Invisible

“You sound angry,” I say.
“Oh yes,” she replies in barely a whisper, “I’m angry. But
what I am supposed to do about it?”
“Do you always speak that softly when you’re angry?”
She smiles. “My husband always tells me I go around whispering.”
“Any idea why you speak so quietly?” I ask, thinking it’s
both a way to keep herself invisible, as well as a way to force others to pay
close attention to her.

Although I’m aware that Mrs. Jackson has ignored my
question, possibly repeating the experience of being ignored herself, I opt for
empathy at the moment rather than confrontation. “I’m sure being constantly
ignored was extremely painful, but do you have any thoughts about why you
decided to come into therapy at this particular moment.”
“I’ve been in and out of therapy my whole life. It never
works. I try, but it never works.”
“What do you mean it never works?”
“I can’t let go, I can’t forget about how they treated me,
despite what the therapists say.”
“And what do the therapists say?”
“They say I should forget about it. And I agree. But I
can’t.”
“I don’t think the problem is that you can’t forget how they
treated you, but rather that you can’t move beyond the feelings you had as a
child. The pain of their rejection feels as though it happened yesterday as
opposed to 70 plus years ago.”
“You’re absolutely right. I can’t get beyond the feelings.”
“Can you imagine what it would be like not to have those
feelings?” I ask.
Mrs. Jackson mumbles a response.
“I’m sorry” I say, “I didn’t hear you.”
“Free,” she whispers, looking down at the floor.
“You sound so tentative. I wonder if it feels scary to
imagine yourself as free.”
“Why would it be scary?”
“Well, for one thing, it’s very foreign to you. Being free
means putting yourself out there, speaking up, feeling you’re valuable and
worthwhile. You’ve spent your life making yourself as invisible as you were to
your parents.”
“That’s true. But I’m 80 years old. I’m 80 years old and I
still feel like a child.”
“It’s really hard to change a lifetime of how you feel about
yourself, how you are in the world. Perhaps you hope that if you make yourself
invisible enough, your parents will finally love you.”
“But my parents have been dead for years.”

There’s another inaudible reply.
“I’m sorry, I didn’t hear you,” I say. “I don’t have the
greatest hearing, but I suspect it’s not only my hearing that’s the problem.”
“I said I’d try.”
“Do you want to try for you or are you trying to please me?”
She chuckles. “Perhaps a little of both.”
“It will be important for us to pay attention to who you’re
trying to please – me, the parents in your head, or yourself. Hopefully you can
get to a place where you’re doing what you want to be doing for you.”