What is cognitive dissonance?

September 4th 2007 by Lisa in Fostering Adoption Parenting

Sunshine Girl On A Rainy Day

Cognitive dissonance is a psychological term describing the uncomfortable tension that may result from:

- Having two conflicting thoughts at the same time
- Engaging in behavior that conflicts with one’s beliefs and self-concept
- Experiencing something that conflicts with everything the person previously “knew” about the world

Cognitive dissonance can be defined as “an internal contradiction.”

We all want to believe that we are good people. So if we do something harmful to another person, we feel that prick of our conscience. Since we cannot live in a state of “cognitive dissonance” for an extended period of time, we have to somehow make it right in our heads.

Our choice is:
- To tell ourselves that what we did wasn’t wrong (denial)
- To tell ourselves that they deserved it (excuses)
- To confess and admit responsibility (best option)

Cognitive dissonance can occur in the minds of neglectful and abusive parents. I can’t tell you how many foster care alumni have come to me and told me about this type of experience. After being reunited with a parent, a young person might try to tell mom or dad what happened during their time in foster care. Or a young person might say, “Remember that guy you were dating before I left home? Did I ever tell you that he touched me when you weren’t around?”

More often than not, the biological parent will respond, “I don’t want to hear about it.”

Why? Because hearing what happened to their child when that parent was unable or unwilling to care for them sounds like an indictment. They don’t want to look at it. They don’t want to face up to their responsibility in abdicating care for their child.

My father is the perfect example. I rarely saw him during my time in foster care - but when I did, I was always mystified by the fact that he could never look me in the eyes. He always looked away. Later, when I came to him as an adult, to try to tell him some of the things that happened, including the fact that I was raped, he didn’t want to hear about it.

He even went so far as to say, “Lisa, we have no way of knowing whether or not those things ever happened to you.”

I had to raise my eyebrows at that comment. Being the person who experienced those things and survived them, I found it mind-boggling that another person might think that by his denial, he could edit my entire life history, and make those painful experiences no longer exist.

I made up my mind at that moment that I wanted to be a person who could face reality, in all its beauty and all its ugliness, and take full responsibility for my actions. As a stepmother, if I feel that my reaction to something was wrong, I will go to my husband and stepdaughters and apologize. I will not make excuses for myself — I will just call it what it is: “I have a big mouth sometimes,” and strive to do better.

Sadly, cognitive dissonance can occur in the minds of abuse victims as well. When a parent is the perpetrator, rather than the protector, that clashes with everything that a child instinctively knows.

So, might a child be tempted to do?
- Tell themselves that what the parent is doing isn’t wrong (denial)
- Tell themselves that they deserved it (make excuses for the parent)
- Tell themselves that a parent should be protector, and that the fact that theirs is not, is due that parent’s choice and not a reflection of the child’s worth (best option, but it often takes years for an abused child to recognize this)

The first two reactions can lead to both current and future emotional damage: A child experiencing sexual abuse might try to make sense of the experience by equating the act with love. Later, that same child might grow into an adult who expects abuse from his or her partner.

Now that I advocate for young people in and from foster care, it is so easy for me to see that their parents’ action are not a reflection of their worth. But, back when I was still in college, it was hardest of all to see that value in myself. I still remember the moment when I realized that my father’s rejection did not make me unworthy of love. I was reading the quote, “When I was a child, I talked like a child, I thought like a child and I reasoned like a child. When I became an adult, I left childish ways behind me.”

It occured to me in that moment that if I were ever to grow up, I needed to assert my own worth and not judge myself as unloveable based upon my father’s reaction.

Good Will Hunting
Similarly, one scene from the movie Good Will Hunting has resonated with many foster care/child abuse survivors.  Robin Williams (playing Sean, a psychiatrist) is counseling Matt Damon (playing Will Hunting) an abused child. After holding up pictures of Will Hunting, covered in bruises, the script continues:

Sean: Will, you see this, all this ****?
[Holds up the file, and drops it on his desk]
Sean: It’s not your fault.
Will: [Softly, still staring off] I know…
Sean: No you don’t. It’s not your fault.
Will: [Serious] I know.
Sean: No. Listen to me son. It’s not your fault.
Will: I know that.
Sean: It’s not your fault.
[Will is silent, eyes closed]
Sean: It’s not your fault.
Will: [Will’s eyes open, misty already] Don’t **** with me Sean. Not you.
Sean: It’s not your fault.
[Will shoves Sean back, and then, hands trembling, buries his face in his hands. Will begins sobbing. Sean puts his hands on Will’s shoulders, and Will grabs him and holds him close, crying]
Will: Oh my God! I’m so sorry! I’m so sorry Sean!
[Will continues sobbing in Sean’s arms]


Stumble it!




5 Responses to “What is cognitive dissonance?”

  1. Char Says:

    i will now make an effort to see the movie, i care for two foster kids who have experienced trauma. They both blame themselves…now i have a mantra for them…thx

  2. Megan Bayliss Says:

    Lisa thank you. This is an excellent explanation of what Cognitive Dissonance is. This is a resource I can use to help people understand what it is, what it may look like and how it works to further harm.

  3. cerebralmum Says:

    When I first spoke to my mother about things that had happened when I was a child there was outright denial, shocked and angry denial. It was so hard to speak and then… that. I left home. Again.

    But not long after that, my mother left the man we had all suffered at the hands of and we slowly worked our way through to our owns truths. Honesty is hard-won but I feel so lucky that, although it took years, my mother and my sister and I were able to remember our past and return to each other.

  4. Megan Bayliss Says:

    Oh Cerebral
    thank you for joining our conversation with your story - your life.
    You are welcome here, anytime.
    Mxx

  5. Patricia - Spiritual Journey Of A Lightworker Says:

    Lisa, this was really hard to read because of its truth. I didn’t tell anyone about the incest until i was in my late 20’s and then only my husband and sister. I didn’t tell my mom until after about 4 years in counseling. She knew I was in counseling, Al-Anon and Adult Children of Alcoholics groups and never asked why. I didn’t tell her until I was stronger because I was always afraid that she would say it was my fault. I only recently through my blog told a high school friend. My high school friend said she knew my family was different but had no idea why. Breaking the silence is one of the most difficult things that I have ever done, first verbally and again on my blog. As I wrote in an article on my blog, breaking the silence is one of the most frightening, emotional, freeing things that I have ever done. Thanks for the tears that reading your article caused. Please keep informing people. It is why I write my blog.

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