What Do You Mean By Religious Trauma?

Religious trauma refers to lasting harm to a person’s physical, mental, emotional, social, or spiritual health due to the beliefs or experiences they have had within a religious context. This kind of trauma is oftentimes complex because it generally involves a series of experiences and a system of harmful beliefs rather than a single traumatic event. People who have experienced religious trauma may struggle with low self-esteem, perfectionism, chronic anxiety, shame, depression, lack of trust in self, codependency, and sexual dysfunction.

There are a variety of religious beliefs and experiences that can have detrimental effects on people’s health and well-being. The following list is not meant to be exhaustive, but rather a compilation of some of the most common ways I have seen people negatively impacted by religion. I will mostly be referring to the Christian religion as this is where my personal experience lies.

Harmful Beliefs

-Inherent sinfulness: The belief that we are all inherently sinful by nature can be extremely damaging to self-esteem and self-worth.

-Biblical literalism: The belief that the bible is absolute truth can lead people to trust outside sources over themselves and may prohibit critical thinking skills from fully developing. 

-Purity culture: The belief that sex outside of marriage is sinful can lead to delayed social milestones, sexual immaturity, anxiety around sex, and sexual dysfunction. The belief that women must practice modesty to be worthy can lead women to feel shame if they are not ‘modest enough’ and can help enable rape culture in the church as some men will blame women for tempting them into the act because of their immodesty.

-Traditional gender roles: The belief that men should lead and women should submit has caused many women to feel inferior to men and to question their capabilities and worth. 

-Self-sacrifice: The belief that you should put others before yourself (as Jesus did) can lead to codependent and people-pleasing behaviors where people lack healthy boundaries with others and can hinder the development of a sense of self. 

-The belief that God is omniscient and omnipresent can lead to chronic anxiety and self-consciousness. 

Traumatic Experiences

-There are countless individuals who have been publicly shamed or ostracized from the church for doing something deemed sinful by the community (divorce, abortion, having a child out of wedlock, etc.). This kind of experience can lead to shame, isolation, feelings of worthlessness, depression, and suicidal ideation. 

-Many churches talk often about hell and what could land you there, leading many people (especially children) to feel chronically stressed, anxious, and hyperaware of their every move. Some churches even put on a performance around Halloween (aptly named ‘Judgment House’) where audience members are taken scene by scene through a story where young people die in a tragic accident and are then judged to determine their fate in the afterlife. You are taken to ‘hell’ where the scene is dark and ominous and there are actors pretending to be demons. You end the performance in ‘heaven’ where there are church members dressed in all white waiting to pray with you, using lines like “If you were to die after leaving here tonight, do you know where you’d spend eternity?” to elicit emotional responses from the audience. Church members (including children) are encouraged to participate and invite their non-believer family members and friends to the performance. 

-Many LGBTQ+ folks in the church have been told that they are living a sinful life. Some have been encouraged or forced to go to conversion therapy and to reject their identity. Others have been kicked out of positions in the church or pushed out of the church entirely because of their identity. This experience of marginalization and stigmatization can result in low self-worth, an inability to express oneself authentically, an inability to explore one’s sexuality, and sometimes suicide.  

-Sermons about tithing being a demonstration of your trust in God can be very manipulative and can influence people to put themselves through financial hardship to prove their faith or to avoid feeling guilty about not tithing.

Questions and Concerns

When you are immersed in religion, it can be very difficult to challenge religious thought or religious authorities because you are taught to distrust yourself since you are of a ‘sinful nature’. You are taught to trust the bible and the people who are interpreting the bible for you. You are encouraged to put aside doubt and have faith rather than critical thinking. This can cause religious people to feel they can’t question or challenge what’s happening within the church. Though they may be able to recognize that some of these beliefs and experiences are damaging, they may not feel they are able to challenge the authorities on them. 

When people do begin to challenge religious beliefs and authorities, it can feel very destabilizing. It’s common to feel confused and unanchored as old ways of thinking are shed and a new belief system and identity is built. Some people can go through the process of deconstructing their beliefs and remain religious, while others feel leaving the religion is an imperative part of their healing. Leaving a religion can be a very difficult decision to make, though, as it often comes with the loss of community and identity. A person who leaves their religion may lose friends and loved ones (or at the very least have their relationships altered drastically) as it can be difficult for people who are still part of the religion to handle the way these doubts and questions challenge their own beliefs. This can lead to feeling isolated and alone as you question your core beliefs and try on new ways of thinking.

