When the sociopath was arrested and I awoke to the devastation around me, I was overwhelmed with one, undeniable truth. I was alive.
I didn’t think it was possible. Hadn’t believed it would happen. I had spent so long in those final months wanting to die, wishing I could, thinking of ways to make it happen and waiting for him to make it happen, I couldn’t believe I actually was alive.
Yet, I was.
How could that be? What was I supposed to do with this unexpected gift of a lifetime?
In Jackie Nink Pflug’s book, Miles to Go Before I Sleep, her survivor’s story of being shot in the head by terrorists and left for dead when the plane she was on from Athens to Cairo was hijacked, she writes that she was happy to have gone through the hijacking . It is an inspiring story of overcoming the odds, and persevering in spite of seemingly insurmountable obstacles such as a learning disability she now has because of the damage from the gunshot to her brain.
And yet, in spite of all she went through, in spite of sitting for hours on a plane parked at the end of a runway waiting for the hijackers to come and get her and kill her, she is grateful for that experience.
I know what she means.
In the aftermath of the relationship with the sociopath, five years after waking up from the nightmare of his abuse, I am grateful for the experience. It has taught me more than I ever could have known about myself, about my weaknesses and more importantly, about my strengths. It has taught me the value of love, of turning up for myself, of becoming all I’m meant to be. It has taught me that life begins outside my comfort zone. That I cannot heal or change what I will not acknowledge. And, it has taught me that I am 100% accountable for my experience. It’s up to me to live my life fearlessly in the light of this moment, right now. It is the only moment I’ve got to get real and be real with where I’m at and who I am, because who I am is enough. I do enough. I am enough. I’m good enough.
For me, that experience was the springboard that launched me into my personal growth and development today. That trauma led me away from limiting beliefs where I was the victim of my thinking that mired me in the fear of never being good enough — without a man, without the right outfit, without the right car or job title or address.
Sure, before the sociopath walked through the door my life was okay. I was on the path to self-awareness, working every day to be a ”˜better me’. I meditated, was in therapy. Had two divorces under my belt (the first one which I seldom counted as I was only 22 and it lasted only 13 months). I had two amazing daughters. An ex-husband (the father of my daughters) with whom I was still friends. I had a great career. A home. A bank account and savings. I had nice things. On many levels I had it ”˜all’. But, I always felt there was something missing. Something wasn’t quite right in Oz. And that something was, love. The true love of a man. Love of the happily ever after variety.
I was ripe for the pickings when the sociopath rode in and swept me off my feet. I had just ended a relationship of three years after finally giving up on trying to weather the storms of my lover’s unpredictable mood swings and depressions. I had loved, truly madly deeply. I knew I was capable of doing it again. And so, when the sociopath fed me his lies of love everlasting, I fell gracefully and gratefully into his arms, swooning with relief that at last my ship had come in, my Prince Charming had arrived. Here was a love worth waiting for. Here was my dream of happily ever after come true.
I didn’t know what I didn’t know and what I didn’t know almost killed me.
There’s a lot I didn’t know about sociopathy and about the sociopath I fell in love with. And, there was a lot I didn’t know about me. It would take that relationship to awaken me to the truth of what I didn’t know about myself. Like, how to stand up for me, my needs, my wants, my desires. Or, how to stand rooted in my light, grounded by my values, principles, beliefs and not get pulled into the vortex of someone else’s bad behaviour because I was too scared to set my boundaries. Before the sociopath, I didn’t know how to be me without the fear of losing the one I loved because I never felt good enough just the way I am.
The sociopath had his game. He played it well.
And in the end, he lost.
Somewhere out there, he’s still playing his game. It’s what he does. It’s all he can do. Maybe someday he’ll awaken to the truth. Maybe not. He is no longer my responsibility. I am.
I’ve been blessed. I no longer have to play his game. I no longer have to play any game. I get to live my life, right now, as if it’s the most precious and wondrous life I’ve got — because it is.
Once upon a time I fell in love with a sociopath. I didn’t know how far I’d fall from grace when I fell into his arms. In having landed on this side of my reality today, I’m grateful for the journey that brought me here. Reality is, I can’t change what happened even if I wanted to. Accepting that journey as the gift that gave me the freedom to step into the wonder and joy of being me, makes a difference in my life today.
I cannot change or heal what I do not acknowledge. When Prince Charming rode in and swept me off my feet, I fell hard upon the road of life because I was searching for a shortcut to happiness. I didn’t trust myself to create the life of my dreams. I didn’t trust myself with my own happiness.
In healing, I have been given the gift to grow and learn and expand beyond the limiting beliefs of my past so that today I can dance with joy in the light of knowing the truth of who I am — I am a wondrous woman of worth living this one wild and passionate life for all she’s worth. I am blessed to be me. Blessed to have lived the past so that I can be free to live today without fear of ever having to fear again that I am not good enough to love, to be love, to be in love with who I am, exactly the way I am today.
Wow, that was a great article. I am so glad to have internet back so I can get back to reading. I needed my “article per day” or more routine so much last week. Every week!
This was a good one for me today. Yes, he’s still playing his stupid game somewhere, because it’s ALL HE CAN DO. Lately I’ve actually been pitying him a little, because I’ve realized how much of life he’s missing out on: all of it, basically. I’m fortunate to be a creature living without such limitations.
I’m working on that relationship with myself. Takes time getting to know her really well, but she’s the one person I should be able to count on for life 😉 It’s an important relationship.
That’s right Panther, we must be able to live with ourselves, by ourselves and be content with that. If we must have someone to complete us we are doomed..ok enuff of that bullshit, I am going to town to get me some chocolate – in the rain ~!
