Tether points are like invisible strings that tie us to the past and keep us from functioning fully in the present. To stop having the same fight with our spouse, or losing friends the same way, or dating the same kind of toxic person, we must discover where our tethers are attached. Then, we must cut ourselves free. To do this, we have to make conscious what is unconscious.
Tether points originate with experiences that were hurtful and damaging to one’s sense of self. We experience many of these emotional injuries, both large and small, over our lifetime. Each one becomes a marker on the “map” we make of the world and affects how we navigate life. Sometimes these wounds help us build resilience, but often they weaken and limit us.
To help illustrate tether points, I’d like to tell you about a person whom I’ll call Christina. Christina came to me when she was in her early 70s. She was alone and very unhappy. She sought answers to why she felt isolated and why her romantic relationships never lasted long. We talked about her history with men and about her childhood.
Christina was 9 when her mother died. Her family believed crying was a sign of weakness, and her father scolded her whenever she expressed grief in this way. She sometimes felt angry at her mother for abandoning her, and then she felt guilty about her anger toward her mother.
Until we become aware of our emotional tethers and identify what they connect to in our past, we will be run by these old, unconscious forces.
Christina’s response to the trauma of losing her mother, and the trauma of being scolded for showing her feelings, was to shut off her emotions. She wanted never to lose someone she loved again, so she made an unconscious vow to herself that she wouldn’t. As she grew up, she dated many men, but the affairs were all brief. On the occasion that a man fell in love with her, she found an excuse to end the relationship.
In therapy, I helped her to see how her relationship pattern connected to the trauma of losing her mother. She had unconsciously lived her life based on what happened to her at 9 years old. Together, I helped her finally mourn the loss of her mother and to work through her feelings of grief and anger. Eight months after our work together ended, she called to tell me about the wonderful man she was in a committed relationship with.
Christina is of course just one example of how unprocessed trauma tethers us to the past and keeps us from living the life we want. Her story shows us what happens when we finally recognize unhealthy patterns and identify our tether points. Until we become aware of our emotional tethers and identify what they connect to in our past, we will be run by these old, unconscious forces.
For help with this and other issues, contact a licensed therapist in your area.
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