He was arrested at 9:14 am on May 21, 2003. It was a sunny, blue sky morning. The birds were fluttering and twittering in the trees. The river flowed lazily by, meandering through the forest, dappled with sunlight, sparkling, clear.
We were in hiding. Had been since February 26 when we’d fled the city we lived in 1,000 miles away, heading west, heading to the US, he’d said. “I’ve got money there,” he insisted. “I’ll just leave this mess to my lawyers to fix. No sense hanging around waiting for them to get it cleared up. I’ll let you go once I’m out of the country,” he promised.
Like all his promises, like everything he’d ever said and done, it was all a lie.
On that morning in May, the lies fell apart and he was exposed. Two police officers walked in and took him away. “Are you on drugs?” one of them asked me as I sat, rocking back and forth, back and forth in a chair watching the scene unfold, a quiet, low keen seeping from my mouth. I was catatonic. I was not on drugs.
They took him away and I sat surveying the mess around me, trying to make sense of the mess of my life.
I hadn’t heard of No Contact with the abuser, but I knew after months of no contact with family and friends, I had to make contact with someone beyond the narrow confines of my world with him. He was gone. I had to reach out for help.
I called my sister who lived an hour away from where we had been in hiding. She didn’t ask questions. She didn’t yell or scream at me. She came and got me.
No Contact was the only possibility. He didn’t have my sister’s number and it was unlisted. He did keep calling the couple who owned the cabin where we’d been staying. They called my sister, she advised them not to give him my number. He called my mother. She hung up on him, even though she felt it was rude. “He’s the man who almost killed your daughter,” I told her. “It is not rude to hang up on him. It’s vital to my well-being.”
I didn’t want to think about him but at times, my mind betrayed me. I’d be walking down a street and hear a cell phone ringing and it would be his ring. My mind would leap to thoughts of him. What was he doing? What was he saying? What was he telling people about me?
I posted No Trespassing signs in my mind. When thoughts of him intruded, I’d mentally hold up a sign and send the thoughts back to where they’d come from, my fear, my shame, my guilt.
I knew that one day I’d have to go through the thoughts of him and examine them, but for now, I had to give myself time to grow stronger. For now, it didn’t matter that I had to rid myself of his presence in my mind. That would come later. At first, what mattered most was that I build emotional strength so that I could eventually deal with thinking about him without making myself sick.
In those first minutes and hours and days weeks and months away from him I focused my thinking on me. On what had happened inside of me. On what I had to do to become healthy again.
The police asked me for a statement about anything I knew about his illegal activities. I had to do the right thing to show myself, remind myself; I was capable of doing ”˜the right thing’.
I wrote it down. It hurt. I was scared. What would he do when he found out I had ”˜told’ on him?
I couldn’t let my mind go there. The monster of him in my head was bigger than the reality of him, out there. Out there he was in jail. I had to escape the prison of my mind trapped in thinking of him. I held up my No Trespassing sign.
Focus on doing the right thing, I told myself.
I kept writing.
To remind myself that I was so much more than that five year relationship, that my life was made up of so many other important things than just ”˜him’, I made a list of things I’d done in my life that I was proud of. Being a mother topped my list. “What kind of mother are you really”, the voice of self-denigration whispered. “You deserted your children.”
I posted STOP signs in my head. Whenever self-doubt, negative self-talk invaded, I held up my STOP sign and consciously reframed the negative into more loving words. “I am a courageous woman. Yes, I did something I never imagined I would ever do as a mother. I was very, very sick. And now, the poison is gone and I am healing. I can make amends. I am reclaiming my life. I am courageous and growing stronger every day.”
I kept adding to my list of things I’d done that I was proud of. In Grade five I raised $122.00 for a charity by walking 21 miles. I was an honor student. Got a scholarship. I ran the marathon. Wrote a play with a group of street teens and produced it.
My list reminded me that I was capable of living in the world beyond the narrow corridor of his abuse. It reminded me that I was a competent, caring human being.
