Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanza, the turn of the year, the winter solstice and all the holidays of the “dark” time of the year are celebrations of the miracle of renewal. The harvest and colorful leaf fall of autumn is over, and the seasons are turning again to the beginning of the annual cycle of life. Our gifts, all our gatherings, the lights and candles are all expressions of joy in our shared warmth, and our faith and hope in our survival through the cold months to the blooming of spring again.
This morning, reading in bed (Richard Powers’ Prisoners Dilemma), I found this line: “Inside each of us is a script of the greater epic writ little, an atlas of politics so abundant it threats to fill us full to breaking.”
It made me want to write you about the “politics” of getting over a relationship with a sociopath. Sociopaths challenge our faith and hope. Our faith in ourselves, and the goodness of the world. And our hope that there are happy endings for us, or that anything we do will be enough to prevail over the forces of evil or the random destruction that appears in any life. In some ways, this is the biggest challenge of healing — to recover our easy belief that we are precious in the world and that what we need is here for us. Somewhere in our hearts, we remember feeling that way. But we are struggling with a terrible lesson that seems to prove otherwise.
As I write this today, I am looking out the windows behind my desk at a grey sky. Sleet is coming and dangerous roads. The snow is frozen hard on the ground, and dozens of finches, cardinals and jays are at the feeders. At dawn, deer came to nibble on the ears of corn my son scattered at the edge of the woods. My furnace died earlier this week, on a day where the temperature never climbed above 25, and it was 12 hours before the repairmen figured out how to get it going again. Now, with the heat turned up, and me wrapped in sweaters and fleece and woolen socks, my fingers and toes are chilled by the cold that falls through the storm windows.
Elsewhere in the house, my years-old Christmas cactus is blooming beside a wildly-sprigging rosemary bush that looks vaguely like a Christmas tree. Wrinkled but still sweet apples, picked months ago from a local orchard, wait to be peeled and mixed with mincemeat for a pie. A leg of lamb is in the refrigerator for Christmas dinner with a man who was an untrustworthy lover, but a loyal and delightful friend. After dinner, we will go to the movies with my son to see Robert Downey Jr. in Sherlock Holmes.
All of it stories of risk and survival, disaster and renewal, the fine edge we walk and the mysterious providence that brings us to each new day. Even the most blessed life encounters harsh weather, and sometimes we find ourselves in trouble that taxes us beyond our conventional wisdom. When our rules don’t work, and our usual insurance policies don’t suffice, we are challenged. And often, we don’t know what it means.
Does it mean that somehow we have fallen from grace, that our luck has changed and we are no longer loved by the world? Does it mean that we are broken in some fundamental way, and no longer dare to be comfortable with ourselves? Does it mean that the world is darker than we once imagined, and that we must struggle harder for less?
This is what a great philosopher called the “dark night of the soul.” In this midst of this challenge, there is something truly great happening. A kind of personal miracle that — depending on how we think about things — occurs in our intellect, emotions or spirit. When faced by something we do not understand and cannot manage with our usual tools, we are learning and growing. Like the germs of life stirring in the seeds buried in the cold earth, we are experiencing the birth of something new in ourselves.
Because the challenge is threatening, because it makes us question ourselves and what we know, the first part of the learning seems like recognition of evil in the world. Sociopaths seem to be dark messengers, informing us that our love, goodness and hope cannot triumph over their selfishness, greed and senseless destruction. But in time, we come to realize that this lesson is not really about evil at all, but despair.
This is about a war — profound and eternal — of belief. Are we, as sociopaths believe, essentially alone in an uncaring and untrustworthy world, forced by circumstance and entitled by the survival instinct to take whatever we can grab for ourselves? Or is there something about us that is blessed by connection to something larger — the love we share with other people, our dependence on the combined strength of our communities, our instinct that an infinite wisdom and strength exists beyond our imagining, larger than us, but also part of us? And that we are meant, by some birthright that we can hardly explain but that is clearly part of our deep character, to find lasting peace, understanding and gratitude.
