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Miscellaneous Destructive Control Behaviors
Written by Clinton Clark   
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Dec 15, 2008 A +  A -  RESET  

Miscellaneous Control Behaviors

  • Forbidding the use of the phone (forced isolation).
  • Forbidding friendships (forced isolation).
  • Forced fed (having to eat when full or eat something distasteful).
  • Forced poverty or the lack of purchasing power (controlling money to control the quality of life).
  • Forced babysitting (forced to watch younger siblings, cousins, or others).
  • Forced dress (dress codes). Having to look good to maintain (control) a false impression.
  • Setting someone up to fail.
    • Examples:
    • a - Allowing the child to make a choice, then discounting or disapproving of their choice.
    • b - Asking a child for an opinion, then discounting it. *
    • c - Asking a child to do something, then ignoring or discounting the results. *
  • Distrusting the child continuously, analyzing the child, making false assumptions. *
  • Forced to get along (having to get along with people even if I don't like them).
  • Forced activity
    • Example:
    • 1. "We will do this and you're are going to like it, or else!"
    • 2. "Do this or you'll be punished!" (excludes safe boundary setting for the child).
    • 3. "I've got it all planned out and you'll like it (and I'll make you participate)."
* Leads the child to believe they are "not good enough."

Controlled intimacy

The inability to create intimacy is a common dysfunction in dysfunctional families where one or both of the parents have a dependency relationship with the child. The child is forced to be close (or held close through the use of destructive control behaviors) instead of being allowed to choose to be close. In this way the child is being used like a drug in order for the addict to "feel better" (secure, in control of possible abandonment, etc). The addict parent substitutes controlled intimacy (or forced intimacy) for true intimacy. True intimacy is a choice by the participants in the relationship to choose to be close and not a controlled-to-be-close alternative. The addict, by forcing the child to be close, experiences an imagined sense of security. The addict parent is unable to create a healthy sense of security by allowing the child to choose to be close. This forced closeness creates a sense (for the child) of feeling trapped (forced) and the need to run (fight or flight) away from the addict. True .i.intimacy; creates a sense of warmth; which the child would naturally gravitate towards (and not away from). Children of addicts feel trapped in the relationship with their addict parents and not like they've been given a choice to be there.

Minor? Repressed Cycles

"Allowing myself to be myself was open to abuse."

Concealed in courtesy or manner, addict parents repress their child's natural body responses to stress and the resolution of stress. More will be discussed about stress cycles in Section II. If I were to consider the following statements and the absence of a socialized myth, I would say that the child is being coerced into repressing his or her needs (to resolve a stress cycle) in order to meet the needs of the family dysfunction. Not being a physician, I am unqualified to answer the question of whether or not there are any medical reasons to coerce a child into prohibiting themselves from taking an action to relieve a stress cycle or behave in an authentically human way.

(said from an angry victimstance)
- "Cross your legs!"
- "Don't argue with the neighbor!"
- "Don't argue with your sister!"
- "Don't babble!"
- "Don't belch!"
- "Don't bite your nails!"
- "Don't bite your sister!"
- "Don't blow bubbles!"
- "Don't chew on that!"
- "Don't chew your cud!"
- "Don't cry!"
- "Don't get dirty!"
- "Don't hiccup; get a drink of water!"
- "Don't hit or bite anyone!"
- "Don't hit your sister!"
- "Don't hold your stomach!"
- "Don't laugh!"
- "Don't make a mess!"
- "Don't moan!"
- "Don't mope around!"
- "Don't pass gas!"
- "Don't pee* outside!"
*(pee, tinkle, go number one, etc.)

- "Don't pee your pants!"
- "Don't pee in the car!"
- "Quit coughing!"
- "Quit picking sleep out of your eyes!"

- "Sit still!"
- "Sit up straight!"
- "Stop blowing your nose!"
- "Stop clearing your throat!"
- "Don't pick at your feet!"
- "Don't pick your butt!"
- "Don't pick your ear wax!"
- "Don't pick your nose!"
- "Don't pick your teeth!"
- "Don't play with your food!"
- "Don't play with yourself!"
- "Don't poop your pants!"
- "Don't scratch yourself!"
- "Don't sigh!"
- "Don't sleep with that blanket; "It's dirty!" "Big boys don't sleep with blankets!"

- "Don't snoop!" (don't explore your environment to create a sense of safety)

- "Don't spit that out!"
- "Don't spit!"
- "Don't suck your thumb!"
- "Don't throw-up!"
- "Don't whine!"
- "Don't yawn!"
- "Don't yell!"
- "Eat your food; I don't care if you're full!"
- "Get to bed now!" (adult need verses age appropriate limits)
- "Stop running!"
- "Stop sneezing!"
- "Stop that shaking!"
- "Talk right!"
- "You're getting fat!" "You'd better stop eating!"


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Last Updated( Jan 30, 2009 )
reviewed by: Harry Croft, MD
Psychiatrist, HealthyPlace.com Medical Director
 

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