(09-11-2013, 09:54 PM)MakersDozn Wrote: We talked about this with our T this evening. I said to our T that I feel that some of our others think that I'm naive because I've always been a trusting person.
Our T disagreed with the idea that I've been trusting. She reminded me that throughout our life, people have proven themselves to be *un*trustworthy. And that I experienced this lack of trust at a very early age.
I said that even after repeated disappointment, I've tried even harder to find validation from people. She said that I've kept trying because I've had hope, not trust. I've kept hoping that I would find trust even though I haven't found it so far.
She said that hope and trust are two very different things. She said that trust has to be earned, but hope does not, and that hope is one of the things that keeps us going. Not just me, but people in general.
How can I continue to hope when I repeatedly experience a lack of trust? Am I indeed naive to keep hoping? Am I hurting myself by hoping? Am I hurting the others with me?
What do you think? What are your experiences with hope and trust (or a lack of either or both)?
Thanks,
Charity
Funny, I was working on this today. Kind of continuing project. Instead of the word "hope," I used "expectation." It can also be wishful thinking
I would say I was a generally an open and trusting person. To put it another way, I wasn't looking to distrust, unless I was given reason. There are degrees of trust. I didn't start out with high degree of trust, unless I had to. (As a young child, I had lost trust in my parents. I wavered between expecting them to be trustworthy and not trusting them because they were so volatile.)
The conditions of life change and character responds. Fact of life. Trustworthiness should be re-evaluated from time to time, even in the best of relationships. It's not a matter of testing so much as not overlooking the obvious.
In certain relationships, trust has to be earned up front via honesty and competence (as in specialized knowledge). I no longer walk into a doc's office in a state trust, or even expectation of trust. In fact, my BP goes up.
I have been so betrayed in recent times by three people I had trusted for years, that my ability to trust was blown out of the water. Even earned trust is questioned, for good reason. My attitude is at a baseline of mistrust. That's the way it has to be due to circumstances: medical; political; family.....
Can this hope/expectation re trust cause harm to self? Yes.
I have particular difficulty with people who frequently give double signals. This scenario has been a pattern in my life that has caused havoc. If there's no emotional/sp. attraction or attachment, I'm okay. I refuse to serve the needs of that person; I don't trust, and will say so. However, if there is a bond (personal or professional), I can have a problem, as I want to trust because of my feelings and because there are times of trust, there can be expectation. My experience has mostly been with people were like a flag in the wind. I didn't know if I was going to be loved or emotionally ab*s*d. Even when I had determined some predictability of that person's behavior, I had an Expectation of being treated nicely the next minute, or hour or day. I also realized this couldn't be maintained by that person. I would choose to overlook the unpleasant treatment, put up with it, because of the special quality of the relationship on the positive side. The hope was that my honesty, trustworthiness and sweetness would make it so the person (a close platonic friendship or a romance would be the setting) had no reason to treat me poorly. But the reason might have nothing to do with what I do. It's a losing battle. I know what it takes to leave such relationships, and I've done it, eventually losing all desire to return. But harm was done: lost years and waste of energy; loss of potential social contacts; even loss of reputation.
It didn't do the other person good because my acquiescence empowers, though with the people with whom I've had experience, the person had little control over themselves, but could be very charming. Something clicked and I was hooked as a friend, trusted student, love interest, whatever, until I couldn't take it anymore. That could be defined as there being a demand that I do or say something that went against my identity and standards and I could see how this could evolve.
time for a nap,
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