At first, I wanted to cry and cry and cry. At first, I did. And then I knew I had to build emotional muscle, to build my willpower. I gave myself a time limit for crying. It began with ten minutes on the hour, every hour. That was when I let myself cry. The other fifty minutes I had to do at least one constructive thing (Work on my resume. Phone about a job interview. Take a walk.) to take me one step further on my healing path. The ten minutes every hour became eight and then five and then only every two, then three, then four hours. Eventually, as I kept doing more and more things to take me on the healing path, I forgot to cry.
At first, I wanted to tell everyone my story. Talk about what he had done. How hurt I’d been. How confused and scared and lonely. At first, I thought everyone knew what I’d been through just by looking at me. Couldn’t they see the scars? Couldn’t they see my pain? I couldn’t understand how the world could be so normal. I needed to embrace its normalcy. I enforced No Contact in my speech. I could not talk of him. I could not tell the story again and again. The only time I had permission to talk about him and what had happened was when I went to an Alanon or Co-Dependents Anonymous meeting. There, with the safety of the 12-steps empowering me, I could speak up and give voice to my pain, my fear and my hope.
The greatest danger wasn’t contacting him. He was in jail. My greatest danger lay in thinking about him. In remembering those gentle moments where I had felt his ”˜love’ embrace me.
“It was never love,” I reminded myself. “Love doesn’t almost kill you.”
I kept working at No Contact in my mind. Good times or bad, thinking of him wasn’t healthy for me. I kept my No Trespassing signs posted. My STOP sign handy. Over time, it became easier. A cell phone ring wouldn’t startle me. My body wouldn’t jerk suddenly at the sound of a car backfiring, or a door slamming. I wouldn’t cry at every turn. Sit in silence immersed in sadness. Thoughts of suicide were arrested before they even saw the STOP sign in my mind. I was building my will to survive. My will to rejoice in living life fully every day.
In time, it became easier to live without the fear I would always be the abused woman I had become. In time, it became easier to live with the possibility of life beyond his abuse, beyond the lies he’d told me about who I was, what I could do, where I could go and who I could never be. It became easier to believe in me. It became easier to talk, about him, about what had happened, about what I’d done to betray myself and those I loved without falling into despair. It became easier to love myself, not as an abused woman, but as a woman who had the courage to face her fears, to turn up for herself and love herself, exactly the way she was. A woman capable and confident enough to let go of abuse and claim her right to live freely in her own skin.
I was an abused woman. Today, I continue to grow and heal, to love myself for all I’m worth and to give myself the space and time to let feelings flow through me without having to stop them.
Today, I give myself the grace of loving myself enough to know, I am okay. The things I did that hurt those I love, and me, are nothing compared to the things I do today to create a beautiful life all around me. I am not measured against what happened back then, my value is in what I do today to make a difference, in my life and the world around me.
Today, he was just a moment in time, a small segment of my life. He has no value in my life today. My value is in how I live, what I do, say, how I think and look at the world through eyes of love. Today, my value is in me.
Hi Erin.
Wow, they take their time, don’t they? I hope it works out. I know you’d be an incredibly valuable participant.
Kathy
Kathleen! Nice to see you, you havent been around for ages:)x I have really missed your posts:) Blue.x
justabouthealed,
wow, thank you for that….Sometimes a little validation of how I percieve this unfolding before me can go a long way in keeping me “sane” over here.
I have my close friends, and I have of course shared some of my experience with my son with them in the past….I have pretty much stopped talking to my friends about this because it is just impossible for me to find the right words to convey what I am trying to say. It is just something that they can’t possibly grasp onto. At least not for now……
I am grateful for a place to share and feel some kind of acceptance. Often times what I experience and see with my son seems really unbelievable to me, AND I am seeing it with my own eyes. So I guess I can understand how they don’t get it….
kim frederick,
Yes your two cents does help! I like to hear everyones perspective and experience.
I am still “watching” this unfold before me and trying to understand so much. In the begining it was very difficult for me to make sense out of any of it.