Recovering From Religious Trauma

Following are some practical steps to work towards healing from the effects of religious trauma:

-Grow your critical thinking skills: Ask all the questions, get as many different viewpoints as possible, learn/read/expose yourself to different ideas, analyze and reflect on the information you gather.

-Learn to trust yourself: Observe and reflect on the feelings and physical sensations that come up in your body, listen to gut feelings, reflect on times when your intuition proved to be right, remind yourself that nobody does life perfectly and that we learn through experience. 

-Set boundaries in relationships: Identify relationships where you feel you betray or overextend yourself, determine how you want to feel in those relationships and what parts of yourself you need to preserve to make that happen, communicate directly and be firm with your boundary. 

-Challenge black and white thinking: Remind yourself that there are rarely only two options in a given situation, seek out nuance everywhere you can, challenge yourself to see how many different options/alternatives there possibly could be.  

-Explore who you are and what you believe: Journal, seek out new experiences, talk to new people, ask questions, go to therapy, observe and reflect on your reactions to new people and experiences.

-Find healthy supports: Seek out communities that are accepting of self-exploration, look into secular groups or groups for people recovering from religion, find a therapist who understands religious trauma.

If you are looking for mental health support as you begin your journey of healing from religious trauma, feel free to reach out to me at tivoli@tivoligardenscounseling.com to discuss working together!

Codependency Explained

What is codependency?

Personal experience has led me to believe that most people have a very loose understanding of codependency. Many people can identify some of the characteristics or behavioral patterns of people who struggle with codependency, but they usually lack awareness around why people adopt these behaviors or what purpose these behaviors are serving for them. There are logical reasons why people engage in codependent behaviors. Understanding these reasons can help those of us who struggle with codependency to see that there are other ways of going about getting our needs met AND can help those of us who don’t struggle with codependency to better support those in our lives who do. 

In her book Codependent No More, Melody Beattie gives a pretty all-encompassing definition of codependency. She says, “A codependent person is one who has let another person’s behavior affect them and is obsessed with controlling that person’s behavior.”

Codependency could look like:

The wife of the alcoholic: She stays with her husband through his addiction, sacrificing her own wants and needs to manage his recovery. She grows in resentment with each additional relapse, complaining that he is the source of her problems, but unwilling to leave him.

The man who has no needs: He will drop everything for anyone (even strangers!) He believes it’s selfish to take care of himself, so he always puts his own wants/needs behind everyone else’s. He anticipates others’ needs and is frustrated that others don’t do the same for him. His needs never get met because he is unwilling to ask for help.

The independent child: She grew up with a single mom that emphasized the importance of self-sufficiency. She learned you must do it all on your own because you can’t trust that others will be there to help. She didn’t learn to ask for help, but she did learn to complain, nag, or manipulate to get what she wanted.

Characteristics of codependency:

-You feel responsible for other people and their well-being, feelings, thoughts, actions, wants, and needs.

-You feel anxious, upset, or guilty when other people have a problem and you feel compelled to help them solve their problem.

-You say yes to things you don’t want to do to make others happy and often neglect your own wants/needs in the process.

-You feel more comfortable giving than receiving.

-Though you have difficulty accepting help (and rarely ask for help), you often get frustrated about how infrequently those around you offer help.

-You feel angry, victimized, unappreciated, and used.

-You blame others for these feelings of frustration.

-You get angry and defensive when others blame or criticize you, though you regularly speak to yourself in these same ways.

-You live based on “shoulds”.

-You feel selfish and guilty when you do things for yourself.

-You think poorly of yourself and feel you need to prove your worth to others.

-You settle for being needed by others because you don’t believe you’re wanted.

-You often seek love from people incapable of loving you, which reinforces the idea that you’re unlovable.

-You obsessively worry about what others think about you.

-You center your life around other people.

-You have trouble letting go of control and allowing things to happen naturally.

-You think you know best about how things should turn out and how people should behave.

-You attempt to control or manipulate events or people through helplessness, guilt, coercion, threats, advice-giving, or manipulation.

-You ask for what you want/need indirectly (sighing, huffing/puffing, nagging)

-You let others hurt you and take advantage of you.

-You stay in relationships that are toxic and harmful to you. 

Why do people become codependent?

There are many different reasons why people develop codependent tendencies. I can’t cover all the reasons here, but I’ll explain a few that I see often so you can better understand why codependent people are the way they are.

