Love is huge topic that spans every other issue that we have discussed so far, and ones we have not touched yet. But for our purposes — to talk about our next steps in healing from traumatic relationships — we have to narrow it down.
This article will discuss the most basic and important element of love — how we love ourselves. We will look at how we our relationships with ourselves are changing. And how that is affecting what other people mean to us
What we think of ourselves
Years ago, when I was involved with a New Age bookstore, I ran into lots of programs that taught positive affirmations. That is, repeating phrases about how lovable we are, how successful we are, how loved we are by the universe, as a form of self-hypnosis. The idea was that we would eventually believe it. And believing it would change our lives.
Unfortunately, many of us only succeeded in making ourselves feel guilty about not believing it. So, as the next best thing, we tried to pretend that we really believed it. And we basically became like those silly pseudo-Buddhists of the earlier hippie days whose languid pronouncements of “it’s all cool, man” was a paper-thin veneer on their angry or fearful rejection of everything that made them the tiniest bit uncomfortable.
For me, the concept of “loving yourself” had a psychobabble flavor. Another fad for people who were looking for short-cuts to higher consciousness. Or maybe this concept was too large, too grand for me.
And why? Because there was too much not to love about myself. Occasionally, somewhere between a second and third glass of wine, I was comfortable with myself. But in the sober light of day, evaluating both the interior of my mind and the evidence of my life, I could write long lists of where I fell short. I didn’t even know what loving myself would feel like But as a start, it would help if I weren’t so anxious all the time. If the anxiety didn’t make me so disorganized. If I could actually plan something and follow without getting distracted with worrying about whether I was going to get distracted and follow through. Sigh.
So you can imagine how I reacted when the occasional character showed up who 1) told me how wonderful I was, 2) told me how he knew how to sort out my messes, 3) talked about his vision of a better life (that he already knew how to do), and 4) raved about his luck at finding someone (me) who fit so perfectly into his perfect plans for this perfect life. I’d think that maybe I was wrong about being such a mess. Maybe the people I’d met before hadn’t been perceptive enough to see this wonderfulness in me. Maybe I wasn’t perceptive enough either, and he was so much smarter. Maybe God had finally decided to send me the long-deferred trophy for trying hard.
And then, because I wasn’t impressed with myself or my life, I would start throwing things away. He didn’t like the way I dressed? No problem. He didn’t like the way I worked? No problem. He thought I should worry more about him than myself? No problem. And then finally, when I realized that nothing I could ever do would be enough, and that the whole relationship was new evidence of my failure to choose well, I would leave behind whatever I had with him, and re-enter the increasingly familiar grind of starting over.
Depressing, isn’t it? A particularly dark view of my history of serial monogamy, and one that explains my periodic descents into depression as I struggled to forgive myself for yet another disaster. But there is a nugget of illuminating truth here that I didn’t grasp until my last relationship with the sociopath.
Here it is. I didn’t believe that my life was my “real” life. Or that I was who I “really” was. Who I was and the way I lived were just interim conditions, until I got to the real thing. The life where I accomplished what I was really capable of. The “me” that was always emotionally balanced, lucid, focused, able to handle all of life’s details. All this imaginary stuff was the waiting reality. And in the meantime, I was living in a kind of purgatory. (For those of you who weren’t brought up Catholic, that is a temporary hell where we burn off minor sins before finally being allowed into heaven.).
in healing, I realized that the sociopath and I had this thing in common. He was never living the life he deserved. All this relentless focus of his was about his drive to put the puzzle pieces together — fame, wealth, universal admiration, all the “merit badges” of his travel and his expensive hobbies to present a smooth and plausible front — so he could airdrop into the “real” life that was waiting for him. The humiliations he had to endure now — including stooping to deal with my unsatisfactory self — were just necessary evils to be discarded and forgotten, except for an amusing story or two of his life on the street, once the lost prince found his way back to the palace.
I used to find his pretensions and ambitions childish. Until I realized that we were alike in this. I wasn’t trying to work my way back to the throne room. But otherwise we were the same. I looked down at who I was and what I did. I was prepared to give up almost anything to become who I was supposed to be. With the sociopath, that turned out to include my business, my family, my friends, my homes, my money, my mental health.
In fact the reason I got involved with him at all, as well as my other significant relationships, is that I saw them as chances to transform my life. To make it something else entirely. The good news is that I’ve lived an interesting life. The bad news is that, though all of this, I never was able to finish anything, hold onto anything. I had lots of funny-tragic stories. That was my life equity. Otherwise, I was the poster child for unfulfilled potential.