What we ultimately learn from an intimate encounter with a sociopath is that this battle is not in the world, but in ourselves. The sociopath triggers our fears, our insecurities, our willingness to give up what we value for the illusion that the ultimate source of love or safety is outside of us. In their betrayals, in the brutal disappointments they return for our commitment to the gorgeous illusions they cast to draw us in, we are thrown back on ourselves. They prove to us, in a way that is a perfect mirror of however much we were willing to give them to make this illusion real, that the first source of our love, safety and greatest wisdom is inside of us. That, however important shared love and community may be, the foundation of everything good in our lives is inside us.
It is about what we believe. At base, under all the little rules we’ve picked up from parents and teachers, under all the little restrictions we’ve placed on ourselves as a result of old traumas, under all the lingering resentments or fears we’ve never resolved, is what we believe about ourselves and this life. It is what, under it all, we know to be the truth and the meaning of our stories.
Our lives, like the life of every other living thing, are about survival and growth and learning. Our lives are about understanding more as we age, an evolving wisdom that sometimes grows out of joy and triumph and sometimes out of pain and loss. Our lives are about trying, not waiting around for something to happen, but also believing that trying is not just us working at what we see. Trying also magically attracts new resources to us. Everyone here on LoveFraud knows how trying to get better brought us here, and here we found resources that simply zoomed toward us, challenging us in good ways to wake up to new ideas and use them. That is how the world works.
Our lives are also about seasons. Not just the season of age, but the seasons of mastery. We have little challenges to learn on a daily basis, and we have huge challenges that we inherited, and that are so much part of the fabric of our family’s history or the state of the entire world that a lifetime may not be enough to understand it all or master its opportunities. We learn the immediate things — how to change a diaper, work the e-mail, get along with a boss, drive in the snow. But our lifetimes are also about those immense inherited questions, and part of the meaning of our life is how much we do learn and how our learning affects the great whole.
Nothing, not one breath or molecule of these recoveries from grief and loss, is wasted. We are part of a great turning of seasons. What we do here is important. We are important. The world and the great spirit that gives it life force have given us a gift, an opportunity to learn something amazing. About ourselves. About the meaning of love and belonging, as well as solitary courage. About how to be whole in the face of adversity. About the great cycle of renewal in ourselves, and how truly dependable is the fact that we are meant to learn, grow, thrive, bloom again, and face new challenges as we feel strong enough for a thrilling new learning experience.
The earth is turning toward sunnier days. Seasons when we take the warmth and light for granted. So are we.
As Oxy likes to remind us, what doesn’t kill us makes us stronger. Not just to endure. But to recover joy, confidence and belief that every bit of this is a gift, sent to us to help us clear our internal decks, get rid of fear and grief and anger, and open our minds to the bright spirit of faith and hope, peace and joy, understanding and gratitude that is our birthright, that lives in the center of our beings.
Namaste. The light in me salutes the light in you.
Kathy
pollyannanomore, you wrote “I think to myself ’you’ve broken up with him – two yrs ago so why is it so significant to find out he is a raging P? Why does that make the difference now?”
I don’t think anyone who hasn’t gone through this can imagine what hard work it is to get to the point of recognizing that we were involved with bad people. When I got to the stage that we all get to, of turning the memories over and over, trying to shake them out into some coherent story I could tell myself about what happened, I just couldn’t get it. Sometimes he was great, affectionate, logical, full of neat contributions to my life. Other times he was horrible in ways that I couldn’t even name, because they were just outside my understanding. And then there was the way I agreed to everything, trying to be generous, trying to be kind, trying to be trustworthy, hoping against hope he’d finally figure out what a great person I was.
At some point, I finally realized that I was trying to figure out if he was a bad person. That was the language. A bad person. And I went into myself to find out where that language came from. It was from a very young age, maybe three or four years old.
And what was a bad person to that little me? It was someone who was mean to me. Someone that I didn’t have to like or care about. Because I was at the stage of development where I was learning about good guys and bad guys, playing cowboys and Indians, cops and robbers. The bad guys were the people who were dangerous, not nice, not “us.” And I didn’t have to apply all those rules of being nice to people to them. I didn’t have to care about them at all, except to protect myself from them. That was the only job I had with bad guys. To recognize them and protect myself.