And I was beating myself up so much because, after all this was my son and I felt like a complete failure as a parent when I saw these signs. The guilt and the anguish I felt was almost unbearable.
One of the things that really helped me get through the initial “acceptance” of what I was experiencing was coming here……
And the other thing that really helped me to stop doubting myself was a very important “someone” who was in my life many years ago. A therapist that I saw years ago and for some reason we developed a special bond. (her husband commited suicide as well so that was a bond right there) But I went to her even before my husband died.
She had always told me that I had the best instincts of anyone that she had ever met. I don’t know if that was the actual truth or not. Maybe she told me that to make me more confident in myself, at the time. But for whatever the reason she drilled into me to TRUST that instinct and not question it as I tended to do.
Even though that had been such a long time ago I was able to “draw” onto her words when I really needed to MORE than I ever did before.
Just shows you how people do enter our lives for a reason.
Kim: good post.
Also: I would like to post some info on celiac. I am celiac.
Stress produces cortisol [stress hormone] and cortisol damages the gut. Dealing with p’s puts us into stress mode [fight or flight] which keeps our cortisol levels elevated. Many people in high stress situations are diagnosed celiac. After a lengthy battle with this and docs etc…I have found: staying on the specific carbohydrate diet works better than just going gluten free. Many of us have found this to be true. You can find the diet by googling. The basis is: our guts are damaged and we need to allow them to totally heal. Grains are very hard to digest. Starches are difficult to break down and hard on the gut. Eliminate them and stick to meat, veggies, fruit, nuts and no refined sugars and our guts don’t have to work so hard to break down our food=allowing healing to take place. Go to the specific carbohydrate diet website and read the science behind it. It’s given me life back.
Witsend:
I had a revelation the other night…..
I shared with you earlier, similarities in our sons……
I think I also shared that most of what he shares with me in regards to his thoughts and his outward behaviors has me thinking there is a large ‘short’ or gap in his thinking….
Like things just don’t connect in him……
I have taken a totally different approach with this child…..
He is going to do what he does, when he does it and the reality is his consequences are just that HIS.
If he chooses not to graduate and do what is required to achieve that……well, as much as it pains me to think of this……I can’t change that choice…..
So I have resorted down to expecting very little of him.
3 rules….
He MUST be in by 10pm on weekdays….Sun-Thurs
12am on weekends.
He must show respect to me. No profanity etc….
He has mastered the first 2 rules……
Because he found he didn’t like being dropped off at later than set curfew (BY LAW, NOT ME) in the boonies where we live…..and being locked out and have to walk back into town to find a place to sleep.
The first few times….he didn’t get bothered, thought he was punishing me….but it got old quick FOR HIM.
I know when he turns 18…..he will have to fend in the world for himself.
He doesn’t help me around the house AT ALL…..and it ads more stress on me to expect anything and rely on him and be once again…..let down and feel angry… cycle, cycle cycle….same end result!
SO I eliminated those feelings in ME. I find other ways of getting things done.
I DO NOT give him money, I do NOT give him rides. I DO NOT jump when he decides HE needs something.
I will not let him get his drivers licence as long as he doesn’t have a B average……There is NO way he could afford his insurance and car upkeep etc…..(currently maintains an F average) Bummer for HIM.
SO….I cut that option out completely and will NOT discuss it with him…..he tries, I am just not available for that discussion….I have already made my requirements clear!
I cancelled his cell phone and he roams free….I have learned NOT to worry about him……and if he chooses to walk in harms way…..I ALSO HAVE NO CONTROL…..HE WILL NOT LISTEN TO AUTHORITY….any authority…..
He goes against any expectation I have of him…..so it is redundant to share my thoughts and try to help him….it is counter productive…..
So….heres my revelation….
He made a statement about graduation…..(remember the F average)
He is 5 classes behind already and currently failing 2 classes in this ‘senior’ year…..
The district requires the 2010 graduates take 4 years of Math and 3 years of Science….
