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.
skylar,
I don’t know if this will help you or not but it is something that I struggle with and it ALWAYS makes me feel very off kilter and sometimes even sick to my stomach. It doesn’t just affect me emotionally but almost in a physical sense as well.
Sometimes our feelings are so deep and so intense it goes against our nature to even begin to deal with them.
Often times when we are trying to recover from a romantic relationship, and our involvement with a toxic individual we assume that no pain can be greater. Once we have cut ourselves off from that involvement we begin to pick up the pieces of our broken selves and try to regroup. Depending on the nature of how long the relationship lasted and how much abuse we encountered emotionally, physically & mentally, we might have a long healing journey ahead…..
But when that abuse was done by a parent, sibling, or even our own child……It creates a whole different perspective. It complicates EVERYTHING we are feeling & the ability to heal.
We are led to believe that “family” should be a place where we are safe. People we can trust. When that is not the case, the feelings that arise in us feel foreign and go against the “grain” of what feels right.
It is one thing to feel contempt for a toxic person that we have gone N/C with, it is quite another to have those same feelings for someone in our biological family tree.
IT just doesn’t feel right. It somehow seems like it is against the laws of nature to feel some of these intense feelings with our own “blood”….so we are not only left with the issues of what to do with these feelings and how to “fix” this, (go N/C, go to therapy etc) we are faced with the “uncomfortable” feeling of having them to begin with.
You know we can pick our friends and lovers but we can’t pick our family plays into this as well. When we are deeply hurt by our significant other we can question ourselves (after the fact) how we might have allowed this person in our comfort zone our “trust” to begin with.
That same question doesn’t make as much sense when we ask ourselves this about someone in our family. We are suppose to love and trust them, yes? That is how we would like to think but that is NOT the case for many. Disfunction within our family is where it begins for many of us.
I often struggle with the feelings I have that creep up with my son. There are days that I feel fear of him……That just doesn’t set right with me. It goes against all what a mother should feel about her own flesh and blood. Its not “normal” these feelings but it doesn’t change them.
I love my son. But there are days that it is difficult to love him. He makes it difficult because he is abusive. He abuses in a way that ALSO doesn’t seem right for a mother to look at a 16 year old and think that she feels “abused” by him.
If someone TOLD me that I COULD feel like this years ago about my own son I would tell them it WASN’T POSSIBLE.
But it is possible, and regardless that it isn’t what a mother should feel it is HOW I DO feel.
It makes me sick, it isn’t “normal” but it is, what it is.
Maybe you are experiencing something similar. Especially since you are now living with your parents again. All those bad feelings are erupting and they are very difficult to compartmentalize and deal with.
I hope you are feeling better.
hey guys, went to visit the girl who is relapsing drinking as she was starving and the guy who took her for a ride has cut off her gas so no heat and he moved almost all the furniture out. Made me dam grateful to be sober. She’s at the bottom and he’s not done with her yet, still calling messing with her head and she’s going to end up back in detox . This guy like all of them will never be done with her until she finally takes a stand but im afraid she’s too dam sick and weak. I tried my best saying, are you going to let him win, talked to her teenage daugher who told me that her mother has always had to have a man and that has been her downfall her whole life and the daugher hopes her mom forgets men altogether , that is if she ever gets sober. It’s a sobering reality for me to see how bad things have gotten for this poor girl, reminding me ver much of my own mother who drank herself to death at age 50. I tried to get her to see that this guy is going to kill her and it is pointless when someone is under the influence. Also have a confession, prob not a good thing, but i haven’t heard from the detective, and now i miss the visits, stupid stupid stupid. And thinking of that has kind of put the socio on the backburner, all crap i know but i have to be honest. I think it’s just plain loneliness makes us do dumbass things. Going to take a nice bath and try and be grateful for all that i have. Just seems like i’ve been alone so long but i guess it’s where i am to be for now. love kindheart
Kindheart, I can sooo identify. I have a lot of your friends issues, but don’t want to go into them too deeply here. I feeeel so bad for her!!! When I was going through what she is, I would lay in my bed at night, and recite “How it Works”, using it to help me with my obsession with HIM. I also used the 12 steps, to the best of my ability, admitting I was powerless, that my life was unmanagabe. Well I think you know the rest. I would pray for God’s help. I would be just as downtrodden, scared and lost as it sounds like she is….but I knew if he came back, I’d jump right back in.
It seemed like it took a really long time, but God did answer my prayers. I was so afraid of being evicted, (my XP stole the rent money for drugs) but when I was, I was finally free!!
When I had nothing left to give the sorry peice of dog defecation, he left me alone. I went to a shelter and found the first peace I’d had in a really long time. I didn’t have drugs in my face 24-7, and I didn’t have to worry about the impending doom, just trying to ward it off everyday, and I could stop and breath and think about the rest of my life.
