By OxDrover
I remember when I was a little kid, driving with my parents, sitting in the back seat sans seatbelt (there were no such things in those days) and leaning over the front seat, repeatedly asking my parents, “Are we there yet?” or “How long til we get there?”
Of course there had been no reasonable way for my parents to convey to me “how long” since I didn’t tell time when I was four, so there was no use saying “one hour” because I wouldn’t be able to comprehend what an “hour” was. Time is sort of fluid anyway, relative to what is going on. If you are bored, an hour is forever. If you are interested in something, an hour is very short. To a bored child in the back seat of a car, the trip seems to take forever with no end in sight. The trip is a price to be paid for arriving at the destination.
When I started the journey toward Healing from my prior experiences with the psychopaths in my life and family, I was in pain. I wanted the journey to be over; I wanted to get to being healed quickly. The journey itself didn’t interest me any more than the passing countryside had interested me when I was riding in the back seat of my parents’ car. I was tired of that trip before it even started. I wanted to be there!
Unlike the smooth ride in the backseat of my parents’ car, which required no effort on my part, this journey to Healing required me to steer and power the vehicle. I had to make sure I didn’t run out of fuel, and that the equipment was in order. Some days my tires went flat and I had to get out and fix them. Other days my emotional radiator boiled over and I sat feeling helpless on the side of the road with smoke boiling out from under my hood. Some days I was simply out of gas with no refueling station anywhere in sight as far as the eye could see.
The road to Healing was a terrible road, with huge potholes that seemed to appear out of nowhere, and sometimes my wheels would hit these potholes. My tires would sink to the axle and I would have to get out and dig and dig until I could get enough dirt pushed under them to get the car out. Other times, the road would be slimed with mud and I would skid into the ditches of despair.
From time to time I would see someone else along the road, and occasionally someone would come along when I needed help the most and offer me a very welcome hand.
I became so tired from this journey that I just wondered if I would ever get there. What I really wanted was someone to come along and offer me a magic carpet so I could just fly over all this terrible barren terrain and I could just get there to Healing!
Often times the signposts along the road were unclear and I wasn’t even sure I was even on the right road. Other times, some prankster must have turned the signs around because I would take a turn, certain I was reading the sign correctly, and wind up down a dead end trail with barely enough room to turn my vehicle around. At times like these I felt so utterly alone and stupid for not being more careful and allowing myself to get off the correct road.
One day when I felt that I just couldn’t go on any longer, that it was too much work to keep my old vehicle going with broken springs that seemed to make each rut, each pot hole, and each rock in the road jar my back teeth loose, I discovered I was no longer on the road alone. I looked around me and I saw other people on the road. Where had they come from? Had they been there before and I was too self absorbed, too weighted down with my own woes, to even notice them? I also noticed that some of these people were riding bicycles, some were on scooters, some were walking. Some of the others on the road were on crutches, or in wheel chairs, and some of these people were even crawling.
I looked around at these people and then back at my old vehicle with its rusting fenders, threadbare tires and leaking radiator, but I realized that it was not so “bad” after all. It might not have been a Cadillac, but I wasn’t having to walk or crawl. I realized there were others who were less fortunate than me. I felt shame in myself for being so self absorbed, for not realizing that I didn’t have it “so bad” after all. I recited the old saying about, “I cried because I had no shoes, until I saw a man who had no feet.” I thanked God for my old vehicle.
As I restarted my journey I became acquainted with some of my fellow travelers, and we shared our stories, our pains, and our insights. When we would come to a crossroads that seemed confusing, we would help each other, and if one fell down, the others reached out to him to help him up. Having company on the journey made it seem less lonely. Though there was no magic carpet there to whisk me away to the destination of Healing, it was comforting to have company.
Sometimes I would pause and rest a while with a fellow traveler. As we traveled down the road we would meet new travelers, freshly injured, also seeking Healing. Those of us on the road would call to them to join us in the journey, comforting and supporting each other on the way. Sometimes the newly injured would join us, but other times, those bleeding injured souls would wander off the road or fall in to the abyss and no matter how we would call to them, they would not answer and sorrowfully, we would have to move on down the road toward Healing without them.