This was counseled on when he entered HS 3 years ago…..
Made VERY CLEAR.
Okay….so he says to me…..as he was trying to explain how stupid the counselor was…..BUT I HAVE TAKEN 4 YEARS OF MATH and SCIENCE!
I said, yes, but you didn’t pass 2 of those math years……he said…..so what, I took them didn’t I. Also science…..
I was so boggled by the fact this was his thoughts…..
I explained to him that he had to PASS and NOT JUST TAKE these years……
He said, the requirement just said he had to TAKE them and he did…….
SO THIS IS THE WAY HE THINKS…….This is his ‘short circuit’……
Then he tears up the paper the counselor sent for me to sign to ‘opt out’ of the 4/3 math /science deal……
I said to him, that I suggested if he didn’t understand what was required of him that he needed to do whatever he could to get clear…….such as making an apt. with the counselor etc….
I offered to him that I would be willing to meet with the counselor along with him, so I could be clear too…..(i had already spoken with the counselor and was letting son handle this…..because of his defiance towards me) I just appeared to not be clear……
Bottom line…..He needs to be the one clear on what he is or isn’t doing that WILL affect whether he graduates or NOT.
It’s already clear to me……but I have already graduated…..
But, that comment he made and the lack of connection to his reality is very telling to me.
THIS IS HOW HE VIEWS ALL OF HIS LIFE>………IT all falls between the ‘short circuit’ in his head…..
If he doesn’t want to hear it……he places it down that gap…..or tears up paperwork.
Problem solved to him!………until later……and that later is fast approaching.
Witsend, I think of you often….I commiserate with your ordeal……we want the best for our children and we can only do our best with them……
As my therapist once said……We need to let life be their teacher……
That is the hard part for us! We see where they are headed and KNOW they will have regrets!
But life has valuable lessons that we all need to learn…..some easier than others.
Good luck my dear…..keep your spirits up!!!
XXOO
interesting how many celiacs are on this blog… Kathleen, TB, Lily and me. Did I miss someone? That really does point to stress as a factor.
I agree about the specific carb diet TB. sugar is bad for me, I use agave syrup.
Kim
Pink Flags, interesting turn of phrase, I’ll have to use that. I’ve never experienced the “time outwhile I ponder my face,” or maybe I just never noticed.
Skylar,
Stress is not a factor in celiac, per se. It’s genetic. However the nutritional requirements created by stress, and the fact that gluten destroys the villi in the small intestine (one of the major places for nutrient absorption), probably add up to accelerated bad symptoms.
TwiceBetrayed, it’s the Selective Carbohydrate Diet (SCD). SCD is a step beyond gluten-free, though it’s elimination of all grains also eliminates gluten. It’s a really amazing healing diet for gut issues, and all the complications of those issues. What it specifically does is kill off the overgrowth of intestinal bacteria, which generate toxins when they consume carbohydrates. The toxins penetrate the intestinal walls (leaky gut syndrom) and create health and brain function problems. The initial cause, by the way, of bacterial overgrowth is arguably related to use of antibiotics and heavy reliance on grain-based foods. (Think of our infants taking antibiotics for their ear infections while they are being fed baby cereal and teething cookies.)
I mentioned in the earlier letter that removing gluten and lactose was a first line of action for children with apparent developmental disorders. The SCD diet is the second line, and it has dramatically good effects on many children with autism.
There is an apparent linkage with celiac, leaky gut and candida. Candida is a systemic thing. Celiac and leaky gut cause systemic issues. Like skin problems, bone problems, joint problems, issues with key organs, immune disorders, etc.
It’s no surprise if many of us are celiac. It’s extremely common in people of western European extraction, as well as many of Mediterranean or Africa origin (though probably by intermarriage). A number of European countries (including pasta-loving Italy) screen children in grade school. No one knows the actually numbers in this country, because it’s so seldom diagnosed, though things are getting better. But I wouldn’t be surprised if were 10 percent or more.
