It’s easy to fall asleep at the wheel on the road of life. To lose consciousness under the seeming weight of sorrows, trials and tribulations pounding you into the dirt. To forget to open your eyes to the wonders passing by. Everyday living has a numbing effect on reality. However, if you’re in relationship with someone who resembles the label of a sociopath, psychopath, narcissistic personality disordered or any other disorderly letter of the alphabet, it’s even easier to forget who you are and where you’re going. Staying awake drifts from your mind as you are drained by the numbing effect of his abuse. The deeper your drift, the further waking up races from possibility.
When we’re in an abusive relationship, we’ll do a lot to avoid waking up, including sleep walking our way through each passing day. But, sleep walking can be deadly. One day can lead to one year which can roll into a decade. Decades pass and you wind up living life on the edge of consciousness, one eye on the door waiting to see what comes in. The other eye is searching for an exit sign, hoping for an opening where it’s the right time, right day, right place to step away, step free, get going away from his abuse. If you are in a relationship where your reasons for staying revolve around slamming doors, fear rising and freedom vanishing, it’s time to wake up and ask yourself, What am I doing?
Yes, it’s hard to leave. Yes, there are 101 reasons why you can’t do it. But, whether you do it today, or do it in a year, the children who keep you there, the financial stress that holds you back, the fear that keeps you shaking, will still be there. Excuses endure. An abuser endures too.
An abuser will do everything he can to make you believe it’s all your fault. He’ll do whatever it takes to convince you that you cannot leave him. Don’t believe him. He’s lying. It’s imperative you face the truth. Prince charming has turned into the prince of darkness. It isn’t some ‘other guy’ hitting you. It’s him. The man you fell in love with. The one who promised to love you ’til death do us part.’ He just forgot to mention, he took the ‘death part’ really seriously. Remember, you didn’t create the monster raging in front of your eyes. And you are powerless to stop him being who he is. Your power lives in stopping his abuse in your life by stepping away from the source of your pain. His abuse.
To end abuse, you must wake-up to its reality
Waking up from abuse isn’t easy. But then, sleep-walking through life is no way to live free of abuse.
Being in an abusive relationship isn’t easy, either, nor is leaving. This isn’t about what’s easy. It’s about what is right. For you. For your children. For your future. It would be nice to keep believing that he has all your answers. It’s just not true. Nobody, regardless of what the abuser says, has your answers. You do. Nobody has the right to tell you where to go, when to go, where to sit, what to wear, what to say. Nobody has the right to tell you who you are. Abusers assume the right and we assume they’re right under the weight of their abuse.
Facing the truth that we have the power to change the abuse in our life, but not the abuser, can be terrifying. It puts us at the centre of our existence, and after having lived so long on the periphery of our lives, it’s frightening to wake-up and claim centre stage. Yet, it’s imperative that we wake up to the truth. It could be a decision between life and death.
Wake-up and make a difference in your life
There is a way to wake-up from the nightmare of abuse and live the life of your dreams. Here are some steps you can take to make a difference in your own life and let go of the difference abuse is making in keeping you stuck in the living nightmare of someone else’s crazy-making antics.
Step 1 No More Lies
Stop and really listen to yourself. Are you afraid? Are you repeating all the bad things he says about you again and again in your head? Are you frightened of speaking up, speaking out, standing up for yourself? If you answered yes, then it’s time to quit lying to yourself and everyone else. What he’s doing is wrong. It isn’t normal. Quit trying to justify his bad behaviour. Quit making you the reason he hits you. You’re not. Quit being the victim of his abuse. When the voices of self-doubt rise up, remind yourself, those are his words speaking, not my truth. Find your own truth. Let go of his lies.
Recently I was working with a woman who had finally left an abusive marriage after 16 years. A single mother of four children, two of them with serious health issues, she struggled with the responsibility of accepting, in staying for those 16 years, she had made choices that affected her life and her children’s lives. But I was a victim, she said.
I’m with Gavin de Becker (The Gift of Fear). The first time someone hits me, I’m a victim. The second time, I’ve made a choice to be there. With that first hit he gave me a clear indication of all that he was capable of. In staying, I chose to ignore the warning. I chose to make a decision based on escalating anger, behaviours that I knew were out of whack with ”˜normal’. Behaviours that scared me. I stayed because I was too afraid to leave.
The woman and I talked about her fears of being accountable in having chosen to stay.
“But that means I asked for it,” she said.