Which — surprise! — accurately reflected what I thought of myself.
Getting real
Taped on the wall next to my bathroom mirror is a page from the 2005 Zen daily calendar. The quote on it from Chogyam Trungpa reads, “No one can turn you completely upside down and inside out. You must accept yourself as you are, instead of you as would like to be, which means giving up self-deception and wishful thinking.”
The paper is yellowed and wavy from shower fog, marked with stains from flying drops of coffee, makeup and toothpaste. I took it down today to copy it for this article and then put it back where it was. It might look a little trashy to a visitor, but to me it’s a jewel placed in the perfect setting, right next to where I look at myself in the mirror every day of my life.
That little quote commemorates my belated recognition. This is me. This is my life.
I don’t have to value it all highly. I can look at any part of it and decide that it’s not useful anymore, or that I love it dearly. But everything that I own, everything I have accomplished (and that’s a lot, even though it wasn’t exactly what I hoped), all my experience, the relationships and memories, the responsibilities, the plans, all the things I think about, is me and my life. What is real right now is what is real.
It wasn’t just about what was objectively real, but it was also about how I saw it. The mental lenses which caused me to see things in a particular way. Like the lens that is fearful about throwing things away, in case all the stores are closed or I run out of money or I need that thing to trade with terrorists for my life. Or the lens that remembers when I was wrong about people, and never gets quite enough information to feel safe. These are me too. If I think I’m stupid or disorganized or have bad judgment, these thoughts are me too. All of these things are who I am.
There are a lot of pivotal moments in our healing, but for me, this idea shifted the ground under my feet. I had spent my entire life rejecting the very reality I lived with, as well as living with the self-questioning insecurity of feeling like an unfinished, inadequate person. This insight told me that I was finished, as far as I went. I didn’t need to be perfect to be real. What I was and what I had done had meaning. I was here, alive, having lived through so much, having struggled so hard to find my way. And the big trophy didn’t need to be coming from anywhere outside myself. I was the trophy. This life, imperfect as it was, was the trophy.
There wasn’t a speck of unrealistic thinking in this. It wasn’t grandiose. It didn’t change the fact that I was still in the middle of healing. My life was messy, and I was still trying to figure out how to be the person I wanted to be. But the big change was that it did not diminish me. I wasn’t beating myself up. I could stop being vulnerable to other people beating me up, because I secretly agreed with them. It opened a new view of my life. Instead of an arid moonscape of failure-craters, it was a rich green story of learning and survival. Some of my worst chapters — the big tragedies and huge failures — began to look different when I thought about how they brought me to here and now. It began to look okay.
Who do we love?
I can see by the word count of this article that we will need at least one more before we talk about loving other people. Something about what taking care of our well-loved selves really means. We need to get clear about that before we even think about another intimate relationship. But maybe we can conclude this one by talking a little bit about what we love in ourselves. And how that relates to unresolved trauma.
One of the most difficult and painful experiences that I can imagine is what happened to Jewish people in Europe during World War II. Survivors of the Holocaust lost family members and endured inhuman treatment in concentration camps. The challenges these people faced individually and as a community to heal, extract some positive meaning from these experiences and to move forward toward confident and creative lives are beyond anything I can imagine.
Just knowing about this — as well as the challenges of other people who face long-term cruelty and desperate living conditions — has sometimes helped me keep my personal challenges in perspective. As well as helping me understand things I might not otherwise understand about international politics, as well as the emotional states and concerns of people I meet. Sometimes there is not enough time in a lifetime, or even several generations, to work through complete healing.
And this is something we may have to accept in ourselves. As long as we are still living with the consequences of trauma that has not been fully transformed into learning that that increases our emotional freedom, compassion and conscious power to act, our values are going to be shaped by the progress we have made, as far as it has gone. And those values are going to have an impact on how we see ourselves and others. That is especially true if we still perceive ourselves as victims.
We may see other people around us who seem happier, more peaceful, able to do things that are beyond us right now, and we may be tempted to be envious or bitter about our lot or afraid that we are less than them. But this is not the truth. The truth is that we’re midstream in a great learning process. And wherever we are speaks of personal triumph to survive and learn more how to navigate this world.
