by AlohaTraveler
How many of us have a list, or know someone who does, of the ideal qualities we are looking for in THE ONE? I think these lists can sometimes cause us to miss out on someone quite wonderful because we get so attached to a check list. But that’s another topic. I have a different kind of list. It could be called the list of EXACTLY what I DO NOT want in a life partner! This list has helped me to heal and come to terms with the reality of the Bad Man.
While going through my things this morning, I found a piece of binder paper with a list I had written about the Bad Man in the early stages of my healing. It was written sometime within the first year after I had left him. The list represents a free flowing string of words and phrases that describe the Bad Man.
Before I found LoveFraud, I was aware that my thoughts of the Bad Man seemed to swing back and forth between never wanting to hear from him again to hoping somehow he would learn, apologize and we would live happily ever after. I didn’t totally understand why this was so and it was perplexing, given my descriptive list.
Bad Man was not the clever sociopath that many of the readers here talk about. Don’t get me wrong. He was very smart and charismatic. But I didn’t get blind sided or robbed behind my back like many readers. He was fairly abusive and inappropriate in the first few weeks though he used all of the customary word games and mind tricks. Still, I find it a little embarrassing to admit that I put up with way too much right from the get-go. Looking back, in what context would name calling ever be okay?
Reality Checks
Bad Man wasn’t all flowers and charming words. I got flowers. I got love notes. But for the most part, the list below describes him best. I wrote this list for myself to use as a means of staying in touch with reality when I felt my heart softening again for him. When I had those moments, I went to my list to remind myself of the destructive, abusive, nightmare that he truly was. Now, I find it amusing how well I was describing a narcissist or a borderline without the understanding I have now of personality disorders.
A second paper I found contained the transcription of his last four text messages to me before I called my cell phone carrier and asked the operator to cut the line. I will never forget the tears of relief as I watched the lights go out on my cell phone. At the top of the page of verbal venom, I wrote, “Words to remember you by.” These messages were hateful, vicious, twisted, and untrue. Every six months or so, I run across these two papers. They don’t really hurt me now. Each time I read them, I see more clearly the pathology driving the Bad Man. For some reason, I save these pages. I haven’t included the text messages in this article because they are very personal attacks on me and no one would benefit from reading them. I certainly didn’t. Still, I save them because reading those hateful messages makes it totally clear that I made the right choice in leaving him and eventually going No Contact.
To Stay on Track, Be Honest with Yourself
I have a gentle suggestion for anyone that is still struggling with that feeling of wanting the pathological abuser/exploiter back. Create your own list using words that describe what happened to you like this:
Bad Man/Woman = constant liar, cheater, infantile, fraudulent, etc.
Use the words that ring most true for you. Then tuck away your list in a place where you can access it whenever you feel yourself getting off track. Or, if you are really struggling, post it on the bathroom mirror or keep it in your purse for instant reality checks! Read it over and over, as often as you need. Use the list to replace those moments of longing.
My list helped me many times in the early days. Whenever I run across the list, I read it through. It reminds me to be thankful for my life for what it is, and what it isn’t, today.
Here is my list.
Introducing… the Bad Man
Controlling
Manipulative
Hypocritical
Attacks me
Judges me
Does not see himself
Isolates me
Name calling
Spin Doctor
Secret Abuser
Advises and “counsels” me on “anger issues” but does not control his own anger
Self Righteous
Inflated Super Ego
Cheap
Selfish
Petty
Twisted
Omits the truth
Manipulates people
Inappropriate
No boundaries
Uses People
E-mail bombs
Possessive
Scares Me
Emotional Abuse
Mind F***
Perverted
Gee, I wonder why I don’t miss him. NOT!
The Truth, a Lesson, and Peace
Imagine if the Bad Man’s personal dating profile was the list above. He doesn’t sound very appealing does he? This, of course, is not how he describes himself. That is why it is important to write down the truth. I wrote my list in one of those raw, painful moments, standing on the edge of “the Fog” as we say. My list is me, speaking to… me. It is the rope I clung to whenever I started to dangle over that black hole again.
The list is the TRUTH.
In the days when I still missed him, it was all about the fantasy of the Bad Man, the great seducer. Today, I am learning to pay more attention to what I see and not so much to what people say. This is fundamental to restoring faith in myself because I let myself down. I need to trust myself to assess a situation and trust what I see (ie.: intimidation, blame shifting, hypocrisy, etc.). I need to stand up for me when life calls for it. No one should be able to talk me out of my instincts to protect myself and my spirit. That was far too easy in the past. This was one of the lessons I needed to learn.
If you chose to do an exercises like my list, it may bring up a lot of pain but ultimately, it is meant to bring you clarity and eventually peace. When I look at this list today, I feel peaceful knowing that I left this man in the dust. There was no other choice.
This is a great idea.
I recently actually this past weekend left her.
I was repeatedly abused physically, emotionally and verbally, if I was to cut myself open for her she would of taken every last drop of blood and then say, “what are you talking about”.
Continually pushed me to the limits, I finally broke, and spit on her. I knew that it was done, I had to leave. I had no excuse for doing that. I was just a name in her book, Soloman, the other James (james bond pic as his screen saver), she names her victims.
I was such a fool.
Its hard coming to terms that 8 months of lies and deceit, nothing was real.
When I asked why she was cheating on me again, and contacting previous people she cheated on me with, she remarked “you did this to yourself”. She is right. I did.