No matter how far I traveled it never seemed I was any nearer to Healing than before. As I traveled the road, it became smoother and I was becoming stronger from my struggles to climb the hills, cover the hurdles, get out of the pot holes, but I never saw a sign that said “how long ’til we get there.” I never saw a sign that said, “Healing 50 miles.” I began to wonder if I would ever arrive at Healing. I even asked some of my fellow travelers, “Are we there yet? How long ’til we get there?” No one could answer me. No one could tell me “how long before we get there?”
As I traveled and the road became smoother, and there were even stretches of pavement that I could roll across without the jarring rocks and ruts, and I began to enjoy the journey. I would gaze off into the distance and see mountains and vistas of incredible beauty that filled my heart with joy just to behold. I had passed out of the terrible salt flats of hell and reached a place where there was beauty and joy, and the road was smoother. Even my old vehicle started to run better and give me less trouble, and I found refueling stations on a regular basis and quit forgetting to check the oil and tire pressure, so I didn’t have flats and other problems so often any more.
Along the road I had also seen some changes and growth in my traveling partners. They were becoming stronger and starting to sing as they walked or rode along. Even some of those in wheel chairs were beginning to walk again, and some that had used crutches had thrown them away and were walking straight and strong. It made me happy to see my new friends recovering and getting better and stronger; it made me feel good to feel stronger myself.
At times my new friends and I would talk about our former lives before we started on the Healing road, and sometimes we even missed some of those people we had had to leave behind. Unkind people who had wounded us, yet we loved and missed, but even those memories of our former lives started to change as we sang along the road toward Healing. We started to make new plans and put together new lives.
I would reach milestones from time to time, the milestone of setting boundaries, another one for forgiveness and a milestone for honesty. As I passed each milestone I felt renewed strength and stamina, but I wondered, “When will I get to Healing? When will I be there?”
Then I came to a milestone that said, “Healing is a journey, not a destination.” I realized that there was no end to the Healing Road; it would go on for the rest of my life. It isn’t about getting to some place and being there; it is about enjoying the journey. It is about growth and learning and companionship with others on the same road. It is about comforting others who have fallen, as there were those that comforted you when you fell. It is the shared experiences of seeing the sun shining on the distant mountains, or reassuring each other during a storm. Healing is about life—living life, experiencing life, and sharing life.
Panther, it’s very unlikely that he will off himself.
Spaths want us to take responsibility for them. So he is putting the responsibility of keeping him alive, on you. It’s that simple.
What a parasite. Maybe he wasn’t breast fed enough.
Wow, I’m so glad you can feel that strongly about it.
You know, when the person you so dearly loved with all your heart threatens to off themselves, no matter how much they’ve hurt you and how much you fantasize about punching their face in, there’s still this part that wouldn’t really want them dead. That’s what’s so hard about it. Yeah, he’s putting that responsibility on me. I know it. I don’t really think he will either, but I keep thinking that on the off chance that he does….I don’t even want to go there.
These are his exact words: “You will end up killing me. You will make me kill myself.”
It’s part of an email telling me that if I don’t break up with him nicely and call him an angel, then I am forcing him to keep contacting me.
Actually, he wasn’t breast fed at all.
And I know people in here are wondering why I haven’t deleted that email account yet. Well I needed to keep it long enough to forward his mails to a cyber-detective, which I finally was able to do today. Now I have to transfer all my contacts to a new address book and forward all important mails in my inbox to my new account. This is a pain in the booty! In the meantime, I am blocking an email account of his on average 3 times per day, and he just keeps making new email addresses. Today I got a ring on my doorbell, and I wasn’t expecting anyone. I don’t have a peek hole on my apartment door and I was too afraid to open it just to check.
This is freaking ridiculous.
Panther,
spaths quite commonly threaten suicide, but rarely commit suicide. Sometimes they do though. I would hate for you to feel bad about it. It has nothing to do with you. You don’t even really exist as a person in his mind. You are just something to manipulate as a source of drama. It’s all about him.