So here I am in my mid-50s, trying to understand what happened. And trying to be mature and understanding, and responsible, and give him the benefit of the doubt because of his bad background and emotional problems, and be aware of how I had failed to deal with him very well, and blah blah blah.
Little me was sending a telegram up to my conscious brain, telling me that it could be a lot simpler than I was making it. Just answer the question — was he a bad guy?
This may sound like total nonsense (because it is), but I felt responsible for him. Through our whole relationship, I had so much power to make him okay, or not okay. I made huge concessions because was so helpless and pitiful, and because he was so unemployed (after I’d been supporting him), and because he was so desperately unhappy (why he couldn’t love me), and because was so insecure (why he was so abusive), and because he really needed me to another sacrifice because he just had no other options.
I’d been brought up with people who treated each other abominably and managed to convince each other that it was all the fault of the person who wasn’t giving enough. I grew up surrounded by “bad guys” who couldn’t be bad guys, and wouldn’t be bad guys if I could just figure out the right thing to sacrifice.
So I’d never really known anyone I could unarguably identify as a bad guy. Until this moment.
And you know, it was just kind of terrifying. I waffled and wavered and wondered if I was really allowed to identify someone as a bad guy. If the sky would crack open and a lightening bolt would strike me dead if I decided to stop being so understanding and self-sacrificing. But I finally did creep up to it on tippy-toes, get a grip on it and do it. I decided he really was a bad guy.
And that parachuted me right into the angry phase. Because he hurt me. He made me feel bad. He didn’t care whether I cried. He kept hurting me no matter what I did. And he tried to kill me. Maybe not with a knife or a gun, but he treated me in ways that made me sick, stole my good stuff, and threw me in the garbage can when he was through.
Can you hear the age in this voice? I had to go back that far into my history to get a version of me that had this clarity of viewpoint. But I found her, and she/I didn’t like what happened. And she didn’t like him. Access to anger was one of the first developmental blocks I removed, and in retrospect, it’s kind of funny and delightful that way that angry little girl grew up in my angry phase. Fast too.
But here was the really dangerous thing about finally identifying someone as a bad guy, because of the way they treated me. I did it that the first time, and then I started looking differently at a lot of things I previously “understood” and was “mature” about and willing to “help them out” about. My whole whole life started undergoing some serious retrospective revision. And gosh, I actually started to get some standards about what I would and wouldn’t accept as respectful behavior toward me. Standards I didn’t have to think about or manage with rules I read about in recovery books or question whether I really have a right to want.
Am I being too cute here? Probably. But this is really, really important. It’s not whether he was a sociopath, although that was what I was originally trying to figure out too. It’s if he deserves any slack from me at all, any caring about why he’s the way he is, or any evaluation more complicated than a very, very bad person who hurt me and didn’t care. Oh yeah, and I didn’t like it.
All that said, Erin, I totally understand about prioritization. You had bigger fish to fry than your parents. It’s a great testament to your triumph over some of those more urgent issues that you can get around now to consider what to do about the parents.
In that sense, I’m kind of glad my parents are gone. I had some interesting confrontations with them before they died, and got to see the positive impact of my getting better, particularly on my beaten-down mother. And it was a pleasure to spend the money my father had hoarded on my recovery. He would have had a stroke to see it going to therapists, and living expenses when I quit work for two years.
Style1’s last post about stopping the cycle reminded me of something. We are so lucky to be living now at a time when we actually can stop the cycle. Woman have birth control and the chance to be financially independent. We have knowledge of psychotherapy and recovery programs. The internet has made us so sophisticated and aware in ways most of our parents never were. And we have each other to share our experiences.
This is an amazing time, and I’m so grateful.
Kathy
OXY….you provide me the BEST VISUALS…….
🙂
You crack me up!!!
Thanks for the laugh!
**don’t forget the scarf….that has to go too!
Oh lord, I was involved in that long, serious posts and you guys are fighting over dog blankets and singing puppies?
I love you!!!