Hens, if it is raining where you are you are fortunate indeed! DANCE in the RAIN for me!!!!!! I went to the auction and ate a rootbeer float! YUM!!!! Sometimes it is okay to say “DIET IS A 4-LETTER WORD!” Just can’t do it every day!
Hens…
RAIN?! You have rain?! Now buddy boy, you are SUCH a tease. First you’re going to get chocolate AND you have rain. AND you had Pikes Peak. They way things are lined up for you, I recommend a lottery ticket. Two. Get the powerball one. And when you go to sleep, dream of rainbows in Hawaii.
Katy, who says OOOooo ENVY!?! Well, good for you my friend. Glad when someone has blessings b/c it affirms the possibility of some for myself. 🙂
Oxy,
we think alike. doncha think he’s making us envious that HE gets rain? 🙂
Katy, who just started but is going offline while i run to the store. think i’ll make Mai Tai’s to go with my hot humid night.
movingon – for some reason i can’t log into the ‘fake baby thread,’ so i will write to you here. I have never hated anyone until the spath (although i probably came close with the bully from my early school years).
they hurt us so much and steal so much from us, i think it is quite reasonable to hate them. i wanted the right to my hate as much as i want the right to change hating her. i think the hardest thing is how others respond to my hate. the people on lf are the best – they get it. a couple of other folks i have talked to (in corrections, councilors) seem to have space for me hating the spath – but in general i think it is seen as a character flaw and something I should get over, move on from, grow up from, yada, yada, yada.
I will know i have healed a lot when i stop hating her. I still do hate her, and i would still harm her physically if i had a chance to. a punch in the face would be a good start. i am sure i had sandbox skirmishes as a kid; i hit the bully 2 times, an an ex once; and my mom once (she was getting quite slappy with me and one day i hit her back – she didn’t touch me after that). these times of physical violence were all self defense. i never whacked my n sib, and should have. we were only ever in one fight that got a bit physical as kids/ teens. i should have whacked her many times….but i loved her and put up with her shit. now there’s a statement that has ruined millions of lives…’but, i loved her (him).’
as self defense i think it is quite natural to hate them. they are threatening. they seek to mess with us, seek to hurt and in some cases destroy us. i think hatred is quite a natural response. and i think it has a whole lot to do with fear. we tend to twin those things. I am becoming more and more ambivalent about the spath herself. not that i don’t still fear her and what she did to me, but my sense of rage is distilling into ‘hard’ boundaries of protection, and the more i see that i can put up steel shields of protection around myself, and that i still also want to let people in (event though it scares me terribly), the less i fear her/ the wreckage of what i am left with. (the wreckage is now more my concern than she is.)
i think there is very little other expression of my fear and hurt possible – other than wanting to do her physical harm. i will not take her on in a public forum, i will not reveal myself to her, and when i do take her on anonymously and covertly, i back away when it tweaks me. I think that hating her and wanting to whack her are really the only venues of expression i have.
i know it is different when you have to interact with these hunks of feces in an ongoing way. I wish great strength to those of us who are in custody battles and going through divorce with them….i don’t know that i would have any option than to become cold as steel in those circumstances, and it would scar me.
over time i may find some other modes than hatred and the wish to do physical harm…but right now what i see on the horizon is ambivalence.
rain and chocolate oh my – it’s a good thing…
1steprs – was reading your post and I understand how you feel about hate, I hate what she did to you and how many others? What you encountered was so unreal and sick, that bitch should be locked up for life. But dont let what happened fill you with hate..take from that experience what you can and try not to live with hate in your heart.
I used to hate the people that did me so wrong, but do they care? no..it takes so much emotion to hate..just remove yourself from them, bury the past because it does not change, it is what it was…dont give them the power to do you harm anymore..there is no getting even with evil…
hens – i agree with you on point 1 (rain and choc); point 2 (what she is, where she should be and on point 3 (not ot live filled with hate.)
i am not sure that i am hateful to try to make her suffer (but it bears investigating). i am hateful because what she did was nasty, and it’s a natural reaction to that.
i am making efforts to re enter life. at work i am working with a number of students (challenging) and my new asst. (again challenging). with both of these situations i have to try really hard to be ‘even’ and figure out the best way to ‘teach’ them and partner with them. these challenges are important because i want them to be successful, so i have to try really hard to be calm. i don’t want to go off half cocked when they do stupid or unknowing blundering things. it’s gong back into life that will wear the hate out of me – because i need a quiet heart to be in the world.
btw i went to a talk the other night at the uni with a group that turned out to be fro gender studies – all young enough to be my kids. had a brilliant time, and plan to do it again next month.
i also went to see one of my lost freinds last night. we talked for quite awhile. not sure what it will come to, or what i want it to – but it was a good ting to do. i avoided the other lost freind by crossing the street earlier in the evening. don’t want to connect with her. i have decided she has a heart the size of a peanut.
1steprs We just have to keep pluggin along and make it the best we can – that beats being miserable.. You are getting out there and being with people – that is good – better than me – i just stick with ones I know are safe.. I did meet a guy recently that was (well when I shook his hand electric currents went woo hoo) but he is unavailable – cant get him off my mind – another onion to peel……..
yes peanut hearts and peanut brains are abundant….
I think I am finally at that point of trying to love being me. I am satisfied with who I am and I think that having the Narcissist actually helps me with that. Everytime I see behavior that I don’t like, I thank GOD that it is NOT me. I am grateful that I don’t see people that way or manipulate people like that. I am proud that I do things for people just to be good to them and not respecting anything in return. I don’t need to hang with fancy people to define who I am. That is an unfortunate way to live.
I did get a hang up phone call last night and I did check to make sure that it wasn’t ex spaths number, or his wife’s. Thank GOD it wasn’t, but I did get a little anxiety initially. It’s funny how more than two years later and I still get that twinge of anxiety over what was evidently just a random wrong number.