But it doesnt mean I will let it happen again.
I am going to write a list.
I have all emails, and text saved. Its sick looking at some of the things she said and did. But she is already onto her next victim, this one is at her work.
msalamanca
Welcome to LoveFraud….keep on reading and learning and know that there is no way that you can have contact with her and not get sucked back iinto her “black widow’s web” of evil and abuse.
NO CONTACT is the protection you afford yourself to get your head together and to keep them from hurting you again and again.
Keep on making that list and protect yourself with NO CONTACT.
Again, welcome to LF and God bless.
Msalmanca, I’m so sorry to read of your experiences and distress.
OxD is spot-on. “No Contact” is the first and greatest step in severing the ties that bind us to “bad people.”
Keep reading and posting. And, consider putting the emails and text messages in a file, somewhere. Get them out of your sight, for a while. They’re not going to assist you in your recovery for a long, long time. Right now, you’re raw and hurting. Reviewing the messages only rub salt into those raw wounds, right now.
Later….when you’ve gotten your feet firmly onto you Healing Path, looking back at the messages might not be such a trauma. For now, they only infect the raw wounds even more.
Brightest blessings
Hi All,
Thx for this article. Oddly enough, during first weeks of my leaving my monster ( his current nickname) I was missing him so much that I did a list too- in my journaling. It occurred to me to do this b/c I still loved him, even though he had discarded me and was already full blown with another woman….the same one he was dbl’ing with me all year! The horrible things he had said and done to me all year should have killed what I felt for him…so my list was a reality check, I still had no idea what he was or why I felt so traumatized…but I knew my feelings were not rational.
I am just 6m leaving him , and 2m NC. Long way to go, but I am going to do another list today…b/c I see us both more clearly. When I first left, I felt like I was going to die if I could never be with him again. Imagine that, I wanted a man back, who had , for starters;
dishonored me, cheated on me, humliated me, lied to me, strung me along, used me , insulted me, disrespected me, tore at my value, raged at me, deceived me….etc.
Really? What a prize he was! I know I am worth so much more…he never deserved one minute of my life. Boy was I hooked. My love for him never made sense.
Starting my counseling tomorrow : )
Bluemosaic
Blue, thanks for re posting this article.
Great advice Aloha. I found I had to write a list of his “attributes” before I could accept what he was. The cog/diss was so great it took a long time for the facts to sink in. Even with it in black and white. He did such a good mind fark on me.
Now, if I have doubts or I’m having a bad day ruminating about him I don’t need to look at those words I wrote down ….on yellow post it notes. The fact that they are there, along with a journal I kept at the time, is enough to keep me standing strong.
Blue, good luck with the counselling. Yes, early days but you are so heading in the right direction. Well done girl!
Keep posting and keep moving forward, hugs 🙂
Bluemosaic & Strongawoman, journaling and making lists is SO valuable! I poured out my venom and purged as much of the infection as I could on my own.
Those feelings of abandonment, despair, sadness, failure, and all the rest were quite real and they needed to be expressed to make room for acceptance.
Oh, man……what a hot mess I surely was…..
Brightest blessings
bluemosaic:
Don’t beat yourself up too much about that. We loved them; pure and simple. They were mean, awful creatures to us, but WE loved THEM so for whatever reasons, we still want them even after it’s over. It takes a lot of work to get past it…A LOT of work. You will be OK eventually. Some people get over things really quickly and move on and some don’t. I am in the “some don’t” category. When I love someone, I love someone no matter what they are. I am too loyal to a fault. Take care…you will be OK. I can tell you are one who will heal and move on. HUGS.
Louise, spot-on. I honestly loved the illusion that the exspath created. What he presented was what I wanted to believ in and love with such depth and devotion. Once the mask fell off, he was exposed for the monster that he is, yet I still gazed at that mask with pangs of love and regret.
Brightest blessings
Truthspeak!
Wise works from you and Louise.
I don’t know if I was more angry at what he was, or that it took off his mask and then I HAD to do something b/c I could no longer avoid what a monster he was.
No more denial. No more hope. No more fixing it. I really really really wanted him to be real. I was so pathetic. 🙁
I feel fortunate that I never was in love with my abuser. His mirroring and relentless pursuit of me for the 6 months leading up to the assaults in the isolated vacation apartment brain washed me into compliance with his demands. Part of the psychological abuse was the assaulting of my mind with lovebombing. In confusion and exhaustion I told him what he wanted me to believe ” i love you”. But I didn’t. I was obeying orders, telling him what he wanted. That led to extreme psychological tension and physical stress; nausea, headaches, jumpiness, irritability, inability to concentrate, weepiness and a feeling of extreme emotional dependance. I feared him leaving me but he frightened and repelled me. When the assaults happened I felt like I was in the presence of something unhuman. A void with a body and animal levels of behaviour. Once the shock and trauma wore off there was nothing about him to get over in terms of attachment. He’s repulsive. I was reading Cleckley last night and this leapt out , it describes him well: “vexation, spite, quick and labile flashes of quasi-affection, peevish resentment, shallow moods of self pity, puerile attitudes of vanity, and absurd and showy poses of indignation are all within his emotional scale.. Mature, wholehearted anger, true or consistent indignation, honest solid grief, deep joy, genuine despair (are not)”. That was him. Form an orderly queue ladies.