“This may sound like total nonsense (because it is), but I felt responsible for him”.
…doesn’t sound like nonsense to me…been there! They are really great manipulators: they control us so well that they make us believe we are the ones in control!
I can’t tell you how hard I am laughing now Kathleen…..
I’m in tears…….
The beauty of posting…..
Ya just never know who your posting over!
At any rate….I did…AS ALWAYS…appreciate and enjoy your post….even though at the time I did have my mind on what opera I prefered my puppy of choice to be singing…..
I love you!!!!
Okay, if I have to fight someone to keep from taking the stinking ugly scarf I am PREPARED TO DIE FOR MY RIGHT NOT TO HAVE IT! I will go down fighting to the death–well, either that or a HANG NAIL, one or the other, whichever comes first! LOL
Glad you got a laugh, guys! I’m doing more and more of that lately, laughing, that is!
Even with the anxiety about the parole board and so on, my son C and I have been poppinig back and forth with the WISE CRACKS since a couple of days before Christmas, and son D is only about an hour away from coming back home, had to detour through Oklahoma City to avoid the icy roads and contrustion AND icy roads through Tulsa, more bad weather on the way tomorrow night so may be in for it again, even NY Eve supposed to be bad weather, so DRUNKS playing BUMPER CARS on ICY ROADS ON NY’S EVE, sounds like a good time to STAY HOME and celebrate with you guys!
Gotta go now, the books I ordered myself for my birthday got here today and I’m gonna go read MaryJo’s book, can’t wait! Have a good night guys!
Puccini, of course. La Boheme, Mimi’s song. Something like a long-legged, sad-eyed hound. Ooooooooww, ow, ow, owwwhow wow wow wow wow…..
Somehow I can see Oxy in her house iwith all the windows lit up to guide her son home, with old clothes floating up out of the chimney and off into the night.
Have a good read, Oxy, and happy birthday. And prayers to get your boy home safe and sound.
ROTFLMAO………..STOP. STOP….i’m going to pee the pants..
I’ve been listening to phantom of the opera music in my car this week….driving home about an hours ride….I noticed the toxic – sociopathic words in the music that I have loved for so long…..
I remember one time after the S came home (from what I now assume was a ‘titty’ bar, out all night) He was supposed to be home for something importiant and ‘blew’ it off….I was so pissed in the morning…..I mean PISSED OFF!
The kids were little and we went upstairs and I showed them my ‘new’ CD…..I ROCKED IT …..window shaking loud…..and sang at the top of my lungs as the kids danced….like stomped on the floor……right above the bedroom.
All to the phantom……boom, boom, boom ,boom, boom……
As the asshole went to bed…..We took a break…..made sure he was just falling off to the deeep sleep you get to when you’ve been up all night…..and had a oncore…..but added pots and pans to the mix……We had a ball……and the kids just thoguht we were having fun…..Oh, we were, we were!!!!
So….has anyone listened to the words like masquerade and phantom……
Ok you guys are cracking me up with the fighting over the blanket and scarf thing. Thanks for putting a smile on my face today. I could really use some laughter.
Today has been kind of a downer for me. My sister has been here for the last 2 months visiting from England and we’ve always been very close. We’ve always been best friends. She credits me with finishing raising her. (Both of my parents checked out when she was in high school due to their marital problems, so I took over) She’s a brilliant young woman. Beautiful, smart, funny, life of the party. She has recently moved to England because she’s engaged to an English guy and has decided to go to grad school there. I am very proud of her for accomplishing so much at 24. But I never imagined my sister and I living so far away, so that bums me out. She’s the only sibling I have. But she left today, and over this last weekend, she really, REALLY made me think twice about out relationship. Maybe we’re not as close as I thought? And this makes me very sad.
She really hasn’t been very supportive with the break up of my ex S. She was along for a lot of the ride. My ex and her became pretty close too. So she knows all the details and once things went to shit, she could only tell me to move on. Besides that, her support was lacking. In fact, we were at a restuarant last week and I tried to talk to her about it, and once again she rolled her eyes and in her bitchy tone told me, “I’m not talking about this with you. You need to get over it and I can’t believe you’re still so hung up.” So I lost it in the restuarant and cried and told her how unsupportive I thought she was. She didn’t really have any response. Here I’m pouring my guts out in a restaurant, looking like a crazy woman and she sat there….cold.
