We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Inside an Internal Family Systems (IFS) Therapy Session with Glennon & Richard C. Schwartz
Episode Date: April 2, 2024295. Inside an Internal Family Systems (IFS) Therapy Session with Glennon & Richard C. Schwartz You don’t want to miss this riveting deep dive into Internal Family Systems (IFS) – the revolutiona...ry therapy model that Glennon has been using in her recovery – with IFS founder Dr. Richard C. Schwartz. Dr. Schwartz even does an on-air IFS session with Glennon! Discover: -Finally, the answer to the question “Why do I do what I don’t want to do?” -How our parts get exiled or locked away and the path to free them; -Why your self-sabotaging parts often believe you are a very little kid and how to update them; and -The must-hear healing revelation from Glennon’s live therapy session with Dr. Schwartz. CW: Self-harm, eating disorders For our prior episodes that deal with IFS, check out: Episode 170. The Most Radical Way to Heal: Internal Family Systems with Dr. Becky Kennedy; and Episode 252. Martha Beck Helps Amanda Let Go Richard C. Schwartz, PhD, is the creator of Internal Family Systems, a highly effective, evidence-based therapeutic model that depathologizes the multi-part personality. His IFS Institute offers training for professionals and the general public. He is currently on the faculty of Harvard Medical School, and has published five books, including No Bad Parts: Healing Trauma and Restoring Wholeness with the Internal Family Systems Model. Social Media: Instagram: @internalfamilysystems To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi everybody. Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things. In thinking about this episode, I want to
say this. This episode is for anyone who thinks of themselves as a relatively intelligent person, but has things that they
do in their life that they don't understand why they do them.
I.e. every single one of us listening?
Well, I don't know. Maybe some people understand themselves completely, but what I will say is I am a person who understood most of myself, but had a self-sabotaging,
many self-sabotaging actions.
So I'm talking about eating disorder stuff right now.
But I know a lot of people who have parts of themselves that sabotage themselves, like
shut down in relationships, like lash out.
I mean, there's a million things that people do.
And at the end of the day, they say, why do I do that?
And how do I stop?
And the person who's here today has helped me more than anyone else
start to understand why I do the things I do that are harmful.
Actually, that's it.
That's as far as I've gotten.
Okay.
But that in itself has been a revolution.
So Richard C. Schwartz, PhD is the creator
of Internal Family Systems,
a freaking celebrity for our pod squatters.
A highly effective evidence-based therapeutic model that depathologizes the multi-part personality.
His IFS Institute offers training for professionals and the general public.
He is currently on the faculty of Harvard Medical School and has published five books, including No Bad Parts,
Healing Trauma and Restoring Wholeness
with the Internal Family Systems Model.
Thank you for your work and thank you
for being with us today.
And what should I call you, Dr. Schwartz?
No, call me Dick.
Okay, thank you, Dick.
It's amazing to call you that after like your,
I mean, your work has informed the people that helped me, my therapist.
So thank you for what you've done.
Thank you. I had no idea that you have had so much experience and I'm very honored to be invited on this.
I didn't realize what a big deal it was until my wife told me, who is a huge fan and knows all of you very intimately.
Well it's totally changed our marriage in ways and the way that we communicate with each other.
I don't know I just think that there's this personalization that we have with all the parts
of ourselves and when you can break yourself into or at least explain yourself through these parts, it manages to cut through the hurt
feelings in a way because it makes it a little bit less personal. I don't know if I'm saying
that right, but it's just been so helpful for both Glennon and I, so thank you.
Well again, I'm just honored to hear this. I didn't realize.
When I was thinking about how I wanted the pod squad to hear you speak first, I kept thinking
about the girl in treatment who was cutting.
Can you tell that story?
Your work started in eating disorder recovery, right?
That's right, yeah.
Yeah, this goes back.
This is our 40-year anniversary of the development
of the model.
So I'm very old, and it's been a long journey.
I started out as a family therapist, I have a PhD in that, and was one of those obnoxious
family therapists that at the time thought we'd found the holy grail and people that
mucked around in the inner world were wasting their time because we could change all that
by just reorganizing families.
And we set out to prove that
and did an outcome study with bulimia.
So gathered together 30 bulimic kids and their families.
And I found I could reorganize the families
just the way the book said to.
And my clients didn't realize they'd been cured
because they kept binging and purging
despite all this great family therapy.
And so I asked why,
and they started talking this language of parts,
which was foreign to me at the time.
