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Today, we're talking about Stockholm Syndrom
What is it,
and how does it apply in therapy?
*Music*
This is one of the most fascinating topics
I've gotten to research thus far
so thank you to all of you who've requested it.
And in all honesty I knew what
Stockholm Syndrome was, but I didn't
really know the applications
or ramifications of it
within my clinical therapy practice,
so this was so interesting.
Stockholm Syndrome is named after
a bank robbery that happened in 1973
in Stockholm, Sweden.
There were bank employees that were kept
for six days.
They were first wrapped in dynamite and
thrown into the bank vault.
And the thing that happened that shocked
everybody, is that throughout
those six days,
those captive people wrapped in dynamite,
for some reason,
became eerily attached to their captors.
They felt bad for them.
They even turned away police
and assistance to get them out of there.
They were not helpful at all
and even once released, some of them
still kept in touch with their captors
and wouldn't testify against them
in court.
So everybody thought,
"What the hell is going on?"
"Why won't they tell us anything?"
"Why are they acting like they were caring
and nice and they cared about what happened to them?"
"What gives?"
What they learned is that,
psychologically, in order to get through
terrifying situations, we often attach
to our captors as a way to almost
survive it.
Thinking 'Well, I care about them"
"I understand what's going on with them"
"See, they're keeping me alive"
"They're really nice".
And in a way, by being nice to our captors
we're increasing the chances that we will
live through it.
So, oddly enough, it's like our brain's
way of helping us get through an abusive
or scary and traumatic situation.
This applies in a clinical therapy
practice, more along the lines of people
who are in controlling or abusive
relationships.
For example, we find a lot of battered
men or women
will refuse to press charges against their
spouse or loved one who abused them.
Many even bail them out of jail after
the police have taken them in because
they've abused them.
Now let's get into the fascinating part,
and the reason Stockholm Syndrome
takes hold.
There are four factors that need to be
in place, and need to happen, so let's
talk about them.
The first, and the kind of obvious one,
is that we must feel threatened-
either physically or psychologically,
and we have to believe that the abuser
or captor will actually act out
on that threat.
The way that we find this happens
most commonly, is indirectly.
Maybe it's breaking things,
throwing things around,
they may even indirectly talk
about harming someone or something
that you really care about-
like threatening to get rid of a
prized possession, or to harm an animal
that you love and care for.
The abuser's goal is actually to get you
to believe that the harm that
they could do is possible,
and may be imminent.
The second condition-
and this is where it starts to,
you can see how it can psychologically
shift for the person being abused, is if
the abuser will then show some
small kindness.
In the instance in Stockholm, Sweden,
in that actual event,
the captors said "Well, they fed us and
gave us water, and they talked about how
hard their life had been as a child".
They will do something to show you
a little kindness to take care of you
a little bit, so that you believe that
they're not all bad.
What this does, is it gives the abused
person hope that the situation
could change.
This could be a small token like
a birthday card, or remembering to
bring dinner home-
any small thing.
A lot of abused spouses will say
"Well, they didn't abuse me when they
normally would."
So even the absence of abuse
with no positive thing added in
can feel like a small token
of kindness.
And you know how I talked about that
event in Stockholm, Sweden,
how they shared some events
about themselves,
that's another part of it-
and that goes into this number two,
that they'll share some hard times
they've been through,
or times they've been abused,
by a mother, or father
or caretaker.
And so that gives them, kind of,
it humanizes them a little bit,
and makes us feel kind of
bad for them.
The third condition
that needs to take place
is being isolated from other perspectives.
The way that this can play out in abusive
relationships, there are a lot
of examples that were given,
one of which is
"I don't like your friends because they
talk bad about me.
I don't want you hanging out with them anymore."
And if we do,
we get abused when we get home,
and so in a way, we're slowly being
conditioned against seeing our friends.
There was an example of a woman who was speaking in one
of the forums I was reading-
where her mother would call just to talk to her,
and tell her that she
was worried about her
and the kids, and so because of that,
then the husband would find out
and would abuse her more for talking
with the mother, so she slowly
started telling her mom,
"Please stop calling, you're just causing
us trouble."
"You're ruining our relationship."
And so, since we're so isolated from any
positive person in our life
or any person who actually
has any insight and is loving
and supportive, all we can see
is that abuse cycle, and that abuse life.
Another way that this is described is
"walking on eggshells".
We will do everything in our control
to make sure that we keep the
abuse at bay.
That may mean seeing things,
and our whole life and perspective