Codependency is a psychological condition in which one person feels an inordinate responsibility for loved ones in a relationship. This reliance can grow to unhealthy proportions, where they feel responsible for their loved one’s thoughts, actions, or feelings and it can impact how they view themselves (lack of self-compassion, feeling unworthy, self-sabotage, the list is long) how they view others, and the world at large.
Codependency is a fawning response in the nervous system. Everything boils down to the nervous system and emotional safety; we can’t control this within ourselves, this drive to stay safe. The brain’s first order of business is to protect the body. Fawn types seek safety by merging with the needs, wishes, and demands of others.
In another article where I chronicle my journey with Codependency — because let’s face it, we don’t end up in this work by accident — I talk about it as, “ I sacrificed my own needs, wants, and thoughts to satisfy someone else in hopes that they would love me and never abandon me.” One of the keys to this statement is the abandonment piece. (Read the full article here.)
The dysfunctional family role of Scapegoat is the person in the family who is groomed to accept all the responsibility, the fault, the blame, and the shame
So that begs the question, how do we get here?
Growing up in abuse and trauma, the dysfunctional family role of Scapegoat is the person in the family who is groomed to accept all the responsibility, the fault, the blame, and the shame. It’s the way the abusers discharge their own shame, blame, and hurt onto another person so they can escape the intense emotional responses. Of course, we know it doesn’t work, but that’s the unconscious intent.
And, being on the receiving end of that is one of the foundational pieces in our toxic, pervasive shame, because the Scapegoat is seen as a threat to the dysfunctional family, and are barraged with mental and emotional abuse. It’s daily emotional abandonment from the people who are supposed to care about and for you.
Why are scapegoated children a threat? A scapegoat child’s growth threatens the abusive parent’s delicate, brittle, and bloated self-worth. Growth is an amazing process for a child, figuring out in healthy circumstances what they like, and what they are good at. It’s a beautiful, wondrous process and the abusive parent who casts the child into the scapegoat role can only be threatened by this.
Being told you are selfish, you never can measure up to others, and everything you do is wrong, paves the way for the abandonment of our emotions and core self. We essentially co-opt the abusive words and in shame’s effort to protect us, turn them on ourselves for sometimes decades after we are out of that terrorizing situation.
This toxicity and intense trapped emotions are turned on oneself and that is what we bring into our adulthood
Basically, when a child is the dumping ground of criticism, judgment, and harsh treatment, they still have all the emotions rise up in response to it, such as anger, sadness, and grief, but there is nowhere for it to go as it isn’t safe to express it. This toxicity and intense trapped emotions are turned on oneself and that is what we bring into our adulthood.
The child adapts to this behavior and it becomes easier to believe all the bad stuff they say, and shame tells us they are right and tries to keep us small and silent, which is its purpose. As an adult, it’s the only way we’ve known how to treat ourselves: those neural pathways were mapped young and shame turned toxic long ago.
From there, the need to contort and sacrifice ourselves to fit the dysfunction and self-hatred is second nature. This is the codependent piece for individuals who have been scapegoated.
I remember when I was about six years old and I loved to write short stories, I told my mother that I wanted to grow up to become a writer. Her response was to laugh cruelly and say that I would never be able to do it, I wasn’t smart enough. She then brought it up, ridiculing me, in front of my abusive father and brother, who jumped on it and got a good laugh at my expense. I started to cry at the dinner table and they sent me to my room saying if I couldn’t control myself I wasn’t allowed to eat.
Then to further the cycle of abuse and dysfunction, this was brought up every so often over the years, resurrected to perpetuate my role of inconsequence and chronic disrespect in the family.
This may seem like a one-off situation, but for the child who is systematically scapegoated at every turn, this is their normalized experience.
So much of the time, we will repeat what we don’t resolve internally
In adult relationships, subconsciously we will draw to ourselves the people that are going to give us an opportunity to help us heal our family of origin issues. (This part really stinks, as we can come out of our dysfunctional childhood with the hope of better relationships, but it doesn’t always happen.) So much of the time, we will repeat what we don’t resolve internally: those feelings of always needing to fix it if someone is upset with our behavior (codependency characteristic) and right away feeling like there is something wrong with us, and we aren’t good enough (which is the toxic shame of course.)
To do this work, we learn how to hold these thoughts, feelings, and behaviors up to the light and see the fallacy of them.
Did I go on to write after being scapegoated and ridiculed for a childhood dream? Yes. Did it take some work to not believe their opinions of me?
Yes.
Because at the end of the day, what I know to be true is when someone is treating another human being that way, it’s actually about their shame. It doesn’t feel good, but being able to dissolve those broken beliefs about ourselves and melt that conditioning into “that’s their stuff,” is incredibly healing. Learning how to believe in ourselves is rife with self-compassion, healthy shame, and working towards interdependent relationships.
We don’t do this work to change other people: we do this work to remove our need for them to change.
The codependency characteristics are adaptive ways for us to survive the trauma of abuse and dysfunction. We couldn’t have done it any differently.
I hope you are taking good care of all your parts today, especially those with toxic shame. You deserve healing and nurturing. You are enough.
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As a Certified Trauma Recovery Coach Supervisor and Certified Healing Shame Practitioner, my focus at Jennifer Kindera Coaching is to help clients navigate their potential traumas which may be holding them back from living life to their fullest capacity. Trauma recovery coaching and healing shame takes time, but with an honest, inclusive, and compassionate space for the unfolding of your life journey, you can work to unravel the binds of trauma and shame to promote your capacity for healing and growth.
Thank you, Jennifer. I’m so sorry you were the Scapegoat. I was, too. It’s so hard being hated, and then internalizing the hatred.
I have made a lot of progress in the last few years. It’s learning to live, not just exist. I long to be free.
I send you love as my Sister in the tribe of Scapegoats.
Thank you for this article! I deeply resonated with what you spoke of, particularly being the scapegoat in my family, and constantly being ridiculed and devalued. The little person inside of me still always expects people to see me as a nuisance and of no value. Even when someone is nice to me, I can’t help but think there’s something behind it, that they only want to get something from me, and that’s why they’re being nice. Honestly, nothing and no one feels safe to me in this world. I realize this is due to my trauma, but merely realizing that doesn’t help all that much! I am still left feeling dysregulated most of the time, and just generally suspicious of people’s motives.
It is helpful to read articles such as this, because I know I’m not alone (even though it feels that way a lot of the time).
Hi Christine! I’m so glad you found the article helpful! Being the scapegoat is no joke, it’s so hard to navigate, and I resonate with what you said about your little one. I’m sorry that we share experiences like this!
And, of course you find it hard to trust others, no one ever modelled for you what that looks like or was trustworthy, giving you a foundation of it’s safer to not trust. This would only happen if the parent/caregiver co-regulated with you, and obviously when we are conditioned to be the scapegoat, that’s not happening. 🙁
You are right, you aren’t alone. Hoping you have super support in your world today, for navigating these waters. Sending love and light to you.
Beautifully written. This.