I’m sorry you haven’t heard from your detective, but try to be grateful that you’re not up to your eye-balls in misery. It’s not so bad to be alone….I’m learning to really appreciate it.
Put some extra nice stuff in your bath, and some extra nice lotion on after. You deserve it. I’ll keep both you and your friend in my prayers.
hi everyone,
Isn’t it weird that I usually post so much and now I can barely talk? I’ve been thinking about why that is and realized it’s because I don’t even know what to think/feel.
I think the reason I feel like this is not because I’m surprised. I’m not surprised, I figured out that my dad is a narcissist and my mom is a covert controller months ago. The reason I feel so strange is because they are such GOOD ACTORS! They will not give up the role. I catch them in a lie and they change coats like a chameleon so fast, I can’t even keep up. My dad is not as impressive but my mother – OMG, she is ssooooo good. Any one of you could meet her and never, ever sniff anything out. She prays every night, says the rosary for an hour and every morning she prays again on her knees for another 1/2 hour. She has books of prayers.
It’s just that she has no morals or values other than money.
When I explained my XP’s character disturbance, narcissism to her, she was very impressed and told me that my father is most certainly a narcissist. Well he is, but I also know that she was doing a projection, which narcissists do. I keep talking to her like I don’t know what she is and she gets more and more deflective.
The woman I met last week, R, also had an abusive mother. When I said, “and my parents are also N’s”.
Her face changed and she took a sharp breath, and whispered, “the mothers are so subtle, aren’t they?” I just nodded.
I get the feeling R’s mom is like mine. You really would NEVER, EVER, EVER, peg her for what she is, if you are not VERY well informed and know the signs to look for. Furthermore, you would still not notice without first enduring years of the most subtle, almost imperceptible gaslighting, emotional sabatoge and covert control.
Really, the only reason I don’t think I’m crazy and imagining my mother’s malignant narcissism is because my XP was also so very, very, very covert for the first 20 years or so and because I have read so much on the subject and know them so well.
So I know what I know, but there is so much continued evidence to the contrary. (she had breakfast ready for me this morning, scrambled eggs and sliced fruit. She made some lunch for me and had it in the fridge. And I’m pretty sure she spent the afternoon praying in her room.) Can you see what I mean about how weird it feels? That kind of behavior from my xP would not faze me because I would know the food was poisoned and he had been praying to the devil, but when your P-mother feeds you – ack – it’s emotional manipulation but based on what a real mother would do…
I’m not sure I’m being clear about what I’m experiencing.
KH,
I don’t know the story about the detective. Were you dating him, or was he just a detective getting information from you in the case of your ex? I so relate about the loneliness. I still miss the young guy who came out to visit me 3 weeks ago (long story). Your friend is lucky to have you to lean on right now while she’s at rock bottom. And of course in helping her, you are reinforcing to yourself that you never want to be in that place again. I’ve heard that when doing the 12 steps, the mentoring/sponsoring part can be very rewarding.
Sky and Kim,
I just can so relate to your posts. Most of my friends loved my mother until I met my first real boyfriend who was much older than me and really cared for me. The first (and only) time I took him to meet my mother and stepfather, he went out in the car and cried afterward. He said now he understood why I had so many issues. I have only had one other boyfriend that saw what she was and cautioned me to stay away from her. No one else sees the narcissism. They just think she’s nice and charming. My mother and stepfather never even pretended to have religion in their lives. They were basically a life-denying family. Nothing happy or positive thrived in that household. My stepfather left a loaded gun under the chair in the living room. I was playing with it one day and almost shot my sister. I was 7 years old at the time, and my sister was 5. Then I’m pretty sure I was beaten for playing with it. One of the reasons the whole concept of God is so difficult for me is that I prayed and prayed to a God I believed in when I was growing up. He never answered my prayers, so I gave up.
It first hit me when I was in grad school how really horrible my parents were. The reality was so harsh that I dropped out of school.
There is no need to talk if you don’t feel like it, Sky. Sometimes there isn’t much to say.
Yes, there’s no one in the world who can manipulate us better than our mothers! And they are soooo covert about it. They come from a time when women had no real power, and the only thing they could really control were their children, especially daughters! Plus, they always had to be nice. That’s what good girls were, back then, soooo nice. They became passive-aggressive, and trying to break free from one of these mother’s was like pulling teeth!
I grew up in Washington State, but the first chance I got I moved as far away as possible, still staying in the continantal US. Married a sailor, who had his own issues, and I was still alone, with me.
I felt, for so long that no one had the slight bit of interest in knowing who I was, what I thought , what I felt.