And they were talking about these parts
as if they had a lot of autonomy.
And like you said in the intro, could make them do things they didn't want to do but they didn't know why, like binge
and purge.
So at some point I got over my, oh my god, these people are really sick and started listening
inside myself and oh my god, I've got them too.
And then I started getting really curious and had a few clients that were extremely
articulate about the whole phenomenon.
Basically toddled all this to me.
But at first I was treating these parts or thinking of them the way the field still does
by and large, which is the binge is an out of control impulse and then there's that
nasty critic inside and it's just an
internalization of your father's voice or something.
So when you think of them that way, you don't have many alternatives in terms of how to
help your client relate to them other than fight with the critic, control the binge.
And it wasn't until the client you mentioned,
because I tried doing that.
My clients were getting worse as I tried to get them to do this,
but I didn't know what else to do,
because that's the way I was thinking of it.
And then I had the client you mentioned,
who cut herself in addition to the bulimia.
And so at one point I decided I wasn't going to let her out of my obsession
because it was driving me crazy to have her do this on my watch
without that part agreeing not to do it to her that week.
And so after a couple hours of just badgering the part,
it finally said I won't cut her, okay.
And I opened the door to the next session and she had a big gash down the side of her face. And I totally emotionally collapsed at that point and
said I give up I can't beat you at this. And the part said you know I don't
really want to beat you. So that was the turning point in the history of this
model because then I just got curious then why do you do this to her? And it proceeded to tell me the whole history
of how when she was being abused as a child,
it had to step in and distract her from that.
And it turned out, you know, that was a heroic story.
I could actually shift and have a huge appreciation
for how it basically saved her life.
And as I did that, the part broke into tears because everyone had demonized it and tried
to get rid of it.
And finally somebody was understanding it and appreciating it.
And from that I just started trying that same approach to the other clients and the study
and to their eating, their binging parts.
And basically found the same thing, which was just amazing that each of them had a kind
of secret history of how they got into the role they were in.
They didn't like the role they were in, but they didn't think they had a choice.
They still thought the client was five years old often and was in a bad situation that
they needed to protect them
in. And they carry what I call burdens, which are these extreme beliefs and emotions that
come into you during a trauma and sort of adhere to these parts, almost like a virus
and drive the way they operate. So as I got that, everything changed in terms of how I approached people
and how I understood all kinds of psychiatric syndromes.
Hmm. Can you explain IFS, the theory, the idea of it,
like you're explaining it to a third grader?
Okay.
Just in the simplest ways, so people who have not heard of this can kind of grasp it.
Yeah, actually, young kids get this much more quickly
than adults, actually,
because they haven't been socialized away
from the phenomena.
But I would say, you know, you have a part
that does this, right?
They'll say, yeah, I do.
And then there's this one and this one, this one too.
So the basic idea is that in contrast
to the way most of us think of ourselves and our minds,
we're actually multiple personalities,
not in the sense that we have that disorder,
but in the sense that we do have
these autonomous little parts, I call them,
other systems call them sub-personalities
or other names like that, that they are little minds inside of us. And they are what we call
thinking usually. They're just arguing or talking or trying to give us advice all the
time. And it turns out that there are no bad parts, that now after 40 years of doing this,
I can safely say that I've never met a part
that ultimately I didn't like.
And I've worked with parts that have done horrible things.
And even those parts,
when you get your client to be curious about them,
we'll share their secret history
of how they had to do what they do at some point and they got stuck in that role. So like kids in a family though, they start out
just innocent and pure and open and eager, inner children really. But traumas or,
I don't know if a 10 year old would know what a trauma is, but bad parenting, all the kind of things that
come to you as problems in your life,
force them out of their naturally valuable roles into extreme roles
that can be damaging
and also sort of freeze them in time, during the time
of the trauma. So that if I were working with you, Glenn, and I would say, ask this critic
how old it thinks you are. You'll usually get a single digit. It thinks you're still
ten years old and it still has to protect you the way it did back
then.
And then also, as I said, they accrue these extreme beliefs and emotions that then drive
them that we call burdens.
So that's parts.
But the big deal about IFS, the biggest discovery from my point of view, is that in addition to these parts and when they open
space inside, there's a you that has these wonderful qualities, what I call the eight
C's of what I call self-leadership, that include calm, curiosity, confidence, compassion, creativity, courage,
clarity, and connectedness,
that that's who you are at your essence,
and that that can't be damaged,
which was amazing, just amazing to stumble into.
