A couple of months ago I had emergency surgery to remove my gallbladder. I’d been feeling discomfort for some time, but put it down to what I was eating, or simply the fact there was a lot of flu going around. And then, one Saturday morning I awoke to excruciating pain in my abdomen. I’d been having little mini-attacks off and on since Christmas, but they had only lasted a few minutes and once gone, could be ignored and even forgotten. But that last attack simply would not stop. My daughter called an ambulance and once in the hospital they told me I needed to have my gallbladder removed immediately.
After the surgery, I still wasn’t feeling up to par. I was constantly nauseous and tired. I told myself, it’s just the after-effect of the surgery. My body is ridding itself of the anesthesia and the gas they used to aid in the surgery. And then, one week after the surgery, I had another attack, this time, without a gallbladder to cause the pain.
Back in hospital, they told me there were still stones in my digestive track. Through another procedure, they divested me of as many stones as possible, and to ensure any remaining stones left my body without getting stuck in a duct, they inserted two stents at the opening to my pancreas.
I thought I’d feel better immediately, but I still felt lousy. Nauseous. Uncomfortable. Tired. After three weeks, they removed the stents and one day after the surgery, I awoke and it was like magic. I felt energized. Like my old self again!
I mention that process because it was so like what happened to me while I was with the sociopath. At first, I didn’t notice the little anxiety attacks that kept undermining my peace of mind. I didn’t notice the ebbing out of my energy, the sucking away of my calm.
As the relationship progressed from its early beginnings of ”˜perfect love’ into the terror and horror of that imperfect lie in the name of love, I began to feel continuously out of sorts. Constantly tired, and sore. At one point, every muscle in my body ached, every joint pained me. Getting out of bed in the morning was a process of rolling slowly onto my side, easing my aching body over the edge of the bed and onto the floor so that I could slowly, painfully straighten up and begin a careful walk towards the bathroom. When I walked with my dog, my fists were clenched by my sides and no amount of concentration would keep them unclenched. In my chest, there was a constant, knife-like pain that wouldn’t ebb. Breathing deeply was next to impossible, and breathing freely a distant memory long forgotten.
I told myself, it’s just a flu-bug. It’s part of ageing. It’s stress. It’s anything but a reaction to the excruciating horror of living with his evil machinations undermining my well-being.
To cope, to keep myself sane within the context of that relationship, I began to amputate more and more of my emotional self. No matter what feeling I let go of, however, errant wafts of pain would trouble my mind like phantom limbs reminding an amputee of all he’d lost. As I tumbled further and further into hell, I thought my body was rejecting me, not because of the sociopath, but rather, because I was not ‘doing it right’, not ‘being enough’ for him. If only I could be more perfect. Be more flexible. More loving. More caring. Furiously I attempted to amputate everything about me until I had left to cling to was the lie of the ”˜love’ he fed me through every weave and warp of his deceit. Without relief from the constant diet of terror that was my life with him, I began to feel like my entire being was being eaten away, cell by cell, by some mysterious, unknown disease.
I didn’t know what was wrong with me. I didn’t dare go to a doctor. He’d told me any attempt to seek medical help would only make the mess I’d created in his life greater. Hearing only his voice roaring in my head, I lost my ability to discern between what made sense and what was sheer stupidity. I needed help but didn’t dare reach out for it, except through him.
I never once connected my unease to his discord. I never once acknowledged that he was the cancer eating away at my peace of mind. That was a truth that was too terrifying to face and so I turned inward, futilely attempting to cauterize the continuous bleeding away of my life-force by stilling the voice of reason buried deep within my mind.
And then he was removed by the police and I awoke to the devastation of my life.
At first, I didn’t want to look at what had happened to me. I wanted to hide my head in shame and sorrow, to chastise myself for having been so stupid, so blind, so naïve. But heaping self-denigration and blame upon myself would only have continued his abuse. Just as trying to make sense of his nonsense would only have kept his abuse alive in my life, I had to learn to turn up for me in all my wounded parts without judging myself for falling to pieces. I had to begin the process of putting my humpty, dumpty self together again with tender loving care.
I had to face the truth. I had been abused. Duped. Lied to. Deceived. Manipulated. Destroyed by the man who had promised to love me ”˜til death do us part, and who had then proceeded to spin the deadly web of his deceit into my demise.
I had to learn to love myself, exactly as I was. Tto ease my pain and sorrow, woundedness and terror, I had to learn to be at peace with where I was, to accept what I had done, and to forgive myself for having gone so far from where I’d meant to be.
