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True Stories of False Memories
By Carol Tavris and Elliot Aronson, authors
of Mistakes Were Made (But Not by Me)
False
memories allow us to forgive ourselves and justify our mistakes,
but sometimes at a high price: an inability to take responsibility for
our lives. An
appreciation of the distortions of memory, a realization
that even deeply felt memories might be wrong, might encourage people
to hold their memories more lightly, to drop the certainty that their
memories are always accurate, and to let go of the appealing impulse to
use the past to justify problems of the present. If we
are to be
careful about what we wish for because it might come true, we must also
be careful which memories we select to justify our lives, because then
we will have to live by them. Nobody
has actually been abducted by
aliens (though experiencers will argue fiercely with us), but millions
have survived cruelties as children: neglect, sexual abuse, parental
alcoholism, violence, abandonment, the horrors of war. Many
people have
come forward to tell their stories: how they coped, how they endured,
what they learned, how they moved on. Stories of trauma and
transcendence are inspiring examples of an resilience. A few
have claimed to be Holocaust survivors; thousands have
claimed to be survivors of alien abduction; and tens of thousands have
claimed to be survivors of incest and other sexual traumas that
allegedly were repressed from memory until they entered therapy in
adulthood. Why
would people claim to remember that they had suffered
harrowing experiences if they hadn't, especially when that belief
causes rifts with families or friends? By
distorting their memories,
these people can "get what they want by revising what they had," and
what they want is to turn their present lives, no matter how bleak or
mundane, into a dazzling victory over adversity. Memories
of abuse also
help them resolve the dissonance between "I am a smart, capable person"
and "My life sure is a mess right now" with an explanation that makes
them feel good and removes responsibility: "It's not my fault my life
is a mess. Look at the horrible things they did to me." Ellen
Bass and
Laura Davis made this reasoning explicit in The
Courage to Heal. They
tell readers who have no memory of childhood sexual abuse that "when
you first remember your abuse or acknowledge its effects, you may feel
tremendous relief. Finally there is a reason for your problems. There
is someone, and something, to blame." Consider
the story of a young woman named Holly Ramona,
who, after a year in college, went into therapy for treatment of
depression and bulimia. The
therapist told her that these common
problems were usually symptoms of child sexual abuse, which Holly
denied had ever happened to her. Yet
over time, at the urging of the
therapist and then at the hands of a psychiatrist who administered
sodium amytal (popularly and mistakenly called "truth serum"), Holly
came to remember that between the ages of five and sixteen she had been
repeatedly raped by her father, who even forced her to have sex with
the family dog. Holly's
outraged father sued both therapists for
malpractice, for "implanting or reinforcing false memories that [he]
had molested her as a child." The jury agreed, exonerating the father
and finding the therapists guilty. Or
she could reject the verdict as a travesty of justice, become more
convinced than ever that her father had abused her, and renew her
commitment to recovered-memory therapy. By
far, the latter was the
easier choice because of her need to justify the harm she had caused
father and the rest of her family. To
change her mind now would have
been like turning a steamship around in a narrow river -- not much room
to maneuver and hazards in every direction; much easier to stay the
course. Indeed,
Holly Ramona not only vehemently rejected the verdict;
she bolstered that decision by going to graduate school to become a
psychotherapist. The last we heard, she was encouraging some of her own
clients to recover memories of their childhood sexual abuse. It's
not easy, because it means taking a fresh, skeptical look at the
comforting memory we have lived by, scrutinizing it from every angle
for its plausibility, and, no matter how great the ensuing dissonance,
letting go of it. For
her entire adult life, for example, writer Mary
Karr had harbored the memory of how, as an innocent teenager, she had
been abandoned by her father. That memory allowed her to feel like a
heroic survivor of her father's neglect. But
when she sat down to write
her memoirs, she faced the realization that the story could not have
been true. ~ ~ ~ abuse & creative expression change / personal growth change / coaching / self-help articles ~ ~ ~ |
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