And when you can access that,
that you knows how to relate to these parts in a healing way, and knows how to relate to these parts in a healing way and knows how to relate
to other people in a healing way.
And you'll begin to relate to parts and people from those 8C qualities.
So that's the big discovery of IFS and that it's just beneath the surface of these parts
so that when they open space it pops out spontaneously. So when I'm working with someone I'll access that place first and then in that
state have them begin to get to know whatever part we want to work with.
So that's like the self, the capital S is the... I don't know where I started
thinking of it this way somebody suggested it but it feels like I'm like a big
conference table and there's all these parts of me that are
at the table trying to make decisions.
And then there's like the wise self at the head of the table,
which is my capital S self who believes in and knows and is
made of the seas.
Can you say them again?
So calm.
So at the head of the table, them again? So calm. Uh-huh. So at the head of the table you're feeling pretty calm. You also have a lot of confidence relative to the parts. And
you're very curious about them. You're not assuming things about them. You're
open to hearing from them. And you have compassion. You have a kind of built-in
caring for them that they can sense.
And you see them clearly.
So when you're blended with some of these protective parts,
all you see are distorted images of these parts.
When you're in self, you can see this is just a little kid.
It's not a critic.
And so that's clarity.
And then you can be much more creative in how you relate to them.
So you have creativity, and you feel a connection to them, so connectedness,
and you want to connect with them, the ones you don't feel connected to.
And you have courage. You have the courage to actually go to the places in your psyche that otherwise you'd be really
scared to go to.
So that's one version of the eight seasons.
We actually do have a conference table technique, just like you described.
Oh, no way.
Okay.
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So now I can think of it as there is a me that is at the head of the table.
And so I have a part.
So the bulimic eating disordered, it has changed over time.
It's been binging, it's been purging, it's been anorexic, it's been bulimic, it's been all the things. That is a part. I have spent my whole life
thinking, why am I crazy? I am always trying to figure out, am I crazy or am I
sane or am I good or am I bad? And so this has helped me figure out I'm not
crazy or sane, I'm not good or bad, I just have all of these.
Like I have a part that like the little girl who was cutting or the woman who was cutting
felt like when things get stressful I protect Glennon but how would you describe like what that part is trying to do to help me?
Have you asked yours?
Oh, this is good. Let's go.
I mean, I think a little bit I have asked.
And what does it say? Sure.
Sure.
Shut up, Abby! It sure. Shut up, Abby.
It's saying shut up, Abby.
Mostly.
Do you want Abby to leave the room?
No, no, I love her.
No, no, she's a good part.
Yeah.
OK.
If you want to, I'd do a little piece with you.
OK. OK, great.
Oh, my God, I love this.
All right.
So focus on the eating disorder part and find it in your body or around your body.
Okay.
Where do you find it?
I feel it in my stomach right now.
I'm just going to say whatever comes to my mind because I don't know.
I think so.
You're not going to like fail at this.
This is not a pass fail situation.
That's exactly right. So whatever part worries about that, maybe it could relax back.
Got it. So as you find it in your stomach there, as you notice it there,
how do you feel toward it, Glenna?
I feel very, very, very warm toward it.
Good. Perfect. So let it know that.
And just see how it reacts to your warmth, your compassion.
It just feels like warm, like a melding of colors or something.
Okay, good.
Yeah.
Okay. And do you feel open to getting to know it too?
Yeah, I do.
I think that's what I've been trying to do for the last year.
Okay.
So, ask what it wants you to know about itself and don't think of the answer.
Just wait and if nothing comes, that's okay.
But just see if something does come.
Yeah. What came immediately was,
I've always just tried to protect us.
Okay.
And how do you feel toward it hearing that?
I feel love.
So let it know.
I love you.
And maybe ask it what it's afraid would happen if it didn't do this or do it in the past.
What was it afraid would happen?
I think it was, well, okay, right.
What it said, it's afraid we'll get big.
Uh-huh.
And what would happen?
Ask it what would happen if you got big?
We wouldn't be lovable.
Okay. Does that make sense to you, Glennon?
Yes.
Okay. So let it know that that makes sense. That it was trying to keep you small enough to be lovable.
Mm-hmm. That makes sense.
And see how it reacts to being
understood better. I feel like it's really excited. Now I just feel fucking crazy.
