Lance Armstrong said, “Pain is temporary. It may last a minute, or an hour, or a day, or a year, but eventually it will subside and something else will take its place. If I quit, however, it lasts forever.”
When I was in an abusive relationship with a sociopath, the pain was overwhelming. I quit trying to get through it and gave into it. I quit and felt like it would last forever.
“Nothing lasts forever – not even your troubles” so said psychologist, Arnold H. Glasgow.
Trouble is, when I’m in trouble I ‘always’ think in absolutes, like never and forever. When I’m in never and forever land, I tell myself tomorrow is too far away to even bother caring about what happens today. I tell myself to quit moving through the turmoil because it is a forever deal. I’m never going to get through it. I’m never going to get away from it. I’m never going to get away.
When I was with the sociopath, I couldn’t see the possibility of freedom when I was mired in my denial of what was happening in my life. I kept telling myself that because I said I loved him, I had to stay true to my love forever. I had to stay true to him, forever and could never leave. I never let myself think about the alternative, “What if I could leave? What if I didn’t love him? what if….?”
Because I told myself I could never leave him, I couldn’t see that I was the architect of my distress. Caught up in the despair of believing ‘the pain of loving him’ would last forever, I convinced myself to quit trying to do anything different, to think anything different. I told myself there was no freedom for me, just this ennui of dying more and more every day.
I work at a homeless shelter. Recently, I had a friend tell me he believes that many of the homeless in our city ‘receive with the expectation they should receive and see no merit in contributing to the very institution or the society that gives them succour’. While I understand his point of view, and on the surface acknowledge there is some ‘truth’ to what he says, I also understand what happens to an individual when they become so lost they see no hope of ever finding themselves again.
In all of us there is a dark-side to our psyches. That place where light cannot find a foothold in the quicksand of negative thinking that pulls us down. Some will never trip over their shadows, some will never fall so far from grace they lose sight of the light. For those who meet up with sociopaths or who lose their way on the road of life, however, darkness will fall as they plummet into the despair of believing they will always be lost to the light. Devoid of hope, they will not open their eyes to the possibility of letting go of never and forever being there.
My life with the sociopath was like that. I fell into the dark-side and quit trying to swim to the shores of sensibility. I gave up on me and gave into him. The pain of my existence, of being me, of having to walk around in my own body was overwhelming. I wanted to die and thus did everything I could to make it possible.
The sociopath became my escape from living. He was my own personal suicide mission.
I see it happening everyday at the shelter where I work. People on suicide missions with a destiny they fear will never come.
And yet, despite the bleakness of their outlooks their human spirit keeps struggling to survive. To rise above the cesspool of negative thinking that inexorably pulls them into the vortex of their despair.
There is no easy cure for pain. Yesterday my gallbladder flared up and for a moment I felt as if the pain would last forever. I knew it wouldn’t and so I breathed deeply. Let the tears flow and waited for it to subside. It did.
Like all pain, it disbursed, eased, backed-off and was replaced with something else. In my case, a refreshing sleep from which I awoke to a beautiful blue sky-day filled with love and laughter. A walk with the puppies and a wonderful friend. A shopping trip to one of my favourite stores to scope out storage solutions for my new home and a birthday dinner for one of my dearest friends.
It was a day that started with pain and ended with love and laughter. The pain subsided, its memory but a distant reminder I must watch more carefully what I eat. The love and laughter, they live on, forever and a day, to remind me to never give up on living my life on the light-side of my thinking.
Dear Dancing warrior,
Just hang on until it is OVER, AND FINAL. I know the NOT KNOWING and the WAITING is worse than the worst thing that can actually HAPPEN….I have always said it is worse to WONDER if you have cancer than to KNOW you have cancer. Same thing here with the wondering what thing he will pull out of his sleeve next!
You know it will not be pretty and he will not cooperate well, so just take care of your own taxes and let him worry about his. As for his nasty snarky lawyer’s comments—remember who she/he is working for! LOL “Consider the source.” That’s the kind of people she works for.
