By Joyce Alexander, RNP (retired)
Sometimes my parrot will come up with a sound or a word and we will wonder “where in the heck did he come up with that!?”
We noticed a few years ago that he would make a “Whooooosh” sound when anyone opened the door either to go in or out. He did it consistently, so we knew he had associated the door opening with the sound, but we couldn’t figure out who would make that sound often enough that he had picked it up. Then one day my husband came in the house and it was very hot outside and when he came in he made that “Whoooosh” sound as he hit the air conditioned inside!
My son and I went, “Whoopee! We know where he got it now!”
It takes endless repetitions of a word or sound for a parrot to pick it up, and my husband must have done this hundreds of times before the bird picked it up. The bird is way more sensitive to the sounds in his environment than we are. We tend to “tune out” the “background” sounds that are not important to us so we can concentrate more on those sounds that actually “mean something.” Not that our ears can’t “hear” that sound, it is just that our brains tune it out and assign no importance to it.
I think sometimes people (myself included) do the same thing with situations and associations. We tune out as unimportant things that happen every day—things that we decide are not important to our world and we don’t want to concentrate on them. I have osteoarthritis just from being over 65 and having used and abused my bones and joints in the past, so I have a sort of “background” pain in most or all of my joints. I try to “tune this out” and usually succeed, because if I concentrated on this background pain, I would not be able to think about anything else.
Emotional pain
It seems to me that I have done the same thing with emotional background pain as well in my associations with dysfunctional or disordered people. The other person would make some “snarky” or disrespectful comment to me, and it would hurt just a bit, but I would push it to the background noise of my life and not concentrate on it. Just as my son and I didn’t “hear” my husband’s noises when he came into the house from outside because it wasn’t important, didn’t mean they weren’t “there.”
Pushing our emotions, our pains, into the background helps us to keep ourselves from being overwhelmed by the vast number of little pains and injuries. It numbs us to those in our everyday life so we can keep on functioning and without succumbing to the overwhelming pain. Sometimes we get a huge emotional injury and we “feel it” intensely, but even then we can put the residual pain into the background of our everyday existence.
Noticing and responding to every little slight in life isn’t the point of this, because if we did, we wouldn’t be able to function. Taking to heart and internalizing every snide remark made by every salesclerk isn’t necessary, but to “notice” and “hear” the slings and arrows of a particular relationship is another matter entirely. If we are continuing to have to “tune out” painful things from a person or a relationship, the pain will build up until there is a cacophonous level of emotional pain in the background of that relationship.
It takes a tremendous amount of energy to keep that level of background pain under control—energy that could better be put to use in establishing boundaries.
It took my parrot’s continual “Whooshing” to draw attention to one of the sounds in the background of my environment. It took tremendous pain to draw attention to the pain that had accumulated as a background noise in my relationship with my son and other family members. I had “eyes and did not see, and I had ears and did not hear,” as Jesus said about the Pharisees. It was unpleasant for me to realize that our relationships were not healthy, because in realizing that they were not healthy, I would be required to do one of two things, neither of which I wanted to do. I could continue to endure this continuing assault on myself, or I would be required to act.
Confrontation
Confronting someone you love with the fact that they have been causing you tremendous emotional pain is a scary prospect. How will they respond? Will they stop doing what they have been doing and try to salve your wounds? Will they stop treating you badly? What if you confront them and they become angry? What if they leave you? What if they punish you? All those are questions that produce great anxiety. Confrontation is risky behavior.
Confronting dysfunctional people is especially risky. It is especially painful because they do not receive your confrontation well, but instead project the problem back on your shoulders. They will tell you that you are the problem. The pain becomes greater.
Becoming aware of the background noise in our lives of abuse and dysfunctional relationships is only the first step in a painful process. Taking action is the next step. If the person in the relationship is not dysfunctional or disordered, they will work with you. If they are unwilling to do so, you can’t make them do so, and so the next decision is to continue the relationship as is, or to terminate it.
Awareness if the first and most painful step, but it leads to a life free of the pain of a dysfunctional relationship continually assaulting our psyches.
Joyce ~ What an interesting post ~ Background Noise. Last week I had started jotting down little bits of oddities that my ex had said during our marriage which I had pushed into the background of my mind. Bits of memories that I had forgotten about but now seem to be moving to the forefront of my mind ~ especially early morning when I am getting ready for work.
I quickly had filled two full pages of “background noise” all just a line or two of each memory ~ and the list is growing. It actually surprised me because I have struggled to figure out what ONE thing had gone wrong with him and after seeing the length of my list I realized there wasn’t any one, two or three things…..there was a WHOLE ENTIRE person who was disordered from the start but I had on such blinders that I pushed each oddity into background noise.
I can’t figure out for the life of me why I couldn’t recognize it? Was I that desperate to find a mate and start a family? I don’t think so. I was well into my 20s when I married and had dated several men (most of them disordered as well, I am sure!) Perhaps he seemed the most stable of the disordered and the most loving? (Now I realize he mirrored my qualities).
As I was driving to work this morning it finally hit me how much better off both financially and mentally I am without this man.
I have my own career, my own money, money I am just starting to set aside as a nest egg; but none the less; MY MONEY for ME!!!