Why? I don't know. Now you're doing great. I think it's excited. It's excited to be heard, right? Yes. Yeah, like
really excited. So ask it now how old it thinks you are. I
don't know. I don't know. I don't think it knows. You're not
getting an answer. No. Okay. Okay, that's fine. To be fair. I
never know how old I am either, so my part's fine.
Numbers are not your specialty.
Yeah, I just wanted you to reassure it that you're not a little kid anymore.
Yeah. So maybe you could just do that even though you didn't get a number.
Yeah, I think. And like that is possible.
But I don't think it feels sure yet.
Yeah, okay.
So ask it more about that, about it's not being sure
that you're not a kid.
I think it feels like...
It's like a little part of me who feels...
hopeful that...
I'm becoming a responsible adult that can take care of things and protect it.
But it's also unsure that it's not completely confident yet.
Okay. So it's like, okay, are you sure you've got this? What do you say? I am more confident than I've ever been
that I am going to be able to lead us.
But I understand its hesitancy to believe that
because we've started and tried so many times.
That's great.
Yeah, let it know you have to keep earning its trust. Yeah. And you plan to do that. Yeah. Yes. See
how it reacts.
Okay, I think it's like, all right.
All right.
I think it's really sweet and hopeful.
And ask in the future, from here on, if there's something it needs from you to earn its trust.
Just ask that question. And don't think, Clenna.
Yeah, it feels like...
A couple of times you preface with I think, so just wait and see what comes.
I...
It feels as if...
And I don't know what this is, but it keeps...
It's like, well then, we'll know when we stop doing things that we shouldn't be doing.
It feels like, why then do you put us in situations
that make us afraid or it's too hard for us,
but you keep doing it.
So you know what it's talking about?
Yeah, but sometimes I feel scared
that what it's talking about is everything.
So ask it, ask it.
Ask if that's everything or if it's just certain situations.
Just ask and wait for the answer.
I don't know, I don't know what it's saying.
Nothing's coming?
Mm-mm.
I mean, some things are coming.
The things that are coming,
are they things that you can not do?
Yeah.
So what do you say to the part about all that?
I want to say that I will experiment with not doing any of the things that that part doesn't want to do. I don't know if we can adult and not do any of the things this part doesn't want to do,
but I actually do. It wants me to do it. Wants me to experiment with not doing any of the things
that this part doesn't want to do. Okay. And what are you saying to it about that?
Okay, and what are you saying to it about that? I'm saying that we will take that request into consideration.
Okay, so there are other parts that want to do these things and would have trouble giving
them up.
Is that right?
Yeah, so that's what we call a polarization.
So maybe tell the part that you're
going to work with these other parts that are so
attached to doing these things.
And we'll see if you can work out some kind of arrangement
or some kind of deal with those parts
and see how it reacts to that idea.
It wants to be the most important.
Okay.
What do you say to it about that?
I get it.
I also want it to be the most important.
I'm obsessed with this little thing.
Whatever the fuck it is.
I am obsessed with this little thing. Whatever the fuck it is. I am obsessed with this part.
For the first time, I really want to do right by this part.
Okay.
How about this then?
Would you be willing to commit to it
for a period of time to not do these other things?
And see how it goes. Yeah. So do that and see how it reacts. Okay. Okay, I think it just wait be patient
it feels happy and playful about that. Okay.
And what's the time period?
Just ask it what it could look like as a test.
Six months.
And how is that for you for these other parts?
Can they do that?
No.
No?
No. No. No. All right. So see if it can shorten the time.
I think what this thing wants to do, in situations where it feels like it can't
be itself. Okay? So this part wants to just say what it wants to say,
wants to be how it wants to be,
wants to not control itself or be scared.
Okay. Sounds reasonable.
Yeah.
But these other parts want to put you in those situations,
where you have to be somebody else.
Okay, so we're not going to resolve it today, but this would be, if I were working with you, this would be a kind of ongoing negotiation. And if we were to take a next step at this point,
I would have you ask the part if it is stuck in the past somewhere that we need to take a next step at this point, I would have you ask the part
if it is stuck in the past somewhere
that we need to get it out of.
And that's a little, often a little more emotional,
so we don't have to do that if you don't want.
But we could.
No, we can.
Okay.
So ask it where it might be stuck in the past and don't think, just wait and see
what comes. Because your thinking mind will get it wrong. So just wait and see if something
comes now.
I mean, what comes is that this part isn't stuck in the past. This part is presently
joyful and it's all the like parts that don't want me to do
what that part wants me to do that is stuck in the past.
Okay.