One of the things I loved about the man I hired to fight my P son’s parole is that he knows what a psychopath is and REFUSES TO WORK FOR ONE!!! LOL Hang on Warrior! P:ut your armor on and pick up your sling shot! Remember what David said when he faced the Giant, Goliath? HE’S SO BIG I CAN’T MISS!!!!! (((hugs))))
Oxy, Interesting about Goliath. He’s so big, and I still act like I am powerless and afraid of him. I still let him control me through his intimidation, and my not talking to him is in huge part due to fear of how he may influence me if he gets angry, blames me, attacks me, threatens me, pleads with me–I feels as if I don’t have the calm and security to let him do whatever and be okay in responding rationally.
I fear if he cried and said he loved me, I’d break down and cry and take him back, that’s how I don’t trust myself and fear my own loneliness and fear, the hanging loose in the cold universe wehre not a soul cares for me–yes my mom and daughter are here and I value that immensely–it’s just such a loss like cutting off my arm as I’ve relied on him in so many ways for 20 yrs. I guess he relied on me MORE as I was the stable and loving one.
Dear Dancing,
YOU CAN RESIST HIM no matter how he cries….you have that POWER IF YOU ALLOW YOURSELF TO HAVE IT. Keep that in mind, YOU ***HAVE*** THAT POWER!!! DON’T LET GO OF IT.
You have right behind you!!!! He only has the power you give him, don’t give it to him!!!! You are NOT ALONE!!!!
Dancing Warrior,
You are not alone and you do belong somewhere, because at very least you have a family here. I cannot imagine how hard it is to give up a 20-year relationship. True courage is what happens when you are terrified and do the right thing anyway. All of us here left the spaths because we had no choice. And that which doesn’t kill us makes us stronger. It sounds normal to feel scared and vulnerable. Just don’t let him see it. You can come here and fall apart or fall apart in your living room. But act calm in front of the spath. Fortunately for you, they are not empathic and cannot tune into what you are feeling, as long as you don’t show any reaction. So with a minimal acting job, you can bluff him.
DW,
You can do it. I know you can. I’ve seen your posts and you’ve built consistent strength throughout all of this. Your situation is not just like mine, but your resolve to have it over and your honesty about where you are, inspires me to keep going too. I’m similar to you in I don’t a support system either, other than my children and I cannot rely upon them to create for me, what I need to create for myself. I understand how terrifying it really is.
Bless your heart. Just hang in there, stay strong and do what is advised here to get you through this.
LL
Star, LL, Oxy,
Thanks for your supportive ear.
It’s first time at age 44 that I have to make a life for myself and I am scared. I did not do it when I was 20, when I married–I was escaping, and anything looked better than what I was escaping from.
I accept that I had it easy to totally lean on him and have him make my life for me. Circumstances didn’t help either–new language, new country, not knowing how to get around, not a single friend/family, no shelter, no money. Just him. He was my world. It was idyllic at first and I bonded with him as a protector, big time. Then when it got bad I was cornered–war in my country, no self esteem and belief I could strik out on my own, leaving never was an option.
Now I don’t know how to make a life for me. Nor who I am. Nor what I want. Or what my purpose in life is. I went through the motions and did what I was “supposed to.” Now nothing has meaning, it’s like I lived a fake life for someone else, not for me.
I thank you Star for saying I belong soemwhere and I have the LF family here. It’s heartbreaking to be on my own. Terrifying truly. Looming dangers look huge out there. And no friend to smile and offer a hand, it seems now.
One day at a time as I’ve done so far.
Thanks for letting me vent and lending a shoulder. I’ll repay the kindness when I’m stronger.
I hope I’m not being nosey, DW, but I’m curious what country you are from?
You are actually reinventing yourself, and that’s a very positive time in a person’s life, even though it’s scary. Do you realize how many people stay stuck in horrible lives because they are more afraid of the unknown than of being miserable? I’m not even talking about people married to spaths. So many people are complacent in bad marriages or jobs because they are afraid to leave, afraid to change, afraid to take any risk, afraid to be alone, afraid of the unknown. Their lives are not killing them, but neither are they fulfilling. In a way you are lucky because you have no choice but to start over again. Just like having to leave my abusive family made me into a free spirit that many of my married friends envy. I have friends that are terrified to go anywhere or make a decision without their husband. One of my co-workers went from living with her parents to getting married and living with her husband and his whole extended family. She has never had her own place or even had a chance to find out who she is without her family. You have this chance because you are forced into it. Good for you! You will find out who you are without a spath in your life. I’m betting you will like who you become and you will be proud of yourself for being so strong. When you are free, you don’t try to hide in mediocre situations like so many people. You can think outside the box at what will really make you happy. Crises like this gives us a golden opportunity to ask ourselves what we really really want.