In acknowledging that in loving him I had given up on me, I began to heal. Within two days of his arrest, my joints quit hurting. When I walked, my hands hung comfortably by my sides. The pain in my chest evaporated. In facing the horrible truth of what had happened to me, I began to claim the emotions I had so furiously amputated in my desperate desire to pretend that what he was doing was all about love.
What he did had nothing to do with love. And what I was doing while with him had nothing to do with love either. It had everything to do with abuse.
Since being freed from that relationship almost five years ago, I have learned to turn up for me, no matter where I am, or how I’m feeling. I have learned to love myself, warts and all and to embrace the truth of who I am, even when I feel like hiding from myself.
Today I know the truth and celebrate it every moment of every day. I am a woman of worth. A woman worthy of loving herself for all she’s worth, with all she’s got. In loving myself, no matter my condition, I have given myself the gift I’ve always searched for, unconditional love.
changedforever:
You are ADDICTED to him. It has to do with the love/chemicals/pheromones/bonding, etc. Also, below is a link I have put here before regarding rats and how, once we have the “dream” or the “reward” we keep going back for more, long after the dream is gone and there are NO REWARDS AT ALL. Oxdrover likened the addiction in one of her posts to a heroin addict.
http://narc-attack.blogspot.com/2008/03/rat-game.html
We have all experienced the same thing. I still miss the “good” of my S, but he wasn’t really good; it was all a mirage, an illusion, a great big magic show that went poof. (Oh by the way, he did love magic shows!)
I felt/feel the same way as you because there is no healing/talking with them, no understanding, no sympathy or kindness, seemingly no resolution. We just have to figure out the puzzle on our own and move on, and it feels like unfinished business. But it IS finished. When they are finished with you, they throw you away AND NEVER THINK OF YOU AGAIN. That is…unless or until a “need” arises. Then you would again become a disposable object for them to toy with.
It is good that you have forgiven him, but that doesn’t mean you want to be with him. Forgiving him lets YOU heal. What you are going through is natural, I think it goes in cycles…the healing, the NC, and the ruminating…
Tomorrow will be a better day. Buy yourself a spring flower basket for good cheer. ;>)
Dear changedforever – Dont panic – there is nothing wrong with you – everything you are going through is absolutely normal in the aftermath of having an encounter with someone with Personality Disorder. Mourning the loss of a relationship with someone with PD is an entirely different experience to that of a ‘normal’ relationship. Obsessing and thinking about them is all part of the addiction that they set up to get you to focus on them. Unfortunately this will continue for some while and it did for me. But it does fade. Read through contributors experiences and suggestions here and be reassured that it is an uncomfortable and distressing phase – but it will pass.
They leave you with a range of strong emotions because you can never get to the bottom of what they did and as my ex did a runner, I wasnt ever going to get normal resolution. No contact is really important, because you have to step out of their game to stop the effects of what they do.
Sometimes I feel that I will not get enough energy to climb this mountain, reach the top and break free of this nightmare. I’m really struggling to reach that top, it still so distant to me. I’m afraid to fall down.
changedforever
“Sometimes I feel that I will not get enough energy to climb this mountain, reach the top and break free of this nightmare. I’m really struggling to reach that top, it still so distant to me. I’m afraid to fall down.”
You will get there. You will also backslide along the way. That’s part of mountain-climbing. The difference this time for me from all the other times in the past I tried to break the unholy hold or connection or whatever it was is that I finally know about personality disorders, about N’ism and S’paths.
That knowledge? That’s the rope — one end tied to you, the other tied to the highest peak. That rope keeps you from falling all the way down, if you let it. If you keep reminding yourself it is there, that NC is the only way to safety, that they do not FEEL anything – just enjoy the game of siphoning off your heart, that they can only get better (if they even can) on their own and you cannot fix them. Nor should you want to try.
Knowledge is the one tool that will eventually help us all get to the top. But some days will be harder than others. When that happens, come here. Read everything you can get your eyes on. Think back to the bad things he did to you in the name of “love.”
Changedforever,
Sometimes I felt like I was in some sort of “netherword” or “OZ” or some place that reality kept changing…or that I was the only one in the world that could “see” what was happening. I got to the point sometimes that I wondered if I was psychotic and out of touch with reality–and I know that others who weren’t involved thought I was CRAZY===even my therapist thought that I might be a paranoid nut case the first time I went to him and told this convoluted “they’re all out to kill me” story–I had to actually take in court papers and a witness to tell him that I was NOT DELUSIONAL. I can laugh about that now, but I can only imagine what was going through his head when he spent the first two hours listening to me tell about my “trip to Oz”
Thank God the Sheriff believed me though! Thank God one of my sons did. Thank God a couple of my friends did.
