I wrote the following nine months after the p formerly in my life was arrested. I was asked on another thread, was there a moment you ‘knew’? Knew that you would be okay. Knew it was okay to let him go.
Yes and no. In those first heady days of freedom, every moment was filled with knowing I was okay. And every moment was filled with the fear I would never get through the pain to find the light of love within me. I had to make a choice. Had to decide — what do I want more of. Lies and deciet. Truth and harmony.
I wanted to share this piece with you because it speaks to the power of one word to release us from fearing life without them so that we can surrender and fall in love with life within us.
As night settled into its soggy wet blanket, the pooch and I went for a walk. The rain beat a sibilant hiss upon the shiny black road, the streetlights glowed iridescently, casting golden orbs of light, punctuating holes into the dark shadows of the night. I was wrapped in the misty blanket of a rainy evening, my skin moistened by the water-laden air, my breath a frosty vapor leading me silently forward. The pooch pranced happily by my side, her tail a constant metronome displaying the tempo of her happiness as we journeyed forth into the dark.
It was a mystical, magical evening. A night for quiet thoughts that drifted through my mind as effortlessly as the raindrops falling one-by-one from the pearl clad branches all around me.
I thought of love found and love lost and moving on. Of new relationships and old. New found love and love that never fulfills its promise of growing old beside me. Of promises made and promises broken. Journeys taken and voyages lost because the voyageur could not see by the light of the moon and lost his way among the stars. And I thought of my brother to whom I had never said good-bye and the P to whom good-bye was just another word for the door is always open until I say so.
For such a little word, good-bye carries a mighty wallop.
Good-bye can mean, see you in a while, or see you in a year. It can carry us into the night on the hope of tomorrow or it can sweep all hope away as we look back and see there will never be a next time, another day, or a new tomorrow.
For those who have journeyed into the valley of the S or P or N, good-bye is a word fraught with the fear that once spoken it can never be returned. It lays frozen upon our tongues, our minds numb in the fear it might slide out on a breath of air and change our lives forever. Terrified we might slip, we pack our hopes and dreams into that one little word and stuff our pride and dignity into the cracks of our pain seeping in beneath the door held fast against our fear that he will leave before tomorrow ever dawns. And all the while, we search for the perfect last words that will either make it all right or make him hear us, just this once, before he slithers off into the dark from whence he came.
And as we flounder in the depths of empty words and promises, we pray that there will never be a time to say good-bye but rather, welcome back, I’ve missed you. Spiraling into the darkness of the painfully long good-bye they began when they said, hello, we silently hold onto the word that will set us free and stumble through the words of begging them to please not say it.
But in the land of lies, the door we thought we held so firmly closed is always open, no matter how hard we push against it. Eventually, when we have worn ourselves out upon the welcome mat of our desire to be all they will ever need, we must face the reality that we will never have the chance to say our fond farewells. They have already left. Gone in search of new tomorrows. Of some other happily ever after which we never saw coming.
In their passing, we are left holding the shreds of our battered hearts in the basket of our dreams, frozen in time. Alone, forlorn, we whisper, good-bye, into the empty space that lays before us, hoping they will hear the soft promise of our hopes they will find out there, that which they could never find in us. We peer into the darkness of the lengthening shadows, our tears puddling around our feet, forming a river into which we fall, in fear of drowning as we cry out for one last chance to say good-bye.
Good-bye. It’s such a little word but it keeps us stuck on the dream of wanting them back so that we can have the last word that will close forever the door to our hearts they so easily open.
In the end, the best good-bye is the quiet hello we whisper within our hearts as we pick at the scab of our wounds that never seem to heal as long as they keep walking through the door to our dreams. Good-bye lies. Hello truth. Welcome back to me.
In our good-byes that are never spoken we will never find the key that will unlock the secret door to their understanding. It resides somewhere in the dark, beyond the edges of the light. But, beneath the scabby, jagged-edge scar of our disbelief, new skin is forming with our welcome home. If we leave it alone long enough to heal from the inside out, we will understand that he could never hear our good-bye. He could never cherish our hearts because he was always and forever, a figment of our imaginations. He was never true.