Meanwhile, we are entitled to appreciation and gratitude for the great work of our bodies, minds, emotional systems and spiritual depths that brought us to where we are today. We can feel pride — not grandiosity, but the dignity of self-respect — in what we have accomplished. By the evidence of our lives, we are not nothing. Far from it. Each of us can look in the mirror and see someone of substance and value.
In learning to accept ourselves, we sometimes have to make peace with things about ourselves that are not perfect. And in doing this, we walk a fine line. We don’t want to deny where we fall short of what we’d like to be, things we’re still working on. But we can also see in our shortcomings the recognition of our true potential. Here are some suggestions for doing that.
If we are grieving, it is because of our blessed capacity to embrace life and take risks. If we are confused, it is because we value meaning and order. If we are angry, it is because we have a backbone of will and belief. If we are lonely, it is because we feel our deep connection with the world, but are still seeking where and how. If we feel despair, it is because we have a deep capacity for faith and hope. If we are depressed, we are in the midst of a great transition of belief. We may not see though it all yet. But the more it pains us, the more we know we are in the active process of learning.
All of this honorable. All of this is reason to respect ourselves.
Where self-love leads us
And if we can’t find any other reason to love ourselves, or if we are unsure that we can love ourselves and still be good people, the ultimate reason is that it is better for the world if we do. If we are patient and understanding with ourselves, if we believe in our potential, if we allow ourselves the dignity of self-respect even though we’re not perfect, it alters the most important lens by which we see the world. If we respect ourselves, we acknowledge that living through our growing-up and the dramas of life’s challenges is the universal story of life. It enables us to see that everything and everyone else is living through their own stories, and, for that reason, may deserve respect as well.
For trauma survivors, this is a touchy concept. If we have endured trauma at the hands of people whose life dramas create hurt and loss for other people, respect might sound like a ridiculous idea. Especially when our survival depends on clearly separating our interests from the interests of people who would harm us. However, if I were in the jungle with hungry lions around, I believe I would have better chance of survival if I respected what they are, than writing them off as evil.
Respect is a form of seeing, an even higher level of observation than the trusting of patterns that we discussed in the last article. It is a way of seeing that often provides us with more information than emotional reactions or judgments. Respect is not admiration or involvement. It is recognition that another being exists in his or her own world, facing private challenges, working with personal resources or lack of them. It helps us face reality more squarely, while maintaining the distance that respect implies. That is, observing from behind our own boundaries and seeing other people as separate from us. Respect helps us see larger patterns of life, making us more aware how we might be affected, whether or not we are actively involved.
Some people have a natural understanding of respect. But for others — especially if we grew up in Drama Triangle environments of victims and rescuers — it is something we have to learn. My Buddhist friend, when I begged him to help me warn off my ex’s latest girlfriend, told me an old saying “Nothing is more dangerous than interfering with other people’s dreams.” He was telling me to respect other people’s paths, to detach myself from what is none of my business and can not change.
Respect acknowledges our differences, while bringing us closer to actually understanding. It helps us recognize the emotional foundations of other people’s behavior or the type of energy they spread, without having to judge it any further than whether it is good for us. So that we can make easier and better choices about where we invest our energy. Respecting the different realities of other lives can even refine our feelings, enabling us to react more accurately. Like appreciating a flower growing in a landfill. Or being touched by the fleeting generosity of someone we know is virtually incapable of sharing. To experience love, awe, gratitude in smaller increments, and also disgust, frustration and grief in ways that we feel sharply but keep in perspective.
All of this makes us more solid with ourselves. Able to choose what is best for us, what matches who we are. This is how self-acceptance, self-love and self-respect are connected to personal power. Not accumulating power over other people, but being more aware and focused on how our actions affect our lives and the world around us.
In this work, we are moving farther from the struggles of early healing, deeper into the realm of accepting reality as “what is,” a relatively neutral position, that only works if we feel fully empowered to act on our own behalf. In the next article, to prepare a little more for love, we will talk more about power and emotional freedom.
Namaste. The deeply respectful spirit in me salutes with awe the flowering spirit in you.
Kathy
I wrote…”You only have to choose to want beauty, love and light in your life and I will happen. Just don’t give up. Ever”
YaY me! Way to screw up that closing sentence, aye? boo..
Of course I meant to write…”it will happen”. I really don’t think that by you lovely folks choosing that beauty, love and light in your life that “I” will magically happen.
I think I’ve already happened but maybe I was jumping the gun too early. Mabye I’m only the prototype and those people are still working out the quirks and kinks on the REAL DEAL me.