I learned to keep my mouth shut, and keep the peace. It was just easier, and then I could still hold on to the idea that I was NICE, just like my Mama taught me to be.
Well, needless to say, I don’t think I’m always NICE anymore, but even when I’m not, I feel guilty.
Don’t know where I’m going with this Skylar. I just know that our parents know just where our buttons are cause they’re the ones’ who installed them.
Focus on getting out on your own. Make a plan, take itone day at a time and doit with a single mindedness of purpose.
Guess what? I finally figured out how to 🙂
Witsend,
I just read your post, and you really touched on something about how deep the pain goes when it’s your own parents. I have been healing since I was 23, since my first meditation retreat. And yet I am nearly 49 now and still going through the waves of grief. I don’t know how to speed them up or get to the other side. It just seems to have become part of my life, and no one in my real life can relate to it, though many of you can here.
After reading everything you have been through with your son, I certainly understand how you could feel what you feel. I think unusual situations call for unusual responses. You have done more for your son in the short time I’ve known you than my parents did for me in 48 years. I hope you don’t judge yourself for being human.
thanks Star, Kim and Witsend, you guys always make me feel a bit better. I know, that I have to get my life together and get out of this house. That is the plan.
Hi Jill, Hi Candy:
I’m not a newcomer to the site but went off for around 6 months so I need to catch up on some of what’s going on with the people who came in while I was gone. So sorry if I didn’t write before! I will catch up to get back in the loop.
Witsend:
For what it is worth, I do NOT believe that your son has anti-social personality disorder, at least not yet.
I am currently reading Dr. Leedom’s book, “Just Like His Father?”
From what I am reading in your posts, your son has an excessive drive for social dominance, that has probably led to Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD).
From Dr. Leedom’s book (page 129), “DSM IV defines ODD as a ‘pattern of negativistic, hostile, and defiant behavior lasting
at least 6 months, during which 4 (or more) of the following are present:
1) Often loses temper
2) Often argues with adults
3) Often actively defies or refuses to comply with adults requests or rules
4) Often deliberately annoys people
5) Often blames others for his or her mistakes or misbehavior
6) Is often touchy or easily annoyed by others
7) Is often angry and resentful
8. Is often spiteful and vindictive
Page 135, “Children who have a strong social dominance drive, often argue, do and say things they know will upset their parents. In fact, it seems they do these things to get “a rise” from their parents. Unfortunately, parents often fall into the trap, becoming angry and giving an emotional display. Why would a child intentionally behave in a provacative manner? The reason is he enjoys observing his parent’s emotional display and the feeling that comes with knowing he caused it. Evoking emotional displays in others is pleasurable because the act makes one feel powerful….End the cycle by not reacting when your child tries to manipulate you. If you sense your child is trying to provoke you, say so.”
Witsend, I thought I read in one of your posts a while back that he has NOT been in trouble with the law.
That’s good if he does not have a police record, yet.
That means that there may be a FEAR of getting into that kind of trouble.
According to Dr. Leedom’s book, FEARFULNESS IS GOOD.
Page 126 of the book, “fearfulness predicts good conscience formation.” It will also help him control his impulses.
What can you do as a parent?
Not react to his gaslighting attempts on you. Don’t let him “get a rise” out of you. Stay calm, cool, & collected, and call him on his gaslighting attempts.
Try to do as much as you can as a family, to promote love and togetherness. Take interest in any sports that he loves, and be his biggest fan.
I am not a parent, or a therapist, and definitely no expert on this subject. I just happen to be reading a book on at-risk children right now, and I believe there are plenty of us on this site who have at-risk kids in our lives. So, I am sharing a little of what I am learning.
I am not trying to sugar-coat anything for you here. There is plenty for you to be concerned about with your son.
He had a very traumatic childhood event, with the death of his father. I believe a lot of the problems that you are having with him now, stem from that event.
Dr. Leedom also says in her book that problems that began during the early childhood years can simply lay dormant until they are activated along with the drive for social dominance in the teen years. (I’m paraphrasing from page 129 of the book)
That explains how a seemingly “perfect child” suddenly develops into a “terrible teen”. (Page 129)
Anyway, you may already know all of this information. I’m not sure.
It sounds to me like you are doing everything right.
Don’t let him get an emotional reaction out of you, if he provokes you. Keep offering him love and affection, if you can. Do as much as you can as a family. Make sure he complies with the rules you have set up in your home. If he does not, then make sure he understands there will be certain, clear consequences.
You know your situation better than anyone.
Hopefully, this is something your son can still grow OUT of.
I will pray for that.
I am not comfortable addressing parental problems on this site, but I hope this information is helpful.