In our awakening to the light of a new tomorrow without him we discover, it was only the darkness of being without him we feared. And without him, we have nothing to fear.
In seeing the gift of his departure in the light of a new day dawning, we lift our heads and see, the sun is shining. As it beckons, we step into the light of finally knowing, the only way to say good- bye to what never was, is to accept it never will be.
gem, my heart breaks for you, I don’t know how you and the others here on LF deal with the pain of a P child. My daughter lives 3000 miles away from me and although I do talk to her often on the phone… not being able to be with her causes me a lot of hurt (which I do not let on to her). I think you are right about it being harder to get over a P child, but you are also right in that you cannot continue to enable her to try to destroy you. She has lost her own children… so it kind of tells you that these bonds between a mother and child don’t mean anything to her, or don’t exist for her, does she even care that she has lost her own children? Our minds can’t grasp this detachment they have because our hearts are full of love for others.
I worked once with a gal that did not seem to have the same type of attachment to her daughter that I have to mine and I remember thinking “a cat or dog makes a better mother than her”. I didn’t know about personality disorders then, she’s probably a N/S, now that I think about it.
AHHHHHH!!!! As much as it annoys me and I hate these people… I’m watching some interview with Hailey Glassman, and she’s crying her heart out over Jon Gosselin. It’s sick! She’s crying how emotionally abusive he is, and even though she’s sick of the abuse, “he just somehome seems to know how to always come back and makes me stay, because he tells me he loves me and he makes me laugh.” or something to that matter. That she’s tired of being his “dishrag.” And when she said, “he’s like a VAMPIRE THAT SUCKS THE LIFE OUT OF ME.” I gasped!!! I was like HELLO!!! RED FLAG!!!! RUUUUUNNNNNN!!!! She clearly doens’t know what a sociopath is, but WOW!! Seeing that made the hairs on the back of my neck stand up. I guess it’s blatently obvious to me that I know the difference. And for that I’m thankful.
Good practice amber! You will do this sort of ‘practice’ for the rest of your life…..on EVERYONE!
WOrd of caution…….Don’t ever get ‘comfortable’ that you KNOW it and can spot em a mile away though…..THAT”S WHEN THEY CREEP IN!!!
I saw that interview and actually felt sorry for her.
She is waaaaaaaaaaay in over her head!!!
EB, good point.
Unfortunately, I’ve gone the other way and although I think I can spot them, I’m also totally paranoid!
But that’s ok, I think a lot of what I’m catching is just narcissistic behavior. Like Oxy’s pilot friend who didn’t care about insurance, even normal people act like selfish jerks sometimes.
I guess the difference is whether the behavior is cold and calculated. Then it’s a P.
SKY:
This is why balance is a key!
It’s about toxicity……Bottom line….whatever ‘they’ are….we don’t need any of it!
Geminigirl
I know it’s not the same thing and it doesn’t change how you feel about your blood daughters…but there are many here that sure do need a mother that understands and is loving and is willing to try and guide us right. I have a wonderful mother in many ways and mean no bad towards her at all, but i’m not at all against having another and could use one that understands the effects the p has had on me and why and that I can’t help the way I feel sometimes and I can’t even come close to explaining it alot of times and I can’t change it over night. I’d make the perfect daughter in that I do what “normal” daughters do, I argue, I don’t always listen and I always need straightened out on my path 🙂 I love you gemini, I truly do…God bless you! You are in my prayers!
MAMA GEM…..not mentioning my childhood issues with them……My mother abandoned me during all of this….not only abandoned me….but worked with the S, along with my father to aid in our destruction.
They lied to me and family, the whole time….stating they were NOT speaking to the S…..I have them on tape!
They wonder why we are not ‘close’ and I have no desire to be intouch with them….they can rot in hell!
I had ALWAYS been there for them….ALWAYS!!!!
So….if you don’t mind…..I’m up for adoption! I don’t eat much! 🙂
Okay….I lied…..I eat alot!