Hm, food for thought….
😉
I didn’t notice the typo. But I love it.
Kindheart: It is hurtful when we find our family is/has/was abusive to us and will hurt us financially, take advantage of us, and do these things deliberately. My mom left me a toxic note to read after she died….she wanted to continue to hurt me in new ways even after she died! (Still I have some good memories, but overall….) I think Matt gave you great advise. It is so hard to be strong in that situation, but it is important that bad motives don’t triumph over good in as many situations as possible, and it is also what you deserve. If you can hire an attorney to do your battles for you, it will be worth what you gain in peace of mind and NC as much as possible. I’m gradually getting my biological family out of my life without fanfareand creating a new family of supportive friends.
Regarding the triggers, I get to feeling really strong, and then once in awhile I slip, but at least I SEE myself slipping and just writing about it helps erase the faulty thinking. Still, I look forward to the day when I am suddenly surprised to realize I haven’t thought of the P/S/N for a few days! AT least I usually think of him as brain damaged now, in a very sad way.
Regarding a spiritual self, yes I think it is there, but I think it can’t depend on thinking, if that makes any sense. I can’t buy that a retarded child has less spirit or is less spiritual than I am, or my dog has less spirituality than I do. I don’t think being spiritual is an intellectual task. What is it? For me it is those moments when you know you and another living being have really connected, really communicated, are really sharing the same positive emotion, vibe or whatever and for a moment all separation disappears. It is also those moments when you feel something come out of you that feels like it is coming form outside you and it is good and you are as surprised as everyone else!
kindheart, I apologize for not responding sooner to your post. I’m trying to respond to everyone for the first few days of this thread. But when I read your post, I didn’t understand all of it. Reading some of the comments helped, and I went back to read it again.
So here are my thoughts. You sound really lucid, despite being so upset. That is, you know what’s what. All the way through it, it was one fact after another. You know what you deserve. And you know your rights (unless there is some surprise in your grandmother’s will that you don’t know about.)
You also know who you can’t trust. I’m remembering more of your story now as I write this. Especially the time your bother wanted you to come out the farm to talk about something. You didn’t want to go there, and we talked about writing a letter instead. Because you were afraid of him, afraid that he might coerce you in some way or hurt you. (Am I remembering that right?)
So now you know more about what that’s about. (I assume this is part of that same story, and he was going to try to strong-arm you into agreeing to all this.) So your brother and your father are colluding to steal part of your inheritance. And one or both of them believe that you’re too weak to stand up for yourself and protect your children’s interests.
If that’s the case, it’s pretty cut and dried, as far as what’s going on.
The first question is why are you bothering to act like a good daughter to this guy? The second question is what is going to take to repay your brother for his treatment of you and get him permanently out of your life?
I’m not trying to minimize how hard it is to cut off your own family. I spent half my life trying to stay friends with mine, even though I had to agree that I was responsible to for the fact that my father incested me to even be friends with my mother. And keep my mouth shut about what I saw of my father’s out-of-control behavior with my mother, my siblings and other people. And frankly, the reason I was so desperate to hold onto them was because they were so awful to me that I felt insecure about having a family at all, and felt like I had to all the work.
When I was 40 and in therapy with an expert on childhood abuse, that changed. I told them that if they didn’t get real about what happened to me, I wasn’t going to continue to talk to them. And I didn’t talk to them until they did. It didn’t change the past, but it make me feel like less of a doormat, and it changed the way I dealt with them in the future.
My story isn’t your story, but maybe there’s a moral in it for you. If these people want to be related to you, they need to earn it. You’re not the one who has to constantly prove what a good person you are. You’ve already done that. It’s their turn. And if the only kind of relationship they can do is one that’s abusive or dishonest or trying to screw you over, then you’re back in the world of sociopathic relationships. And it’s time to go NC. They can talk to the lawyer who’s protecting your rights and helping get your brother, the scary-dangerous parasite, out of your life.
Am I being too aggressive here? I’m not sure what you’re ready to think about. But from my perspective, you deserve better family, even if you have to put together a family of choice (good friends you can trust) to replace the family you were stuck with.
As far as not getting adequate strokes in your trauma group to get over the s, I know that you feel like you’ve got a vitamin deficiency in acknowledgment and approval. But you’re surrounded by people who are all dealing with their own big grieving processes. They may be able to say “oh, poor you,” but otherwise they probably don’t have the internal resources to be emotionally generous right now. And as far as the facilitator goes, what he or she is probably waiting for is for you to stop crying over how you were betrayed, and get made because you deserve better.