That's good to know.
Let it know you get that.
It's like this part wants me to believe
that we can just play and be happy.
But the other parts are like, no, you can't.
You have to do the thing.
You have to ghost, you have to be with those people.
You have to do the work.
You have to follow the schedule.
You have to do all these things.
It's like, those are the parts in the past.
This one is just,
I think she's right. parts in the past. This one is just...
I think she's right. I do too. So ask her if she'd like us to work with one of those other parts.
Yes, that's what she would like. She wants to be left the fuck alone.
All right. Should we keep going?
Yeah.
All right.
So focus on that driven part that's always pushing.
You find it in your body, around your body?
Yeah.
Where do you find it?
It's like much higher.
It's very chesty and shouldery and heady.
How do you feel toward it?
I feel tight. Tight like afraid of it or tight like it makes you feel toward it? I feel tight.
Tight like afraid of it or tight like it makes you feel tight?
It makes me feel rigid.
Yeah, but how do you feel toward it?
I feel a little bit
uptight or scared or
scared of it?
What's the word? I don't feel scared of it.
I feel
bossed around by it.
I feel like...
Mm-hmm.
Sort of controlled by it.
Yeah.
Yes.
Which is what that part was complaining about.
Yes. Right.
And like, it doesn't have a lot of breath. Yeah. Yes. Which is what that part was complaining about. Yes. And like it doesn't have a lot of breath.
Yeah.
It makes me feel like,
a lot not a lot of breath.
Yeah.
But let's get all the parts that have an attitude about it
to give us some space to just help it and get to know it.
Oh.
So you can just open your mind to it.
Huh.
Cause that's not a bad part either.
No.
Right.
It's trying to protect you for some reason.
We'll find out.
Hmm.
OK.
How do you feel toward it now?
Curious.
So let it know.
And just see what it wants you to know about itself and why it does this so much.
What it's afraid would happen if it didn't.
I feel like it's saying, I'm scared for us.
That's right. How do you feel toward it as you get that it's really just scared?
to scare.
Now it's just feeling like all of the people that are like kind of wild and like high energy,
stressful in my life.
Like I feel like it's just trying to keep us.
I feel like I can see it from a bit of a distance
when you say it that way.
How much distance would you say in terms of feet away?
Like not far, like one foot.
Okay, that's better than being totally blended with it.
So from that little bit of distance, again, ask it what it's afraid would happen, because
it said it's really afraid,
if it didn't push you this way.
I hear you will be worthless,
everything will fall apart.
Got it, okay.
So it really feels the responsibility
of keeping you together and keeping you
from feeling worthless, is that right?
It's worth, worth keeps coming in. It's like, what will you be worth? Like what will
you be worth to your family? What will you be worth to your sister? What will you be
worth to the world? What will you be worth? You'll be worthless.
Okay. Okay. Does that make sense that it would be pushing to make you valuable?
Yes. Does that make sense that it would be pushing to make you valuable and...
Yes.
Okay, so now how do you feel toward it?
Mmm... I mean, I understand it.
So let it know that.
Okay.
So ask if it protects the part of you that does feel worthless.
Oof.
So when you say that, I feel the other part, like glowing.
Okay.
Like it's, I don't think that I feel worthless anymore because of that other little glowing
part.
Okay.
So it may be that this driven part just needs to be updated.
Mmm.
Mmm.
Yeah.
You follow me?
Yeah.
So let it know that that one has been healed and doesn't feel worthless anymore.
And just see how it reacts to that info.
It feels like it was very tornado-y,
and now it's like muting a little bit.
The colors are muting a little bit.
It's like a little bit further away.
OK, that's great.
And ask it if it could really trust that it didn't have to
do this to make you feel valuable all the time. What might it like to do if it was freed
up to do something else? Oh, it's like a blob. It wants to rest. I bet. Yeah, it's like a blob. It's like a piece. It wants to rest, I bet.
Yeah, it's like tornado to like blob.
Okay.
So let it know that's where you're headed.
You're going to free it up so it can be a blob.
Oh, okay.
Oh, yeah.
Okay.
Now we've got a gray blob and a glowing little hot pink orange part
over here and a gray blob.
We'll finish in a minute, but let's go back to the glowing one. Okay. And just ask if
it's aware of the piece of work you just did with the other one and how it feels about
that.
It's saying like you thought the energy was in the tornado, but the energy is in the glowing blob.