“No.” I replied. “It means you made a choice to believe the unbelievable after he hit you once. You chose to believe, he’d never do it again, thus making it acceptable he’d done it once. At no time, however, does it mean you deserved it. No one deserves abuse. No one deserves to be hit or screamed at or called names. That behaviour is not about who we are, it’s about who they are and what we’re willing to accept. You never deserved to be hit, and you never asked for it. You chose to stay. When we accept responsibility for our choices, we empower ourselves to make different choices.”
That is the gift and power of no more lies. We quit denying our role in staying and applaud ourselves by having the courage to leave.
Step 2 Let go of someday thinking and never say never
Let go of someday thinking and never say never. There is no such time as someday and never never happens. Listen to what you’re saying. Do you think in someday terms? Do you say to yourself, “Someday I’m just going to get up, pick up the kids and walk out of here. I don’t care if I have a penny to my name, if I don’t have a job. I don’t care what the neighbours think or what he says, someday I’m not going to take this anymore.”
A woman I worked with decided one day that she had had enough. Eleven years into the relationship she woke up one morning and realized, he was never going to change. He liked things just the way they were. She packed up her twins, ran to a shelter and has never looked back.
Three years later she says, “I didn’t have any money when I was with him and I didn’t have any money when I left. Nothing was different the day I packed up except I let go of thinking about someday and did it now. My life is way better than it ever was with him. I still don’t have much money, but I’m not being abused. And without his angry outbursts and unpredictable behaviour, I am able to make plans, go back to school, get a job, take care of my twins. I have way more energy and I know I’m going to be okay. I didn’t know that when I was with him.”
He isn’t going to change. He doesn’t have to. And all the wishful thinking in the world will not make it happen someday.
Give it up. Let it go. Shake it out and quit planning on someday. Start planning on the date when you get free. Set a date. A timeline. A target. Plan. If you fear for your life in leaving, don’t tell him anything about your plans. Just do it. There is no such time as someday and never never happens.
Step 3: Find help
We suffer abuse alone — except for our children of course. They’re part of it too but we try not to think of that very often when we’re rationalizing staying for their sake. Mostly, however, we suffer abuse alone, especially in our heads.
We repeat again and again what he said, what he did, what we didn’t do. We talk about if only I had”¦ We think about, one day, maybe. And then we suffer silently in our heads.
To leave, you need help. Get it. Don’t make excuses. Don’t say, but he’ll find out. He’ll know I’m up to something. Be as secretive and cautious as you must, but get help.
After I was released from the living hell I endured for 4 years 9 months with the abusive man who went to jail and is no longer in my life, I realized, he knew I wouldn’t lie to him. He knew I couldn’t lie to him. I believed he was omnipotent. I believed he knew everything I did and said.
He made sure to paint the picture in such a way, I believed he did. Sometimes, he’d phone and ask, “Is there something you need to tell me?”
“I love you,” I’d quickly reply.
“I’m serious. Is there something you need to tell me?”
I’d rack my brain. “No.”
“Are you sure?”
“Yes,” my voice more hesitant.
“You know I hate liars. You know I need to trust you completely.”
I’d pause and look back over my day frantically searching for a transgression. Oh no! I’d had lunch with a male friend from work. How did he know? Quietly, I’d tell him the truth. And then I’d apologize. I’d hang up and wonder, how did he know?
He didn’t. He was just really good at making me feel guilty for doing nothing wrong.
I needed help. I never looked for it. Every time I thought about leaving, of contacting someone for help, I’d remind myself of all the lies he’d told me. My phones were tapped. Men were listening in. Watching me. Tailing me. Taking pictures of me unawares. I’d remember the times he phoned and told me he liked the dress I was wearing that day. How did he know? I hadn’t told him and hadn’t seen him. He didn’t have to see me. He didn’t have to know the actual dress. As long as he kept me guessing, I’d never wake up to the realization he’d never actually described the dress I was wearing, just said he’d liked it.
I never went for help. Never reached out. Never asked. I almost died. And through it all, I never gave up my magical thinking that one day, someone, somewhere would make it all stop. Make it all go away. Make him love me again. Make him be Prince Charming again. Make me okay. Maybe even, make him forgive me for having caused so much trouble in his life.
It never happened. I knew what was happening to me was wrong, but I could never face the truth. In running from the truth, I ran into his lies and believed I was the cause of his bad behaviour. I was just the recipient. I was never responsible for his lies. Just my own when I quit believing the truth of what was happening to me, and bought into the lies he told me. His bad behaviour could never stop as long as I stayed with him.
Ask for help. Get informed. Google ”˜how to leave an abusive relationship’. There’s lots of ideas and help online. Make sure you look up what to do to erase your Internet footprints. Make sure you keep yourself safe. And DO IT. You have to take the steps to get free. No one else can do it for you.
