Every other week I participate in a ‘one word’ blog carnival. This week’s word was ‘grief’.
Grief. A tiny word. Five letters. ‘i’ before ‘e’. A story of precedence. What comes before grief? Love. Friendship. Familiarity. Hope. A belief in tomorrow. A belief in another day. A better day. A different time. A time for endless hello’s to fill our day with promise. A time to love.
And then death sweeps in and robs us of that time. That moment. Those endless hellos punctuated by good-byes that do not mean, never more, but rather, until later, until we meet again, until the next time.
In death’s embrace we fall and grieve for the one who was lost, for what was lost, for time lost and never to be recaptured.
In grief there is no next time. No better time. No later. Grief consumes all time and steals all hope of a better tomorrow.
Grief.
When love ends, we grieve. We grieve the passing of what could have been, should have been, might have been, if only. We search for ways to give meaning to our pain, to explain the sometimes inexplicable causes leading to loves demise. Sometimes, we talk it out. We make arrangements on how to separate, how to divide loves spoils, how to survive loves loss. We draw up agreements, outline custody and visitation arrangements. We divvy up assets and liabilities, arrange for payment. We divorce and move on with our lives, sometimes poorer but always richer in experience.
When we have loved an abuser, love cannot die. Love never existed. There was no mutual agreement to love honestly, truthfully, respectfully. There was only the abuser’s mask hiding his or her intent to deceive. There was only the lie we did not know existed.
In love’s vanishing out the door slamming behind their last words, we hang our hopes on one more chance to say, ‘good-bye’. On one more time to see their face, hear their voice, be in the presence of the love we believed to be true.
In our grief we plead for one last time. We pray, he will return. We pray, he or she, the one we loved, will come back if only to give us a chance to secure the elusive closure our empty arms yearn for. We want to say good-bye on our terms. We want to have the last word, to make them hear us, see us, feel our pain, witness our anguish. We want to know they understand the harm their passing through our lives has caused. We want them to ‘see’ how much we love in the hopes that the one we loved, the one we believed to be true, will return. We want one more chance. One more time. One more good-bye.
And so we plead with time to give us this one last chance so that we can come to terms with their good-bye. So that we can steal the time to learn to grieve on our terms.
And that is the lie we tell time. Give us a chance and we will make them hear us, just this once, so we can grieve freely.
It never happens. It can’t. Because grieving an abuser is the greatest betrayal of all. In having loved a lie, we can never grieve what never was.
With our empty arms and broken dreams, we must give into grief and mourn for the one who was lost. The woman who was abused. The woman who was lost. The woman who fell. The woman who was betrayed and who betrayed herself. We must mourn for the one we must love the most. Ourselves.
Once upon a time I loved a man who was untrue. He never really existed, though I searched for him between the lines he spoke that were all lies. Between the pages of my journal where I wrote of love ever lasting and promises of happily-ever after. I searched for him in every nook and cranny of my mind, desperately trying to make real the unreal. To make sense of the nonsense that was his passing through my life. I searched and held onto the hope that the pain, the turmoil, the sorrow was all a lie and he would turn up and be true.
It never happened. It couldn’t. He was the lie.
And in my facing the truth of his deceit, I grieved. I grieved for the dream that could never be, the love that never was. I grieved for the woman who was abused. The woman who lost herself in the arms of an abuser. I grieved for the pain she endured, the pain she caused. I grieved and cried and wished and hoped and prayed upon every star that the pain would cease, the tears would dry up and my heart would be healed. I prayed for the past to be erased. The lies to be vanished. The horror to be undone.
Nothing can undo the past. There is nothing that can be changed in yesterday.
Grieving a love that never was is part of the illusion of loving an abuser. We look for meaning in our memories and come up empty.
On either side of grief is love.
Grieving for the woman who lost herself in the arms of an abuser, set me free to fall into the arms of love.
In grieving for all that was lost, all that was forgotten on the stormy waters of his lies, I embraced all that was possible when I set myself free to sail upon the sea of love that surrounds me, sustains me, and lifts me up.
Love has no limits. Love knows no bounds. Love is my answer.
Stand in love. Grow in love. Be love.
In mourning for the one who lost herself in the arms of a man who was untrue, I found myself. I found myself and fell in love with all that I can be when I set myself free to live this one wild and precious life free to be all I am when I let go of grief and fall… in love.
Hi One joy,
happy Sunday morning to you.
hope all is well. best wishes.
thanks for helping me in my recovery.
petite
petite:
Thank you. I try to stay strong, but it’s not always easy.
one/joy:
I do have LF and I am so thankful for it! Thanks, everyone.