It’s okay to be scared. You can be scared and still take care of business. Don’t let the fear stop you. The problem with fear is that it’s SCARY. But remember it’s temporary, just like all the other emotions. The flip side of fear is excitement. I hope one day, you will find things in life that you can be excited about. I remember when after a period of intense grieving, I felt excited about something for the first time. It was pretty cool. What could you ever be excited about living with a spath?
DW,
“It’s first time at age 44 that I have to make a life for myself and I am scared. I did not do it when I was 20, when I married”“I was escaping, and anything looked better than what I was escaping from.
I accept that I had it easy to totally lean on him and have him make my life for me. Circumstances didn’t help either”“new language, new country, not knowing how to get around, not a single friend/family, no shelter, no money. Just him. He was my world. It was idyllic at first and I bonded with him as a protector, big time. Then when it got bad I was cornered”“war in my country, no self esteem and belief I could strik out on my own, leaving never was an option.
Now I don’t know how to make a life for me. Nor who I am. Nor what I want. Or what my purpose in life is. I went through the motions and did what I was “supposed to.” Now nothing has meaning, it’s like I lived a fake life for someone else, not for me.
I thank you Star for saying I belong soemwhere and I have the LF family here. It’s heartbreaking to be on my own. Terrifying truly. Looming dangers look huge out there. And no friend to smile and offer a hand, it seems now.”
You just wrote almost word for word how I’m feeling. That is amazing.
Even though our circumstances are different, what you have spoken here speaks EXACTLY to how I’m feeling too.
DW, you’re a strong person. You’ve grown a lot. IT’s hard to do without the support you wish you had. But it can be done and you’re doing it!
LL
Dancing Warrior,
When you were 20 you took WHAT SEEMED the “easy” road but it turned out to be a very HIGH PRICED RIDE….and that is how it turns out many times. Becoming dependent on someone else to provide for our needs is in a way selling ourselves into “slavery” of a kind….as they control us and we have no way out.
Now, you are ESCAPING that slavery and are becoming independent, and IT IS SCARY, but it is also very LIBERATING. Now you can FIND your PURPOSE IN LIFE. Find your goals. I think that short experience you had with the BF was a FEAR-BASED thing where you were seeking another “protector” to provide for you….but then you saw what you already really knew. When we become DEPENDENT on someone else, they become our MASTERS and we the slaves. Even a “kind master” is till controlling us. We need to leaRn to be INDEPENDENT and then when we are secure in who we are, we can find someone to SHARE with and the two become inter-dependent, each one able to stand alone, but standing together.
You are 44, I am 64, sometimes I don’t know what my goals are either, and I have few family or friends left since I kicked the disordered ones out of my circle of family and friends.
You know the language now, you’ve been here 20 years so for better or worse this is your country now, so find some cause that interests you, and go volunteer to work in the gift shop, or put out flyers, or gather donations, and meet some people and make some friends. Not friends to “depend on” or “take care of” you, but friends to share with. To laugh with, and eventually friends that you can cry with. ((((hugs))))
Hi DW,
have been reading your posts.
you are doing very well, you may not feel that way, but I can sense that inner strength in your words.
you will be able to shoulder it all, give it time.
your post makes me think, if I had not acted on the advice given here by Oxy, LL, Sky, Star, H2H, Schic, Candy, Libelle, etc. I may have even left my country and been in the USA, with a situation similar to yours standing at my door step.
which country did you move from, if it is not convenient to write here, it is OK.
stay strong, we hvae to get these jerks out of our lives.
I feel so much at peace this week, after I finaly pulled out my plug from his ugly twisted socket – his messed up brain.
I took my power back, I will never give it to him again, he will not be able to even sniff at my power, it is mine to keep forever.
petite