Then this past weekend, her and MY best friend wanted to go out dancing. Well, it happened to be the place where I met my ex and I told them I wasn’t comfortable going there. Too many memories and I knew I wouldn’t enjoy myself. And I didn’t want to see his friends, and god for bid if he showed up there. Told them I would be up for anything else though!! Well, they got on the phone with each other and because this particular place was free vodka all night they decided that they didn’t give a shit if I went or not, didn’t even try and come up with somewhere else to go so I could be comfortable, and went! I was SHOCKED to say the least. I have never felt so left out in my life. I now am lower on the totem poll than a free night of vodka. WOW! Here it’s my sister’s last weekend here and I probably won’t see her for at least 6 months and going out to some fucking club serving free vokda is more important than spending some time somehwere else with your only sister.
So they crawled in the next day and I completely ignored them. They could tell I wasn’t happy. You could cut the tension in the room with a knife. So my friend left. My sister then, with attitutde, says, “Are you mad at ME for some reason??” So I explained to her how I felt, and she rolled her eyes and didn’t see anything wrong with her choice. Told me that that’s what SHE wanted to do. And it’s not her problem that I’m so insecure that I can’t go places because they are going to remind me of my ex. GASP. This was clearly not the response I thought I was going to get. Not from my little sister that I’ve supported 110% through EVERYTHING!! Not my little sister that I thought I was so close to. So the last 24 hours of her visit here were awful. I didn’t speak a word to her. And she said to me earlier..”so this is how you’re going to be my last day here?” Like I owe it to her to bend over backwards and be nice. HA! I didn’t even get off the couch to say goodbye to her today.
So now I feel guilty. I’m the older sister. I should set the example. But today I just feel like, F her! She didn’t give a shit about my feelings over the weekend. And if I meant that much to her then a night of free vodka wouldn’t have swayed her decision. It just makes me really sad. I feel like I’ve already lost my little sister to some guy in England and now even when she’s here, I don’t feel like I’m important. It’s the same feeling I got with my ex. I’ve never considered my sister to have any bad traits, but since she’s been engaged and living in England with her privilaged life, now I feel like I’m of no use to her anymore. Well, I am if she needs a ride to and from the airport. So this past weekend has been sort of eye opening as far as my relationship with my sister goes.
I don’t know how to feel really. I don’t know if I’m just being oversensitive or I’m realizing that my sister has changed. Sigh. Not a good feeling. And on top of that, one of my cats ran away. Actually it’s my sister’s cat, but she’s mine too since I’ve had her here for 8 years. She’s been missing for two weeks. I’ve put up signs, looked at shelters, looked around all the surroundings neighborhoods….Nothing. So today is filled with loss for me. I’m ok, just trying to stay strong. Trying to figure out my feelings. Just needed to vent I guess.
I LOVE being able to come here and sort out my thoughts. And I’m so THANKFUL for all of you here. Thankful for your stories, support and advice. And thank you for making me laugh today! I needed it! HUGS to everyone!
Amber:
I think, until they are in ‘need’ (our support system), people in general do NOT live up to our expectations of support.
The rolled eye thing must be infuriating for you……as my mothers “such as life’ comments…..
It is a lack of validation.
I bet you….if the shoe was on the other foot….she’d have your undying suport…..and forego the free vodka!
It is hurtful when we give so much to others and they do not return the ‘favor’ in the times we need them…..but this is what we must realize….if we have NO expectations of others….they can’t disappoint.
The good thing is….you will have time to think about your response to her…..and how your going to deal with your bff.
Honesty is key with your emotions…..but Kathleen nailed it today…..teach them what you need.
Sorry it worked out this way…..I am sure you never inteneded or expected this….
I believe we go through an evolution of looking at people in our lives through different eyes….as we grow ‘older’ and wiser.
XXOO
EB