn more
Paul Gibney's article The Double Bind Theory: Still Crazy-Making After All These Years (pdf) explores Gregory Bateson's original
research on double binds in relation to schizophrenia and contains several
extended double bind examples.
Let me know what you think!
Did this article spark a response in you? I'd love to hear about
it! Call or email to
share your thoughts.
Buy the book
This article is part of Wellspring of Compassion: Self-Care for Sensitive
People Healing from Trauma, available from
WellspringofCompassion.com,
Powell's Books, or Amazon.
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Free Consultation
For a free phone consultation about whether supportive
bodywork can help you handle double binds, call Sonia at
503-334-6434 or
email today.
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Copyright © 2011 Sonia Connolly
Section: Recognize Abuse
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