Holding on to the ROPE–the knowledge that they are EVIL–will keep you safe. Believe only THAT, and just like the “Siren Song” you must plug your ears and NOT LISTEN TO IT, you must tie yourself to the rope and not let the “song” that he sings to you lure you to your death! Because even if they don’t physically kill you,, they kill your soul.
I know all this sounds rather “dramatic” but I have a feeling you get what I am saying! This isn’t like a normal break up or divorce, it is like something out of a night mare!
Hang on and you will survive and get to the top. Even if you fall you won’t go all the way to the bottom as long as you DON’T LISTEN TO THE ‘SIREN SONG’ he sings.
God bless.
changedforever,
First, congratulations for being NC for 7 months. You are doing well. I obessed 24/7 about BM for at least a year and a half. Now, I don’t really think about him. I think about LoveFraud and the readers and I think about what I have learned but I never think about missing him or why did he do that or wanting to see him. All of that is completely gone.
Now, he was just a learning lab where I learned some enormous lessons. He was my textbook psycho. I have a goal to help Victims of Domestic Violence. Without this experience, I don’t think I would be able to do that. I still need to go back to school and get the officail training but I wonder… what will they teach me? I wonder.
Changedforever. Yes, this bit is hard, but you will climb the mountain. Having discovered I had breast cancer on the tail of the trauma of the exN, feeling absolutely exhausted, but I got through that double whammy too. That is the thing about abuse, it weakens us physically and mentally. But as OxDrover says, the pain does pass and you will recoup your energy. Six months ago there wasnt a moment when he didnt occupy my head. Now I find that I am thinking about him minimally, he is fading into the background – ONLY – because I have kept NO CONTACT – which is crucial to stopping the opportunity of further abuse and manipulation and mind control etc.
I really now feel that I am on the tail end of the experience with him, although six months ago I was in the thick of it like you – feeling like it was an never ending nightmare. But as others have said – There IS an end to it, and life heals. Thank goodness it is spring!
I have been on information overload but in a good way. Part of the overwhelmed sensation from yesterday came from the fact that I had learned and been forced to confront so much since Friday. Then I stumbled across this site and while at work and even when I get home I read, read and read some more. Knowledge is power, I now have no illusions about what I am facing even when he is nice and pleasant as he was last night and this morning. Maybe what you can do is when you feel your thoughts drifting towards your ex, if you are able, come to this website and read the blogs and other things. D o a google search for sociopath or psychopath. And one other thing that works for me, count your blessings. Literally. Think about and do a mental list of all the good and posititive things in your life. And come here and talk to these good folks. I am a newbie here but I have felt such support and love from people who I know fully get me.
Congratulations, Livinglovingme, you are now on the road to healing, KNOWLEDGE IS POWER….and strength, and so many tools in your “survival kit”
Stress overload is, I think, a common thread to us all at one point or another–the more we discover the more betrayed we feel, and sometimes what we first discover is only the tip of the ice berg.
Yes, come here when you are feeling down! And whatever you do, realize that anything he says is a LIE, even if he says the “moon is round, the sun comes up in the east” it is still a LIE because in some way he is using that to try to deceive you. Sometimes they will tell a small truth to cover up a BIG lie. (head shaking here and big sigh)
Have a good day!
Last night was the worst. I am so tired all the time, just drained. I have to come home and take care of the baby who has gone from sleeping 4-5 hours at a stretch back to sleeping maybe 2. It ias about all I can do to stand upright. He was out again last night until midnight. At 4 am I was up throwing up, well it was dry heaves since I hadnt eated since early yesterday. I woke him up tell him he had to take the baby and that I was just exhausted. He was amd that I woke him up and told me it is as usual all about me. I managed to make it to work this morning. I was crying so hard in the shower I caould hardly even stand. Much more of this is going to kill me. I thought this morning, what would be the harm if I died? The baby wouldnt remember me anyway, I only have a few friends and my oldest son would go live with my best girlfriend and her husband. I just want to sleep and never wake up. I just cant take much more of this. Everytime I think it is just about as bad as it can get it gets worse. I have lost so much weight over the last month and still cant bring myself to eat more than maybe once a day. The more of the truth I see he less I am able to deal with it. I am losing my mind