That's not even the energy. Like you think if you live over with that part,
that's where the energy is, but it's not even, it's not, that's not it. It's in the glowing. Yeah.
Yeah.
What's it like to get all that?
Well Dick Schwartz, I feel like I want to paint.
Great.
Oh.
Well, don't run off just yet. Okay. I'm not going to run off just yet. Great.
Well, don't run off just yet. Okay, I'm not going anywhere.
That feels really understandable.
The idea of understanding ourselves as a community of helpers makes so much more sense to me
than my whole life where I've been, am I this or that?
Am I this or that?
Like just we are, all of our pronouns should be we.
It's true.
And the idea that they're all just trying to help.
Sorry.
I have so much compassion towards your little glowy self because can you imagine,
like, I just identify a tiny bit because I feel like my primary role part, my loudest part is like protector.
And I am very often seen as a real pain in the
ass to everyone, but I feel like I'm just loving them through protecting them. And so
when your little glowing part who has just been working so hard to protect you your whole
life and has your life force in it, but then has been continuously just a villainized and
shamed as if that's like the worst part of you and
everything's good about you except for this part that keeps doing these things and if you could just eradicate that
you'd be a good person and
It was just trying to do its best the whole time. That's right. That's exactly right.
I started in during this round of recovery, I started understanding before I understood all the language that you have given us, that
there was a part of me that did not feel heard.
And it was a very young part of me.
And when I recovered from bulimia, because I thought I was recovered, but really I just
replaced bulimia with anorexia, right?
I just controlled that part.
I just kept that part like banished.
Exactly right, exactly right.
And so I started going for these long walks in the morning
and just said, okay, that part, you can have these walks.
This is where we're gonna spend time together
and you're gonna be able to say whatever you need to say.
This part would just like rise up
and it was all in memories and all taking me back
to childhood and all taking me back to childhood
and all. We started, I started calling them the exile walks because it was like the part of myself
that I had exiled. That was obviously after I got your language. And I just spent a lot of time with
that part and it really just had always wanted me to tell the truth. It always just wanted us to like
always wanted me to tell the truth. I'd always just wanted us to like not pretend it didn't exist. And I was talking to my therapist yesterday who is very knowledgeable and speaks in this
language in the IFS language. And we were talking about how I actually have been painting
so much lately, which if you knew me, it's the weirdest thing.
It's so unproductive.
It's horrible and awful at it.
But I do it for hours a day.
It's so fun.
Like this fun thing is brand new.
And she said, isn't it interesting that you like spent enough time with this part?
That's right.
And now it can play. That's right. And now it can play.
That's right, exactly right.
It's so wild.
Can you explain the exile?
Yeah, tell us about the exiles.
Yeah, as I was confronted with all these different parts
from my clients, I'm a systems thinker.
So I'm trying to make sense of the patterns
and like I would with our
family.
That's what we learned to do with family therapy, is track the sequences of interaction and
create a map of the family patterns.
So I'm just doing that with this internal system.
And the big distinctions that leaped out immediately were between the parts we've been talking
about.
We've been talking about both, but what we call protectors who, you know, we just talked to the striver part that's trying to protect
you that way and the eating disorder part's doing that way. And then the parts they protect,
because as I would talk to these protectors, they would point to these others that they can't change until that's been healed, because that's somewhere locked away, and it just
drives the whole system.
And so it turned out that, yeah, there are what we call exiled parts that you tended
to lock away for a variety of reasons.
Sometimes they just don't fit in your family
and your family doesn't like those parts of you
and so you have to sort of exile them inside
in inner basements or abysses.
And then sometimes it's the impact of trauma.
So these are generally the younger parts.
They're these inner children who, before they get hurt, they have these wonderful qualities like creativity and playfulness and wanting to love people and be close and all of that.
But because they're the most sensitive parts of us, they get hurt the most by the traumas and the rejections and the betrayals.
the traumas and the rejections and the betrayals. And so they take on these burdens of emotional pain or terror or worthlessness also. And once they carry those burdens, we don't want
to be around them because they can overwhelm us with those feelings and make us totally
feel that way. And so we lock them away too. And so most of us have a lot of exiles.
And when you have a lot of exiles, you feel more delicate
and the world seems a lot more dangerous
because so many things could trigger them.
And if they get triggered, they explode out
and overwhelm you and then you're in bed for a week.
Yeah.
And so to keep them contained,
you have all these protectors.