Leaving him isn’t easy. Healing takes time, but healing cannot begin until you get free. Whether you do it today, tomorrow or five years down the road, healing will always take time, but it can’t begin until that moment in time when you close the door behind you and leave him and his abuse in the past.
Do it and start healing.
I agree. I think it is the ultimate betrayal, as far as they are concerned. That’s why we are most in danger of being victims of domestic violence when we try to leave…It means they’ve lost the power to control us.
Even if they aren’t violent they still like the ego rush of knowing they can contol our emotions, and can use and manipulate us via said emotions…they lose alotofego gratification when we cut them off.
It’s really the only power we have, and the one and only way to recover, IMO.
I kind of have mixed feelings on NC on the part of the spath.
I think to a degree that they don’t care, because they are focused on their next seek and destroy mission, but should you give them the opportunity to come back into your life, they sure welcome it with open arms. Granted the relationship will never be the same, but it does hand over control, or at least implied control, to them.
Thanks Wini – that made me feel really good!
But what if the S/P instigated the NC out of a completely paranoid delusion, and he is the one who has discarded you…won’t speak to you…comes face-to-face by accident and looks away as if you aren’t event there…won’t acknowledge that you do, or have ever, existed???
I know, I know, I’m better off without him, but how DOES it feel to treat someone so inhumanely and sleep at night, go about the day? It hurts to be totally deleted without any explanation or any human recognition whatsoever…
Dear SageeGirl, this is a psychopaths ploy called the “devalue and di.scard” or D & D and it is their version of NC It is to make us feel small and worthless. Sometimes though, they will do this for a long time until they get out of “supply” themselves and then they will shot back up, ready to start over, seemingly forgetting how they treated you in the past.
NC makes them furious because you D&D’d them before theyu had a chance to do it to you I think, either that or they weren’t ready to do it yet and wanted more chances to control you, and without contact there is no control.
Thanks Oxy. It’s still hard to comprehend though. He has now done it three times… I didn’t understand it all until now, but it’s still hard to deal with the feeling that he is acting as if I never existed. Like I meant nothing to him…
Funny, I had a feeling both other times that he had someone else and I told myself that when she got tired of his chit that he would be back. And he was… This time I know better…
Yea, he treats you like you don’t matter (because you don’t, but it makes you suffer so you will weaken and be there for him when he’s done with the one he’s with now) Wait until he tries to come back and he can’t get aresponse from you. Not even a return phone call. Not even his texts or e mails….because they bounce.
I suggest that you change your number or block his calls, ditto e mails. Make your FB if you have one private so he can’t read it, unfriend him and do not answer any friend requests. And none from anyone you don’t know so he can’t have a person contact you indirectly.
Cut him out of your life. Do not speak to him if he encounters you on the street. If you get into your car and he follows you, drive to the police station and report that he is following you. MAKE A FORMAL REPORT. Keep copies of any e mails or texts or anything because you will need these for a restraining order possibly. Put a peep hole in your door and do not open it if he is on the other side.
Do NOT talk to anyone about him or to anyone who will carry tales and information back tg him.
NO contact, none, zip, zero, nada—and keep on and do not give him ANY response and he will eventually go away. But if you slip and even yell “F&^k off at him, THAT IS CONTACT and you have noticed him and are back as far as HE is concerned to square one. It is must be an ALL out No contact. Good luck.
I’ve been doing that as much as possible…very small town…
The police do know about his reaction to the “stalker”, who just-so-happens to be his ex ex… I noticed that my police officer is FB friends with the co-worker he suspected of doing the stalking since before I came along… Like I said…VERY small town…
I don’t think he would get violent, since he’s already had three strikes and two other run-ins, but that was a long time ago.
We are such polar opposites…but we attracted… So not like me… Yeah, I was LONELY, and like my friend told me, “Lonely people do desperate things.” He noticed that too. Told me I never smiled… He saw me smile a lot after that, but then he hurt me even more… Go figure…
Hi all, need some help/support/advice please.
Spath ex moved to FL in 2007 after long history of threats and some violence to me during marriage and throughout divorce. Threatened to kill himself on my front lawn if the divorce didn’t go his way. He had a shotgun he called a “people killer” which he showed me, etc.
I have been in contact with him all along because going n/c always provoked frightening responses from him, even from FL, and I thought the price to pay—talking to him, listening to him—was an ok trade-off to stay safe. He is not too rational when he feels ignored. (he’s a psychologist, PhD, go figure)
In late June of this year I finally stopped taking his calls—he uses prescription drugs, binges on them, then would call and rant, vent, etc. All this time I had been hoping he would meet a woman in FL and fixate on her and leave me alone. (very mixed feelings about that of course—for her sake) Didn’t happen, though he has tried and not gotten anywhere.
