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 SeeingClearly,
WOW!!!!! WOWWWWWW!!!! TOWANDA girlfriend!!! “I don’t know you and I don’t dance with strange men!” WAY TO GO GF!!!! WAAAAAY YO GO!!!
I can’t believe that he had the gall, ah, yea, I CAN believe he had the gall but I “can’t believe it!” LOL ROTFLMAO
Did you clue your date in after the fact? Or did the refusal to dance with the arsehole clue him in.
I would have given half my fortune to have seen his face when you refused to dance with him. They think because we are in a “social” situation where we would not want to “cause a scene” that we will buckle and let them walk on us.
My egg donor’s brother, Uncle Monster pulled one of those once when he thought I would not stand up to him because there was a large audience of my friends, and BOY was he wrong! We were all baling hay for him (as a favor actually) and when he got to verbally bad mouthing and showing off, I said to the crew, “come on boys, let’s go” and we walked off right then leaving UNCLE MONSTER’S HAY CROP in the field unbaled—-cost him a pretty penny, and it embarrassed me a bit, but I apologized to my friends and said “thanks guys, sorry for the problem.” Uncle Monster sure had EGG ON HIS FACE after it all. LOL He was the one that took the hit not me.
So they catch us where they think we won’t stand up to them because we don’t want to draw negative attention to ourselves socially. I have come to the conclusion that I could give a rat’s behind what the situation is, I am NOT going to let it be used against me and if I have to “make a scene” in order to enforce my boundary I will do what has to be done!
Good for you!!!! You did great!!!! I can’t think of a thing in the world you could have done BETTER! I THINK IT WAS PERFECT!!!! Can’t get better than that!!!! hee heee hee
Dear Oxy,
Give them an inch…..
Date is an old acquiantance. I explained after the fact. He said he would have given him a piece of his mind if he had known. I told him that’s exactly what he would have loved to have seen happen, and that my friend is why I made sure it didn’t. I love it when people underestimate me. She’s so pretty she doesn’t have a brain in her head. Give me a break!
He’s not worth talking about just thought you guys would enjoy the side show. What a stupid a** he is. Can’t you just picture it all. LOL
Trust me Oxy I have no trouble putting him or anyone in there “rightfulness” place and I’ll do it with total charm and good grace. LOL After all I was born and raised in the South.
Love ya Oxy girl—-you keep it real and straight to the heart of the matter—I relate.
Stay Stong, Stay Safe and Stay Sane… Seeing Clearly
Dear SeeingClearly,
The thing it took me so long to realize is that Southern “good manners” are so badly used so many times to MASK BAD BEHAVIOR….and I learned to COVER up my pain and embarrassment with a Southern Smile. Pull my apron over my bleeding heart and pretend that “everything is lovely!” even when I was BLEEDING TO DEATH.
“What would the neighbors think?” and “let’s pretend we are a nice normal family” were so ingrained into my thinking I didn’t know there was any other way to think. COVER UP the dirty laundry in the family, hide it, it didn’t matter what it was as long as the neighbors didn’t know about it, then it was okay.
Don’t express your pain in any way, your feelings don’t count as long as you keep the secrets. It never felt right to me, but I was confused about why it didnt’ FEEL RIGHT. Now I am learning and really could give a rat’s behind what the neighbors think…I already know most of their secrets anyway, they’ve lived next door for 6 generations and I know their grandpa used to go drinking and whoring with my great grandpa…LOL I know who stuffed the ballot boxes and who killed John Clayton in 1889 (a political murder here in my county that made national headlines) I also know whose daddy and granddaddy were stealing from the county and who were riding at night with sheets over their heads. I know who was in the lynch party —but as long as we ALL PRETEND IT NEVER HAPPENE, EVERYTHING IS LOVELY. Go to the charity ball all dressed up and dance with the crooked politician and keep on smiling. NOT any more. I’m done with playing PRETEND. I’m a grown up now. Only kids and crooks play “let’s pretend we’re a nice normal family.”
‘v
AMEN Oxy,
I hear you loud and clear—-been there and have been washed in fire. I learned to use my southerness to disarm those that would do me harm. But let someone abuse me not since I was 28 and that was 30 years ago. I am nice but not a doormat. I refuse to be a victim for someones amusement.
I hear you on the politician thing too. No NADA not going to happen. Been there too and I will call them out—might not get a straight answer but at least they know. YOU CAN’T FOOL ALL THE PEOPLE ALL THE TIME.
My friends know where I stand and my enemies can all go to _____. (fill it in) I am totally not a game player. I take my lumps straight up. And that my friend is why you have my deepest respected. You tell it like you SEE IT!!!
I don’t think the pain is gone. I just learned to cope and create a new life without the sociopath. I adapted to this new life but the effects and damage brought by this person remains. He is long gone and yet not a day goes by I do not see and feel the impact he had on my life. After 2 years I am still single and alone – unable to trust myself and others…unable to give myself to anyone. And I resent him for that with all my heart. He took away my ability to hope and believe that not all men are like him – heartless, cruel, manipulative, cunning, deceitful. He killed my ability to trust in the goodness of people and I will forever hate him for that. Hate does not even begin to describe how I feel about this man and the anger I feel at what he took away from me. So no the pain is not gone…I just learned to live with it.
Dear Deceived,
Don’t give up the HOPE that you can reclaim yourself…you were naive, but not stupid….and you got burned by a bad man, but that doesn’t mean that all men are bad or that you care not wise enough to protect yourself from those who ARE BAD in the future.
You lost your trust in YOURSELF, but you can regain it! Sure, hate him for what he did to you, but learn to love and TRUST YOURSELF. Just cause you got fooled once doesn’t mean that it must happen again. YOU ARE A WISER WOMAN NOW THAN BEFORE, stronger, and more determined to keep yourself safe!
You can overcome that pain, that fear of having it done to you again…two years isn’t a long time in the healing process, so don’t rush it, but don’t give up either. ((((Hugs)))) Read here and learn, take that knowledge and let it grow, make you stronger, and heal. My prayers for your peace and healing!
GOOD FOR YOU GIRL FRIEND!! WOW!! YOU DID GREAT!!
A HUGE TOWANDA FOR YOU!!
And you did it with class, grace, balls,style,and guts!!
Couldnt have been better ! WOWEE again!!
HI 5 to you!!
Love,}}
Mama GemXX!
Dear Seeing,
Thanks, the validation I get here helps me to stay strong and to grow. Validation from gutsy and strong women and men who have been through the fires of hell and survived….maybe singed a bit, but still whole!
Even the best of virtues can be turned around so it becomes a problem, and patience can be one of those virtues that becomes a big FLAW. As southerners we are taught to “be patient” with others, to be caring, and “bless their hearts….” when someone does something nasty…but I am no longer patient with EVIL. I no longer TOLERATE anything that is mean. I am impatient and intolerant and prejudiced against folks who hurt others.
Makes me a b1atch down here! LOL
I have a plaque in my bathroom which read:
I AM NOT A BIT__! I AM THE BIT__. enough said? LOL
There was a movie with Kathy Bates (not green tomatoes) where the woman that she worked for said something to the effect of : sometimes being a bit__ is all we have to hang on to. I like that!! Ya’ll be sweet now ya hear LOL
Mama Gem:
Right back at ya. It’s great to be in the company of all you wonderful women and you to gents.