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Defense mechanisms
In the beginning, I will quote a text of an author I won't name:
"People who love themselves, don't try to hurt others" says Oprah Winfrey, talk-show queen. She must have never heard of Hitler, Stalin, Mao Tse Tung... mass murderers with very high self-esteem and self-confidence. She probably hasn't heard of children who bully their peers. Those wild kids surely lack many things, but not self-esteem.
"Violent people are violent because their self-esteem and self-confidence are unrealistically high. Many violent criminals describe themselves as powerful, special and elite people who deserve special treatment" says Ulla Lovenkrands, Danish psychologist who spent 20 years studying criminal psychology."
"Street gang members have high opinions of themselves and demand respect from others. Bullies from school playgrounds consider themselves more special than others. Low self-esteem and self-confidence are found amongst victims of violence, not amongst violent people."
This kind of attitude is typical for people who lack psychological education and the insight in their own emotional processes. It's surprisingly superficial and hasty from an educated psychologist.
First, in the above quotes only the external behavior is recognized, only those feelings which the violent people are able to admit to themselves and others. External confidence is equaled to self-esteem and defense mechanisms to true, deep feelings. Self-esteem is also indirectly equaled with lessened sensitivity to others' needs.
If you are ready to truly look within yourself, deeper than the surface feelings, you will notice that often some feelings mask and hide others. The feelings that make us feel safer and stronger seem to be protection from deeper and more unpleasant feelings. A simple and common example is that some people weren't allowed to express anger as children, but they were allowed to cry. They started to feel uncomfortable with anger, maybe even scared of it, but sadness was safe enough, so it could be used instead of anger to express discomfort. Do you sometimes cry out of anger? It might be a sign of such a pattern.
Violence and arrogance are the result of an opposite process, in which guilt, shame, scorn for oneself and one's feelings are suppressed and masked with anger and false strength. Perhaps sadness, embarassment, shame were too frightening, or the environment responded in a humiliating way to them. Such children learn to mask those feelings with false power and confidence, if they notice that it's a way to avoid being hurt by others. Usually they have models of similar adult people around them.
Why do such people scorn gentle feelings and can't express them? Because they feel them as frightening vulnerability and weakness. Is this self-love? How can such a scornful attitude to the most gentle parts of oneself be called self-esteem? The true self-esteem means appreciating those kind feelings the most.
A superficial observer might say that violent and arrogant people have no compassion and kind feelings. That would imply that they were somehow born without them, or neglected them out of their own will. I claim that such people suppress their gentle feelings in a very early age and vere never able to develop them. Why did they suppress such feelings? Obviously not because they would have felt comfortable and safe with expressing such feelings, accepted and respected by people around them.
Emotional confusion within family
The author of the quotes I started with also mentions that some parents teach their children to feel special, better than others, and that they give them unrealistic self-esteem. The desire to be "better than others", "special and elite" implies that we don't feel good enough if we are "one amongs many", equal to others. It means we can't appreciate ourselves just for being here and being who we are. If we examine such families more closely, we'll most commonly find an atmosphere in which encouragement is given verbally, but instead of true compassion, warmth and acceptance, children experience hipocrisy, pretence and conditional love. Parents who act like that are usually not aware of it, they just repeat what they experienced in they own childhood.
What we experience as children, becomes normal to us. Later, if such children see others expressing gentle and kind feelings, they might not be able to feel correspondent feelings and motivation to develop them. They might be afraid of such emotions, or guilty for not expressing them, but then the fear and guilt are suppressed and masked by defensive "strength".
In the family which verbally expresses encouragement and big expectations, but in reality lacks warmth, compassion and healthy boundaries, the child is confused. What he hears from people most important to him, contradicts his instict and feelings. Without enough awareness of his emotions and out of need to trust parents, such a child will usually forget his own feelings and accept what the parents present as the truth. Subconsciously, he will still feel the lack of real love, but will not be able to make it conscious and explain it to himself. In search for a substitute for love, he will use the behavior that others approve, or anything that gives him temporary good feelings. Such substitutes might be power, respect or material gifts.
What is true strength?
The claim that violent children have too much self-esteem, is not logical if we consider the fact that such children normally attack the weakest and most frightened amongst other kids, and they usually attack as a group to a single child. They won't attack children who appear strong and ready to fight back, because they play it safe, they won't risk defeat, hurt and vulnerability. Some of them will later say that they felt what they did was wrong, but they complied because they felt dependent of the approval and support of the rest of the group. Is that self-esteem?
Hitler commited suicide because he wasn't able to face defeat. It is typical for ruthless dictators that they are not capable to tolerate vulnerability, self-doubt or criticism from others. Why not? Because they deeply love and accept themselves?... No, but because such feelings are too painful, they endanger their defense mechanisms and threaten to uncover untolerably painful fear and shame from their childhood.
If you want your children to like themselves, warn them about their faults and unacceptable behavior, but lovingly - so that they can feel that it's allowed to make mistakes sometimes, and that they will still be loved. Don't tell them they are better than others, expect huge achievements from them, while in the same time subtly or less subtly putting them (or other people) down for their weaknesses and vulnerability. Show that you respect them, but also yourself, that everybody has personal boundaries and the right to express them.
Some people give everything to children, while neglecting themselves. This is also confusing to the child. This only shows inconsistency, not real love - a parent who doesn't appreciate himself, can't set boundaries and doesn't feel worthy of it, can't give true love and respect to his child. Then the child turns to what she is able to get as substitute - usually material things and favors. The child might feel that this is not right, but doesn't know how else to feel good. Then she will develop defensive mechanisms, protecting herself from her confusion by convincing herself that she is "special" and "better than others", so that she could continue to use parents and other people around her.
True respect for others and compassion can only come from the ability to feel good about ourselves in the same time. Also, we are not able to understand and be compassionate to others if we don't understand and accept our own emotions and mistakes. Some people show respect to others, but not to themselves. This is, however, not motivated by pleasant emotions, but by fear or guilt, which inevitably produce other negative consequences: indirect or unconscious manipulation, passive aggression or self-destructive attitude, which shows in self-hatred or even physical disease.
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copyright Kosjenka Muk