You deserve it for what you gave, your goodness and generosity. But more than that, you deserve it because you’re a human being and you have an intrinsic right to be treated with respect.
You can’t get back the lost years or the sqandered money. You can’t change the fact that the way you were brought up conditioned you to be a perfect target for betrayers, because you keep trying to be a loving good girl, rather kicking them out of your life when they hurt you or disappointed you the first time. You weren’t trained to think that you’re worth anything or that you deserved to be treated well. (And I’m guessing here, but reading between the lines in what you wrote. Why else would you keep hoping that your father is finally going to start watching out for you?)
So please, forgive me if I’ve stepped over the line here. But you have an absolute right, not just to get mad, but to start defending and taking care of yourself. To stop feeling betrayed, because you recognize that you’re not dealing with people like you. You’re dealing with people are incapable of being fair or even kind to you. And just like you would shoot a mad bull that was rushing toward you or swat a mosquito that landed on your arm, you are starting to regard them as a problem, rather than some big thing that is wrong with your life that everyone betrays you. This is not everyone. This is these two brutal users, who are grabbing what you have for only one reason. Because it’s easy. Because they’ve conditioned you to accept it, and they think they can get away with it.
The great news about your letter is that it sounds like you’re waking up. All your hope that they love you or fear that they’ll hurt you is hardening into outrage and determination. You’re separating what they want from what you want, and you’re choosing what you want. You’re giving up hoping or pretending the situation is anything but what it is.
And if that’s true, you’ll be taking the biggest step forward of your life in resolving your trauma. Because the early stage of trauma-processing is when we feel blasted and wobbly and betrayed by events. The turnaround is when we say, “This is my life and I have a right to defend myself and, if necessary, fight back.” Not just to the latest sociopaths, but to the ones that went before that set us up to be a victim.
You not only have a right to fight back, but you have a right to create a decent life for yourself without dealing with ongoing betrayals and harassment. You have a right to get rid of what makes you crazy and sick, so you can open your heart and your life to what is truly life-giving and rewarding for you.
Thank heavens you have good sons and good relationships with them. But they’re growing up, and you’re going to have to find new meaning and new things to love. And to do that, you need to get this garbage out of your life.
And all that is in support of what you are already planning, I’m sure, and what Matt and everyone else here is going to tell you. Get a lawyer, pull your documents together, and fight for what’s yours and what’s right. All of it. If you can recovery something of what was lost, go for that too. You deserve interest for all the meanness you’ve put up with. Don’t feel sorry for them. Don’t get suckered in and refuse to be bullied. Nobody in this group is watching out for you, but you.
If you do this, you won’t care if the trauma group is giving you strokes. Or anyone else. Because you’ll be blooming on the strokes you’re giving yourself. I am sending you a truckload of taking-care-of-business energy. You have always been a brave woman. It’s time to go to battle for you. And win.
Kathy
justabouthealed, I saw your post after I posted to kindheart.
Wonderful, succinct advice. I wish I had that gift.
I love what you wrote about spirituality:
“For me it is those moments when you know you and another living being have really connected, really communicated, are really sharing the same positive emotion, vibe or whatever and for a moment all separation disappears. It is also those moments when you feel something come out of you that feels like it is coming form outside you and it is good and you are as surprised as everyone else!”
The only thing I’d add is when I’m working in the garden or walking in the woods, and I get awed by all the life around me. I want to do something I don’t know how to do. Jump out of my clothes, my skin and just roll around in it, get inside of it. It’s something like love but different. I want to just disappear in it, let it eat me up. Water too. Sunsets. When the deer are eating the roses, and I’m thinking that I’ll miss the roses but how killer-lucky am I to have the deer grazing in my front yard. The stars in the black sky here in the mountains. I think all this is part of it.
What you said about something coming from you that it feels like it’s coming from out of you… I don’t know if I’ve ever talked about this, but sometime in my recovery work, I realized I could see though things. Not all own stuff. I was still working on that. But all the complicated stuff I deal with at work, and in relationships with other people, I just suddenly knew things without having to think about it.
I didn’t trust it for a while, kept going back to do all the careful research and analysis that I always did. But I knew I had it right the first time, and then I just started trusting it. And my relationships totally changed. I had to rethink who I was with other people. Because I didn’t know what to make of it. And then I finally realized that I was just supposed to listen and say what I thought. That was largely why people wanted to talk with me anyhow. I could stop making it so complicated, and just do it.
