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The Negative Love Syndrome and the Quadrinity Model©
A Path to Personal Freedom and Love
by Bob Hoffman
The Vicious Cycle of Adopting Negative Love Patterns
To
illustrate the stages of adopting Negative Love traits,
let’s use the patterns of "uncaring/unloving/non-supportive"and
trace the self-defeating circular logic of the programming.
Imagine a childhood situation where your mother and/or
father did not display affection and love either to each
other, or to you, or both. You learned and adopted this
behavior.
Here
is an illustration of the vicious cycle.
Reacting
unconsciously, you choose either:
1.
Adoption: "Mommy,
Daddy,
I’m
just
like
you,
unloving,
and
unlovable.
Now
will
you
love
me?"
2.
Vindictiveness: "I don't care what happens to me
as long as I get even with you."3.
Shame: "Oh
no!
Now
I've
done
it.
You'll
never
love
me.
I
feel
guilt
and
shame
for
being
so
mean.
I'm
truly
bad
and
unworthy."
4.
Self-sabotage and self-punishment: "I'll make sure
that no one loves me, to prove to you that I'm unlovable,
just as you taught me."
5. "To
maintain my unlovable condition, I will adopt all your
negative traits, Mommy and Daddy, and use them to fight
and reject my own positive essence. Then I'll be just like
you." (Self-sabotage and self-punishment)
6. "Now
will you love me? I am just like you." This vindictively
mirrors the pattern back to them. The end resulting in
more self-punishment.
7.
Then, it's back to step one again, and again.
This
is a vicious cycle. We adopt negative traits to get love,
but the result of adopting negative traits is that we feel
unlovable and can't give or receive love. The more we try
to be loved, the more unlovable we become. Negative Love
compels us to sabotage ourselves continually by forcing
us to reject others or to be rejected by them.
In The
Prince of Tides, Pat Conroy describes the full
spectrum of Negative Love. Can you trace the patterns
adopted by this character?
I
had lost nearly thirty-seven years to the image I carried
of myself. I had ambushed myself by believing, to the
letter, my parents' definition of me... My parents
had succeeded in making me a stranger to myself. They
had turned me into the exact image of what they needed
at the time, and because there was something essentially
complaisant and orthodox in my nature, I allowed them
to knead and shape me into the smooth lineaments of
their nonpareil child. I adhered to the measurements
of their own vision... They succeeded not only in making
me normal but also in making me dull. But their most
iniquitous gift they did not even know they were bestowing.
I longed for their approval, their applause, their
pure uncomplicated love for me, and I looked for it
for years after I realized they were not even capable
of letting me have it. To love one's children is to
love oneself, and this was a state of supererogatory
grace denied my parents by birth and circumstance.
I needed to reconnect to something I had lost. Somewhere
I had lost touch with the kind of man I had the potential
of being. I needed to effect a reconciliation with
that unborn man and try to coax him gently toward his
maturity.
...I
had married a fine and comely girl, and with brilliance
and craft and all the instincts of self-preservation
jettisoned, I succeeded over the years, through neglect,
coldness, and betrayal, in turning her into the exact
image of my mother... I was not comfortable with anyone
who was not disapproving of me. No matter how ardently
I strove to attain their impossibly high standards
for me, I could never do anything entirely right and
so I grew accustomed to that climate of inevitable
failure. I hated my mother, so I got back at her by
giving my wife her role... Like my mother, my wife
had come to feel slightly ashamed and disappointed
in me. The configuration and tenor of my weakness would
define the fury of their resurrection; my failure would
frame their strength, blossoming, and deliverance.
Though
I hated my father, I expressed that hatred eloquently
by imitating his life, by becoming more and more ineffectual
daily, by ratifying all the cheerless prophecies my
mother made for both my father and me. I thought I
had succeeded in not becoming a violent man, but even
that belief collapsed; My violence was subterranean,
unbeheld. It was my silence, my long withdrawals, that
I had turned into dangerous things. My viciousness
manifested itself in the terrible winter of blue eyes,
My wounded stare could bring an ice age into the sunniest,
balmiest afternoon. I was about to be thirty-seven
years old, and with some aptitude and a little natural
ability, I had figured out how to live a perfectly
meaningless life, but one that could imperceptibly
and inevitably destroy the lives of those around me.
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