The classic codependent is a person who is very close to someone with an addiction (usually a partner, parent, or child). Oftentimes, they learn that their loved one is unreliable, unavailable, and in need of care. They learn to cater to their loved one’s needs and deny their own. They lose themselves as they begin orbiting their lives around their loved one. They forget their sense of worth and doubt their sense of self. They resent their loved one for taking so much from them but they don’t leave the situation. They’ve put so much into this relationship and it can’t all be for nothing. They didn’t make all those sacrifices in vain! Their loved one will change. They will help change their loved one. Then everything will be better.

Sometimes the above situation happens without an addiction. Substitute the person struggling with an addiction with a person struggling with an eating disorder, a chronic physical ailment, or severe health/mental health issue and you can get the same codependent situation. People in close relationship with those who struggle with these severe health/mental health issues often adopt codependent tendencies in an attempt to care for their loved one through their illness.

We can also learn codependent behaviors in childhood through the way we’re socialized and taught to engage with others. If you grew up in a super religious home, codependent tendencies may have been revered by those around you. You may have been taught it was honorable to put others before yourself and deny your own desires. You may have learned that you don’t turn your back on family and you never leave a marriage. You may have learned that your purpose is to serve others and unconditionally love. These beliefs are not inherently wrong or bad, but they can lead to (and perpetuate) codependent behaviors.

Little girls are often taught to be polite, kind, submissive, and nurturing. They learn that “good girls” do as they’re told and don’t make waves. Maybe they see mom doing this as well (especially in religious homes where women are expected to submit to their husbands). They learn that “good girls” are to be appreciative of what they get and are to not ask for more. Maybe they see dad come home from work to sit on the couch and watch TV while mom comes home from work to tend to the kids, the house, and dinner. Mom never asks for help and doesn’t expect help, but is very appreciative on the rare occasion that dad does offer even the tiniest bit of help. Girls learn to take on the majority of the caretaking responsibilities and the responsibilities around the house because this is seen as “women’s work.” Women who challenge this are often seen as difficult. Good little girls take on all of these responsibilities and do them dutifully as they’ve been taught.

Little boys are often taught to be strong and heroic. They learn that there are people who need rescuing and that they can be the hero of these people’s stories. Maybe they see how dad always swoops in to fix or solve problems for everyone around him. He’s known to drop everything to help a friend or person in need; how selfless and admirable! What little boy wouldn’t want to be the hero of the story?

People often learn codependent traits from their parents or other caregivers. If mom nags, complains, or emotionally manipulates to get her needs met or desires fulfilled, you may learn to do that as well. If dad talks about how incapable other people are and how important it is for you to be able to do everything on your own without the help of others, you may learn to do that as well. We learn a lot from our caregivers and it can be very enlightening to reflect on the messages we were taught in our childhood to see how they affect us today. 

So, how do I stop engaging in codependent behaviors?

Develop a sense of self-worth: People who lack a strong sense of self-worth are more susceptible to codependent tendencies because they believe others are more worthy of getting their wants/needs met than they are. When you believe you are worthy of getting your wants/needs met, you will stop denying them and start addressing them. 

Set boundaries: People with codependent tendencies often have very loose boundaries, if any at all. They may have had boundaries at some point in time, but they have slowly deteriorated as they have learned to put up with more and more poor treatment from those around them. They allow themselves to be taken advantage of by not saying no and always saying yes. Learning to say no is crucial to ending codependent behavior. You must be able to set the boundaries you need to take care of yourself. Other people’s needs are not more important than your needs. It is not your responsibility to take care of other people. It is your responsibility to take care of yourself.

Ask for what you need directly: I know you’ve been taught it’s not okay to ask for what you want or need. You probably cringe at the thought of asking for help. I get it. But the easiest way to get what you want is to ask for it. Directly. Not by huffing and puffing or complaining about how you have so much to do and nobody to help you. This is annoying. And unhelpful. Challenge the beliefs that perpetuate these behaviors. Humble yourself and ask for help. I know it’s hard, but it’s the only way.

Stay in your lane: Stop taking on responsibility for things that aren’t your responsibility. If someone is upset, those are their feelings to deal with. If someone has a problem, that’s their problem to deal with. Challenge your behaviors and ask yourself: Am I really helping others by saving them? Is it helpful to save someone from experiencing the consequences of their behavior? Or will that just enable them to repeat the behavior again? Would it be more helpful for them to experience the consequences so they can learn to not engage in that behavior again? Sometimes rescuing people is more harmful than it is helpful. 

As someone who has struggled with codependency in the past, I know how difficult it can be to squash these behaviors. The beliefs that perpetuate these behaviors can be deeply ingrained. I’d recommend finding a therapist to help you examine these beliefs so that you can begin to weaken your codependent tendencies. If you’re in Lexington, KY, I’d be more than happy to help!