Good morning Petite. I saw a couple of your recent posts this morning, and I am so glad that the fog has cleared for you. That’s a big step, and so important. Good for you!
Louise – I want a therapist. I am coming up against some things that are not shifting. I am finding i have a lot of negative self chatter. A lot of it is linked to what i can and cannot do due to physical pain; and some of it to having chucked my family and ….and…..and.
Not sure how i will afford a therapist or work it in to my work schedule. but i do need some more help.
one/joy:
I am with you. I need to find a therapist also, but I know it’s so important to find one who specializes in this stuff. I do live in a rather large city so hopefully it won’t be a problem. Have you gone to therapy in the past? Just wondering if you did what your experience was?
Hi everyone – Happy Father’s day if there are any of you in the room 🙂 It’s a longshot, but just in case!
I need some validation today… An old message just popped up in my Facebook account (it brings up “Memorable Messages”) and it was from him… Re-reading it, I cannot believe how OBLIVIOUS I was!! The way he talks about himself (having to micro-manage others), the way he calls his ex jealous and annoying (the ex that he was intentionally talking to / flirting with at the time), etc etc…
http://s3.postimage.org/15gs758vu/image.jpg
That’s really a true narcissist isn’t it, from beginning to end? The happy faces / enthusiasm was all me… He just mirrored me… Didn’t he?
I remember the day he met his new boyfriend. The smiley faces stopped. The contempt began. It was so weird.
I’m not crazy am I?
Makes me feel sick.
Hi Louise – Yes, I have been in therapy before, years ago. I have had a couple of very good folks; but have had to bowl through a lot of hacks, too.
I don’t live in a major center, but I think it is a major advantageous when looking for a therapist.
I know that cognitive behavioral therapy is NOT for me. I need to discover my own thinking and then get some help to shift it – a more organic process than the rather ‘prescriptive’ therapy track of CBT.
I like jungians. A lot. They fit well with me. I also had very good results doing EMDR for a specific issue. Have too many now to use EMDR! I’d be at it until the cows came home.
I would really like to try gestalt – i think that it could be really useful. I am kinda bottled up and i think it would help me to break down the held in tension into manageable pieces (and deal with specific relationships).
I am sure there are new modalities of therapy – or trends that I don’t know about. I completely stopped going to therapy when I was mediating all the time. It was an intensive practice and it changed everything. Why am i not doing that now? there are a few reasons, probably the two biggest are isolation (that might sound funny, but I belonged to a big sangha and during times of lack of strength to continue to practice a sangha will pull you through); and the other reason is my teacher. He is, I think, a racist. He is anti-muslim, and makes a habit of going on about it while he is teaching. I cannot abide it.
I saw a jungian at a uni when i lived in a bigger center. she was a MA student and had to work with clients. I figured she’d be useless given the difference in our age and life experience (she was very young – in her 20/s). But she was bright, and lovely and very engaged. I only got to see her for a semester, but she was great.
The biggest piece for me, beyond finding the right modality, is the establishment trust with the therapist. I am sure that is why the CBT route was not a good one for me (besides the fact of the pomposity of that particular therapist): i was suffering through the end of the spath stuff – had just figured out that whatever and whoever the spath really was, he certainly wasn’t dead, which was the lie i had been told. I was shattered, absolutely shattered – my sense of reality was in ‘a thousand pieces’ – this was NOT the time to have my sense of ‘reality’ challenged by some dude in a flaming Burberry trench coat. I didn’t know him and i had no idea if he was trustworthy, and his lack of sensitivity to my experience was outstanding.
new winter – crazed, not crazy. step back emotionally, because this ISN’T about you – it is about his disorder.
If he is blocked on FB why do his messages come up in ‘memorable moments’? God, i hate fb -it’s just bloody evil. I could go and and on about the pain inflicted to dupes on fb, but my biggest concern is how fb shares info. REALLY concerns me. I would never have another fb account in my name, or connected to any email account that identifies me.
Until this sort of thing doesn’t trigger you, you might want to consider a long break from fb, or deleting your account unless you can block his old messages showing up.
Please go out and do something today TOTALLY unrelated to the spath – something different and fun – get away from the emo charge of it all. It will helpe you clear your head and regain your balance from this ‘contact.’
one/joy:
CBT isn’t for me either. I find it pretty useless. I had to look up gestalt to see what that is. Sounds very interesting. I could see that maybe helping me as I think that is a big part of my problem…the way I “see” things. I don’t always see them as they are.
Yeah, trusting the therapist is a huge piece of it. I know that will be hard for me also. I will let you know what I find out or what I decide to do.