I don’t know why or how this happened. Or what to call it. In my own mind, I call it “laser vision” but that’s my shorthand, and I wouldn’t say it to a client. But I also don’t claim it as my own. I think that this too is part of my spirituality. I’m using eyes that are better than my own. Tapping some observational wisdom that is smarter or wiser than me. Maybe it is me. Maybe all this work on myself cleared some clouds or static that was keeping me from being able to focus and interpret this way. But I don’t even really want to own it. I just want to ride it, use it, be grateful for it.
Especially since it’s why I can talk now. Where I always got boggled by second-guessing before. Something in me thought I was ready. And I don’t think it’s part of our relationship for me to second-guess it.
Maybe that’s what you were talking about in your earlier posts about your clarity and certainty now. In what you see. In what you’re doing. In the way you talk. If so, wow.
Namaste.
Kathleen,
As I said, I love reading your superlative essays and also the proceeding commentary to the LF tribe members. But me bum gets numb!…haha.
How’s that for Brit speak? I love when they call your garden variety creepos names such as tosser, prat and twit. Cracks me up!
Oh, and when they’re 3 sheets to the wind those lovely British folks say they are “pissed”. When we say we’re pissed, means we’re about to do the hoedown on some knuckle-head’s…well, head.
Ok, I’ll chill with the colorful expletives otherwise Donna’s gonna do a righteous throw down on MY head!
😀
Ah Jane, that was a short one for me. Try just reading down the words in the middle of the column like the speedreaders do. You have to get Zen about it and not care if it makes sense. Who knows what you’d discover I’m saying?
Yes, the spirituality of the deer and jumping out of my clothes. Getting it right the first time and stop making it so complicated. Smarter and wiser than me. Wow!
See distilled Kathy, easier on your bum. And at least as entertaining.
What about wanking? I used it the other day to mean mental masturbation. And someone from Britain was shocked. I read too much punk fiction probably and my sense of proprietary is dulled. But was it really shocking?
Kathleen, thanks for all your kind comments. Well, yeah, sometimes the clarity is there….and sometimes I fall.
I feel exactly the same about nature. And also knowledge that comes from somewhere. Maybe it is my subconscious putting a lot of pieces together for me, without me being consciously aware. I think it is something available to everyone.
I’m working on getting to your honest communication. At times, it is there. Other times, not so much! LOL! My favorite cartoon is three birds on a telephone wire. The first bird is sitting on the wire looking bored. The third bird is hanging precariously from the wire, holding on with his wings as arms, one leg wrapped around the wire, and the other leg has slipped off and is dangling, and he is looking down in great fear and shaking. The middle bird, sitting calmly on the wire, says to him “You’re over thinking this, Phil”
At times that is me!
PS Kathleen, you have given me succinct advice. Sometimes when I slip back a bit, I remember you said, “who ever he is, he didn’t deserve your attention.” And that has centered me if there is a trigger that gets to me. Some days I feel “completelyhealed” or at least incredibly strong. But sometimes you have to go back down a mountain a bit to find a good path to the top.
justabouthealed, me too. Sometimes I fail too, not as much in the clarity (though my ego is definitely still fighting for air time), as in how I express it. I’m trying to get better at sensitivity.
When being scared and defensive was more prominent in my mind, I was a lot more geared to paying attention to the state of my listener. Trying to create an impression and manage their reactions. Now this stuff, which is just unemotional reality in my head, can make me sort of Mr. Spock-ish. And I’m having to work to recover that sensitivity that was second-nature before. I guess this is where I’m at in my recovery. Maybe after we work on emotional freedom (not feeling responsible for other people’s feelings), we have to re-learn how to be a social person again.
Another round around the mountain. I love it that you visualize this as a mountain too. I think I go around it and around, revisiting the same issues, but each time from a higher perspective. The view of the world beyond is a little better. The circuits around the mountain get a little faster. Maybe a little harder, in some ways, because the material is just so distant from where I started, and it gets harder to find role models and I still have sentimental feelings about some of the stuff I left behind. But it’s just so cool to get well, to see the world differently, to find the new definitions of my life.
I am so grateful to be here at LoveFraud. There are plenty of role models here, and friends who get it.
Like you. Thanks for the bird joke. I can’t figure out which one of them I am. I guess it depends on the day.
Kathy