I know that sounds outrageous, but if you can’t imagine giving up bread and pasta, you should probably go in for a blood test. That “addiction” to wheat is a tip-off. And if you think that giving up wheat would be hard, you have no idea what the “detox” phase of the SCD diet is like when all those beasties in your gut are demanding their carbohydrates and then dying off. Whew! It can be a rough week or so, but it’s worth it.
What does all this have to do with us as a sociopath recovery group? Well, it really could have a lot. I got serious about changing my diet in those agonizing early days after I got rid of him. As soon as my mood started to change, I realized how much easier it was for him to manipulate me when I was slightly depressed — anxious and weepy — from gluten all the time.
Later, I did the SCD diet for some months. It took the psychological and physical benefits of the gluten-free diet and magnified them ten times. It’s a cleansing diet; you don’t have to stick to it for the rest of your life, but six months is recommended.
So if you think your body is fighting you in your recovery process, it might be true. Gluten and leaky gut can make you lugubrious. (I love that word, but hate being like that, which I was for too many months.) Getting healthier can really help.
Within a year after getting rid of my S, I got off anti-depressants (after something like five years) when I changed what I ate. I still had to deal with a lot of pain, but I was able to deal with it and think it through, which was simply beyond me when I was still eating wheat.
We’re not all celiac, but if you’re ancestors are from Scandinavia, the British Isles, Holland, France, Germany or Italy, or any of the surrounding countries, you might consider getting tested. Or if you have the other common symptoms — itchy rashes that keep coming back or really terrible intestinal problems. There are other symptoms, but those are the ones that usually tip off the doctors.
It could make your recovery a lot easier.
For the people here who need lawyers but cannot afford them, has anyone checked out prepaid legal services? I actually know of a SOCIOPATH who used one. It costed him $30 a month, but he managed to garner enough attorneys for dozens of frivolous lawsuits, some of which he actually won.
$30 a month sounds like a pretty good deal for ongoing legal representation. What do you guys (especially Matt) think? Has anyone ever tried one?
Good points, Kathy!
In addition to any problem you have a genetic link for, stress may ACTIVATE the gene which may have lain dormant or semi-dormant. Being highly stressed keeps our bodies from “handling” some things as well as they might otherwise.
During all this chaos, I developed lactose intolerance (to cow milk) which I had not had previously.
Since our “guts” react very strongly to stress they are one of the first “signs” that something is wrong in our lives.
To be a bit graphic, if you are going down the road and get behind a “bull hauler” (large cattle transport) the stench will knock you over (STRESSED cattle being hauled) however, the NORMAL smell of cow manure in UNstressed, healthy animals, even if kept in fairly close confinement is NOT too bad at all. The stress of being herded with STRANGERS who are fighting for room in a crowded environment STRESSEs the cattle to the point that they get MAJOR BOWEL UPSETS.
The high carbohydrate diet (80%) that is fed to cattle to fatten them in feed yards were they are again CONTINUALLY under stress fighting for dominance and space as well as food and water is why much of the REAL flavor of the beef (commercial) we eat is nothing close to that produced from UN-stressed cattle.
In both the cattle and in humans, stress causes a marked pH change in the contents of the stomachs and bowels as well as small intestine. All of this contributes as well to “gut” problems in highly stressed mammals.
The speed of motility of the gut contents has also been linked to cancer in humans as well, so all kinds of “stress responses” effect our health (or lack of it) as well as whether nutrients are absorbed or not. Under stress, our blood is re-directed to the muscles rather than to the liver first which is where much activity goes on that has to do with absorbing and processing nutrients, so stress effects absorption as well.
Stress also effects glucose metabolism as well, which is why we feel “washed out” after a particularly stressful episode as the muscles have “used up” the stored and available glucose.
Like you, I highly recommend attention to our bodies needs and taking care of ourselves, reducing stress as much as possible, and being “good to” ourselves.
BTW good to see you back posting, thanks for some good information and FOOD FOR THOUGHT! (a bit of a PUN there!) LOL