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Sometimes at moments of particular stress, one adult will turn to another and say:
‘Stop behaving like a child.’ Or even, ‘Act your age.’
This isn’t merely rude - though it might be that too. In contact with given challenges,
we revert back to an earlier stage in our development. We leave behind our adult faculties,
the ones associated with reason, logic, calm, strength, forbearance and perspective, and slip
very quickly into a child-like spectrum marked by panic, rage, despair, terror and appeasement.
The specific occasions that shift us from adult to child are an individual guide to our own traumas.
The reason why we behave like a child is that traumas selectively arrest development. A part
of us will remain fixed at whatever age we become traumatised at; so though we may be 28 or 72,
we will to all intents - in contact with a certain inflammatory situation - resemble the frightened,
bewildered and ashamed 3 or 5 year old we once were - though we’ll be unlikely to
notice this. No bell goes off in the mind to signal, ‘You’re now shifting from being
32 to being 2.’ The transition happens in a flash, and it’s the work of years of therapy
and self-exploration to be able to notice the shift and take measures to attenuate the damage.
To guess at our original traumas, we need only to study triggering situations and generalise
outwards from them. Let’s imagine that we get very worked up about a difficulty at passport
control with a stern officer or about a dispute with a neighbour who is threatening legal action
because a tree we planted is blocking their view. When we erase away the local details,
we may be able to see an elemental structure and can then ask ourselves questions accordingly:
a powerful man is adopting a bullying manner towards us. Does this remind us of
anything in the past? Or: we’re suddenly being accused of having done something ‘bad’ that we
had no idea about and the repercussions feel severe. Does this sound in any way familiar?
Memories tend to emerge. That stern passport officer might map with eerie
precision onto an extremely frightening father. Or a legal dispute might in its
psychological fundamentals hint at at some awful bullying one suffered at school.
When there is a certain kind of crisis, we should notice how fast we fall through
the floors of adulthood, ten or twenty or forty years/storeys below the present to
the child-like basement. A part of us needs to hold the other steady, see the hole blown in our
minds by a triggering event - then ensure that we step carefully around the gap and take a seat
somewhere very safe on the edge of the room, while we wait for reason to repair the damage.
We’re so afraid of patronising ourselves, we can find it hard to accept the bewildering
way in which, in certain areas, we truly can be slammed back into being a frightened, panicky,
perspective-less young version of ourselves. The floors in our minds may be prone to collapse at
moments of stress; but knowing the hazard is more than half-way to a solution - and greater calm.