And their job is to both control the outside world,
like the managers, what we call,
manager type protectors, so that you don't get triggered
or keep you from feeling much,
keep you a little dissociated from your body.
So even if you did, you didn't feel it much.
Or, you know, there's a whole bunch of different,
what we call manager roles.
So the critics are often big managers.
If they criticize you enough, you'll stay small, right?
And you won't take risks and you won't get hurt.
Or they're criticizing you to try and motivate you
to strive harder and work harder and look better,
look perfect all the time.
Or there's caretaking managers
that take care of everybody else
but don't let you take care of yourself
and so on and so on.
So we all have a bunch of managers,
but if an exile gets triggered enough,
it's kind of life threatening, it feels like.
And so there's another set of parts who immediately go into action to get you away right now.
Get you out of your body, get you higher than the flames of emotion.
Yes. Take you off in what seems to be out of control,
because you can't stop them.
So they're very impulsive and reactive,
and damn the torpedoes,
I don't care about the collateral damage to your body,
to your relationships,
I just have to save your life
by doing this extreme thing right now.
Yes.
And so most of us have a bunch of those also.
They're not active all the time.
Sometimes with some people they are, but most of us,
they're just kind of standby.
We call them firefighters because they're fighting
the flames of exiled emotion.
And usually there's a hierarchy of them. So you've got these
sort of low-risk firefighters like binging on TV or you know work or
whatever and then there's a higher risk like anorexia and at the top of the
hierarchy for most people is suicide. It's the ultimate firefighter
Mm-hmm. And so these lower level firefighters are literally saving your life a lot of the time
so
That's the map to the territory
and then there is self and
So when I was asking you the question, how do you feel toward these parts?
I was checking to see how much of yourself was present.
And I didn't have you interact with the part until you said,
yeah, I can open my mind.
I'm curious about it.
Or even I care about it.
I feel a lot of love for it.
So the saving grace with all this
is there is this self in there
who can begin to depolarize,
begin to get parts out of where they're stuck in
the past, and begin to have them all start to trust you as the leader, which is where
we started. How can we get that part to trust you? And it was very clear, I'm not going
to trust you until you stop putting me in these situations.
Yeah. It's like with anorexia or bulimia,
I'm starting to figure out that I have a moment of dissociation
before the eating behavior starts.
I didn't even know that for the last 30 years.
I just thought, I do these weird things and I don't know why.
But when we slow it down completely,
we can see there's a moment that comes that's like, this is a
scary moment or something.
That's right.
It feels too much.
That's the exile that got triggered.
Exactly.
And then like 15 minutes later, I'm in the toilet.
I'm throwing up.
I'm I don't even know what happened.
Like I'm just.
It's exactly right.
So is that that's a part of me saying I have to do something
dramatic right now to protect you from this thing that's about
to kill you, which are these big feelings. We are trying to
avoid that.
That's exactly right.
So even if it feels crazy, I mean, I've had moments where I'm
like, Oh my god, I'm a good mom. I'm a good mom. Like, it's the
one thing that I have been. And whatever that means, I am it.
And I have had moments where I'm like throwing up, where my kids are outside the bathroom.
And I'm like, oh my god, they could find me. They could. And I think this, this part is so
desperate. Nothing else matters.
It actually thinks we're going to die
because if it didn't, it wouldn't do this.
That's right.
That's exactly right.
Yeah.
They don't care about the collateral damage.
So is the goal then with these exiled parts
that get triggered that then send your firefighters
into action, is the goal to deal with these exiled parts, bring them up, have a relationship with
them so that you can develop the skill set to deal with the emotions when those get triggered
so as to not need to call upon the firefighters? Or is it possible to deal with these exiled parts
in a way that you no longer get triggered?
That is correct. Yes. That's the big goal of IFAS is to heal these exiles so they don't carry these burdens anymore.
And they can just be like your glowing part really is a healed exile.
And so we have to convince these others that they don't need to protect it in the same
way.
But it doesn't need the protection it did.
It won't get triggered in the same way because you've unburdened it somehow.
So that's the goal.
And the challenge is, and what I learned the hard way with these internal systems is protectors
are really, really scared to have you go to exiles. So
generally we work with protectors first, not expecting them to change. So if I
was working with your eating disorder part, I would say no, I'm not here to make
you change. We just want to get to know you and we want to get permission to go
to what you protect. And what are you afraid would happen if we want to get permission to go to what you protect.
And what are you afraid would happen if we went to that exile,
if we went to that little one who's so hurt?