Since June he’s sent me letters, flowers, emails….so many phone calls I unplugged the phone, turned off the answering machine. The letters vary from hateful “you are a cruel selfish bitch” to “you are my soulmate.” All include either pleas or demands that I call him. He has called my daughter and my ex-husband (daughter’s father). I responded to nothing.
Last Wed (Sept 1) I received a 4 page suicide letter and called the FL police—they checked his house and said he wasn’t there, his car wasn’t there. I called all hospitals in the area–nothing.
I called his best friend (lives in IL) who said he’d talked to him a few days before and he was fine, although a bit “hurt” he couldn’t talk to me. Said the ex was planning to move to another place in the same town, so I figured Ok, just more of his usual drama and game playing—the car wouldn’t be at his house because he’d moved that day or the day before. No worries.
The suicide letter said I was the one with my finger on the trigger, that I was the reason he was killing himself. And that I would inherit all his worldly goods and that he hoped that would “teach you some humility.”
Yesterday I received a copy of his will in the mail. Dated April, and I am the beneficiary. This was alarming…I checked his FL town’s newspaper yesterday afternoon online and there was a photo of him and an article saying he is missing and armed, and the police found ammo strewn around his house. He has his very powerful 12 gauge shotgun with him. The article said police found several suicide letters in the house. It gave a description and license plate number of his car. His sister (who lives in IL) reported him missing.
I called the FL police—they have found his car at a local body shop (he was in an accident the Sat before he disappeared) and don’t know where he is—they are thinking he took off walking but I know he didn’t. He wouldn’t just walk off, and carrying a shotgun? No. They are being close-lipped because I am not family, just an ex-wife.
The detective told me this morning they have no evidence he rented a car. I think he may have bought one—he certainly has the money to do so, and a neighbor reported seeing him putting stuff into a car–after the accident. He has no friends in FL, so no one to assist him. He somehow got his hands on a car. I called 3 of the major car national rental places and no record of him.
FL police are going with the “he went off his meds and wandered off” theory. I think that’s what his sister would like to believe as the alternative would be too mean of him—to put her through this. He is her only sibling. He has been missing for 8-9 days now.
Since he hasn’t committed a crime the police can’t get his credit card records, cell phone records, etc. It is not illegal to go missing. He left his computer behind, his laptop. I can access his email and there is no activity since about Aug 26. He really has disappeared.
I called my local police who told me to lock my doors and call 911 if I see him. That’s all they can do–just warn me to watch out. He’s had enough time to cross the US if he wanted to—and he has prescription dexidrine to stay awake. This is all very scary and horrible. If he did kill himself, and he was pretty clear about doing it, he puts the blame squarely on me and my going n/c with him. (he doesn’t call it n/c, calls it being selfish and mean and cruel, etc)
I don’t know, this is all very surreal. He’s made suicide like threats before so this is somewhat like the boy crying wolf. But he’s never disappeared before.
I don’t know how he could return to his life now—not with his photograph on the front page of his newspaper and article about the gun and suicide. I don’t know if he is parked in a car somewhere, slumped over. I don’t know if he is on his way to CA, or if he is already here.
I guess I have mixed feelings about going n/c with someone who is dependent, has a history of violence, is easily frustrated–even if they live across the country. I did email him back in June that our “friendship” was too stressful for both of us and it would be best to just throw in the towel. He seemed ok with that, I heard nothing from him for a few weeks or so, then he started in again as if I had never written that email. So it wasn’t just an abrupt n/c from me, although from his point of view I guess it was, even with an email saying let’s just call it a day and I wish you the best.
My dad (retired cop) and my cousin (retired cop) both think I should leave my house. The FL cops think he’s around there, on foot. My local cops just say be careful, don’t open the door.
This is all very surreal and frightening on many levels. I can’t see him killing himself, at least not without an audience. But maybe I am in denial, and he really is gone. But most people who are going to commit suicide would do it at home, not on the road. (he lives alone, so no worries about someone he cares about finding him)
I feel horrible and guilty and think daily phone call to prevent this from happening is far more humane than me doing a survivor version of discard—me going n/c is the same as him doing the discard thing (which he’s done off and on over the years—and it does hurt when you care about someone—now, whether he ever cared about me is highly debatable).
Any ideas, anyone???
CAmom,
How stressful for you! If I were you, I think that I would try and do what your father and cousin recommend, getting to a safer place. Hopefully, the ex won’t come your way, but he sounds terribly unstable. I’ll be praying for you.