As a normal human, you would naturally feel empathy for anyone whose life is so unbearable that they would off themselves. In some ways, I feel empathy for my spath and my spath mom, knowing that their lives are so unbearable as drama-addicted spaths. BUT THAT DOESN’T MAKE IT MY RESPONSIBILITY.
This is the crux of the matter. As empaths, we have been drawn in and duped by the pity ploy, over and over again. Spaths use the pity ploy liberally. Our overdeveloped sense of responsibility is a form of narcissism, that’s why it’s a hook they use to catch us. Your job is to develop the humility to understand that you cannot save him. It’s not your job. Your job is you.
They are three-trick ponies: Charm, Pity and Rage. The goal is simply to get a reaction. The only time that spaths kill themselves is when they feel they have used all their charm, pity and rage cards and are powerless to affect anyone anymore. Then they pull the suicide card because they can imagine how dramatic their deaths and subsequent funerals will be.
panther i am with sky on this one – it is the oldest manipulation in the book, the pity ploy.
when spaths threaten suicide they are hooking into our compassion, and trying to get us to do what they want.
i know someone whose husband did kill himself. he manipulated her to the very end, blamed her for it and landed her in a mess with his family at the end of it all. it is still not her ‘fault’ and it never will be. she is a kind and caring woman who was tortured and jerked around mercilessly.
ignoring a spath only takes away their supply, it doesn’t force them to kill themselves. that’s on them, and on no one else. again, he’s a moron.
panther – will be in touch soon.
Okay.
I just rambled my brains off in another post, so I’m trying to lay off the keyboard and get back to Thor 🙂
I actually agree with you both that it’s a trick. It’s just that I think (perhaps he tricked me into thinking this though) that he has it in him to actually go through with it. It’s like the absolute last card he can pull at the moment.
I disagree with you Sky that compassion is narcissistic. I think hero-syndrome is narcissistic, yeah, but compassion isn’t. I don’t actually have this idea that I can save him as though I’m carrying the magical antidote to his sickness. I am thinking in a literal cause and effect way here. I ignore him = he kills himself. Hmm, really? Well, if he does, that’s not good. Hmm. Yet, what can I do? One/joy, you’re right. Even if he actually goes through with it, it’s not my fault.
panther – the paradigm is NOT ‘I ignore him = he kills himself ‘, it is ‘i can’t control anyone = i kill myself.’.
shift it in your thinking. he’s a moron. (nope, never tire of saying that. 😉 )
Panther,
Compassion is certainly not narcissistic. I said, “an overdeveloped sense of responsibility, is narcissism.”
Narcissism is the perspective that the world revolves around you and everything you do. It is the idea that you are in control. When we feel that we can “control” anyone, that is narcissism. The spath who threatens to commit suicide is “hooking into” that sense of narcissism. Spaths don’t intellectually do this, it’s more intuitive for them. He is saying, “Your action or reaction to me, will determine the outcome. My own behavior is not my responsibility, it is yours.” As empathetic human beings we WANT to respond compassionately, but this isn’t compassion, because in the long run it is enabling his addiction to manipulating people.
Panther-when I was 16 my first love told me if I broke up with him he would kill himself. I thought there was a good chance he would. I loved him dearly and was terrified to break up with him….I did and he didn’t. That was when my family of origin was still strong so I had the strength to break up with him. 20 some years later we spoke, I got to clear my concience and “help” him the way my heart was crying to help him then.
Panther, the advice you got from Sky and One is 100% right on! The last card they have to play is “do what I want or I will kill myself and it will be your fault” BUT, YOU HAVE THE ULTIMATE TRUMP CARD and that is that you KNOW IT IS NOT **NOT*** your fault, and NOT your responsibility….so you CAN control your own attitude….he has the choice to kill himself if he wants to, but if HE chooses that option, it is “unfortunate” but not your responsibility. SO THINK OF IT THAT WAY and you will TRUMP his “ace.”