And there's a common series of fears they have.
They're afraid of the overwhelm, they're afraid of those emotions,
like you said, they're afraid of being judged by me.
There's a common set.
And now we have ways to address each of their fears,
but we don't go to exiles without permission
from the protectors.
Because I learned that the hard way,
because if you go without permission,
there's what we call protector backlash.
And you have some kind of big after reaction
that's pretty severe sometimes.
So is the eating disorder the protector or the exile?
Eating disorder, so it's likely that we started by talking to the eating disorder and then
it showed the exile had been protecting, which is the blowy part now.
I'm not sure, you'd have to ask, but that would be my guess.
It could be that that's the transformation of the eating disorder part, but my understanding
it's still active, so I doubt that.
Interesting.
Can you give us some common examples of exiles?
If these are the most extreme parts that we,
as people, have decided we can't handle,
they can't be part of our lives,
what are some of those that you see a lot?
Well, there are the vulnerable exiles
that I mentioned earlier.
So the parts of you that,
because when you got hurt, they took on the worthlessness. They
assumed that you must be, must have no value because your parents treated you a
certain way but they're young and they don't know any better and because they
can make you now feel that worthlessness so you can't even function or you shrink
away you can't have that in your life. So then you lock them up.
So that would be one common example.
And the same is true for parts that carry a lot of terror.
You can't function if you're feeling that terror
all the time.
So you tend to lock them up.
So the actual exile, whatever it is, is kind of arbitrary.
It's what we assigned to it.
So if the shame is what's overwhelming or the sense of worthlessness, we take this arbitrary
exile and we say, you are the one that I'm giving all the shame to and I'm putting you
away so that I never have to face that shame.
Yeah, I wouldn't put it exactly like that. Okay.
These are younger parts.
So they're okay.
And they often are the ones that just believe what whoever hurt you said about you.
Yeah.
So they take in that I'm not valuable message.
Or because they're young, they're the ones that get scared the most by whatever trauma
happened. And so now they're just stuck in that they're frozen, they're the ones that get scared the most by whatever trauma happened.
And so now they're just stuck in that,
they're frozen in that scene and they're just terrified.
Or they feel the pain and the grief of the loss the most.
And you don't wanna feel that all the time,
so you lock them up.
And you do it not thinking,
oh, here's this valuable part of me that carries this, so now I'm gonna lock it up.
You do it because ours is a kind of
rugged individualist culture,
where the way to handle trauma is to just move on.
And don't look back and just let the memories go
and the emotions.
And you do that thinking that's all you're doing,
not realizing you're distancing
from your most precious qualities,
your most precious parts.
Because as we find, when people get access to their exiles,
they wanna start to paint, they wanna start to play.
They get access to these things
that they have locked away all the time.
Yes.
Does that make sense, Amanda?
Yes.
The exile, it feels to me like my most precious part.
Absolutely.
Well, you don't want to say that to your kids, you know.
You don't want to say, you're my most precious kid.
Yeah, you're partial to that part.
Yeah.
You are.
You have a favorite child.
It's great to welcome it, but you can say that secretly,
but don't tell your other parts. Okay.
That's the most precious part. That's good advice. Oh we're gonna stop there with Dick
Schwartz but don't worry because the next episode we are gonna come back.
Sister is going to go through her parts. Abby is going to go through her parts
and we are going to figure out with Dick Schwartz how you can start to know your
parts and live more in this self, this capital S self that operates from curiosity, calm, confidence,
compassion, creativity, and clarity, courage, and connectedness that we're all trying to live from.
courage and connectedness that we're all trying to live from. Come back next time. Bye.
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I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlisle. I walked through fire, I came out the other side.
I chased desire, I made sure I got what's mine.
And I continue to believe That I'm the one for me And because I'm mine, I walk the line We're adventurers and heartbreaks on map A final destination we lack
We've stopped asking directions To places they've never been To be loved we need to be
Finally fun away back
Through the joy and pain that our lives bring
We can do a hard day
I hit rock bottom, it felt like a brand new start
I'm not the problem, sometimes things fall apart I continue to believe the best people are free and it took some time
But I'm finally fine
Cause we're adventurers and heartbreaks on that
Our final destination with that
We stopped asking directions To places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known We'll finally find our way back home And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do our thing We're adventurers and heartbreaks on that We might get lost but we're okay That we've stopped asking directions
In some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be wrong
We'll finally find our way back home And through the joy and pain that our lives bring
We can do hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things