I even chuckled to myself thinking about all the trappings of my married life which seemed so grand at the time but had all been blown away by a gambling addiction and the grandiosity of living large. Of course there were plenty of travel and dining perks; but the reality is none that left me in as good as position as I am today.
In a way I think I am glad my background noise stayed where it did. My children are grown and out on their own and I know there would have been a custody fight and a nasty divorce if I had confronted the ex during their adolescence. Somewhere in the background I always knew he could be vicious.
I finally feel like a much stronger version of the young girl I used to be. Still loving and caring but much more aware of her surroundings and the noise that looms in the background which is really the rattle of a snake and not to be ignored.
Donna, Thank you…yes, the awareness of the background noise of our relationshits (I love Henry for coming up with that word! LOL) just becomes something we don’t even hear any more but it can build up that is for sure.
I actually at one time thought I had a wonderful relationship with my egg donor. I really did…but then, like you when I started to become aware of the “back ground noise” because of the BIG injury, I realized there was a LONG LIST of little slings and pricks that I had never addressed…little slights, little nasties, but I pushed them into the back ground because confronting them would have been too painful.
I’m sorry you had to wait until your kids were grown to get out but I understand that entirely. Sometimes you have to pick your fights and the timing of your fights.
Being FREE of the background noise is sort of nice….makes the music more clear!
Joyce/Oxy ~ I’m a firm believer that “everything happens for a reason” ~ even though some of it is extremely painful. In my case I think I figured it out later instead of sooner because I don’t think I would have been able to handle the reality/pain any sooner.
Even my relationship with my children. I always thought they had a tighter bond to their father but after the masked dropped and he has pulled a few shenanigans on them; it seems our bond is tighter.
How sad that it had to be your son and egg donor for you; but if it is any consolation maybe yours happened so that you could be a strong guidance to the rest of us?
I just love LF. Without it I sure as heck wouldn’t have started to mend as quickly as I have and each time I read a post I feel like someone has plucked it from my own life experience!
And I do love the words used here ~ I was definitely in a RELATIONSHITTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT!!!!! LOL!!!!!!!!!!
Donna dixon, I wish I could take credit for that word, but Hens/Henry came up with it and I think it is marvelous! LOL Yea the Love Fraud vocabulary is cute!
Well I’ve encountered a nest of psychopaths and most of them were in my family! Both sides and in the middle, but at the same time, I have survived and that is more than some people have done. Laci Petersen and lots of other women have died because they didn’t know what a psychopath was. I didn’t know either but I can usually spot them now if I’m around them much.
Yea, I over estimated my son D’s connections to some “close long time family friends” who had almost become family. In fact, the man of the couple was listed as a survivor on my husband’s funeral program as a “son of the heart.” My husband never knew what they both were (the couple) and it was only a while after his death that I was able to put them out of my life completely. I hesitated for several years because I thought my son D was more attached to them than he was. Now, if anything, he wants less to do with them than I do and I am totally NC. LOL He won’t even go where he thinks they might one or the other show up.
The collateral damage that the psychopaths can do can be terrible. People we love love the psychopath and when we confront the psychopath it can impact the other collateral relationships because those people don’t “see” the truth. I had actually caught the woman of this couple from stealing from me, nothing big but NO DOUBT ABOUT IT AT ALL, THEFT…that was before my husband died and he cared so much about this couple that telling him she was a thief was like trying to convince him his mother was a whore. LOL We never did resolve that because he died before we could do so.
I’m glad that your children are starting to see what their father is, and that will in the end be self confirming as he continues to try to pull shiat on them…and he will, I have little doubt about that. LOL
Thanks, Oxy!! I’m just GRATEFUL every day of my life that me and my kids didn’t end up like Laci Peterson!! Scares the crap out of me when I think of the flip side!!!! Being SLIMED but STILL ALIVE isn’t so bad!!!!
The background noise.. Wow I like that. I just got jr down and am so happy I read this article.
I realized after my grandmothers funeral this past week that I have been living my entire life with background noise as loud as a concert. IDE think that was funny if it weren’t so damn true. My family is small but so screwed up. It was amazing for me to see the masks, manipulations, greed and dysfunction of my whole little family. It was horrible and very, very, sad.
I saw and just “went numb to the noise”..
Since I’ve been back it seems like everything that could possibly go wrong has..I’ve gotten sick, dryer broke, lost $1400.. Just all types of bad crap keeps happening. To top it off I managed to attract a person into my life that’s going to be very hard to get rid of…RED FLAGS everywhere and inconsistencies, I dont know how I’ll be able to get rid of him while being polite…
I’m so tired and my lungs are on fire. I have 8 cigarettes left and then I’m done!! I’m just feeling so sad right now.. Really depressed but I can’t even cry. I’m exhausted.. I don’t know when all this crap is going to end but it honestly needs to soon. No matter how hard I try I’m not making any headway. It’s more like 1 step forward 10 steps back. Man something really needs to give..
Dear Coping,
You said “I dont know how I’ll be able to get rid of him while being polite””
I say SO WHO SAID YOU HAVE TO BE POLITE….say to him “Joe, this isn’t working for me” if he asks what or why say “It just isn’t working” then RINSE AND REPEAT until he leaves….you are NOT REQUIRED TO BE “POLITE” TO SOMEONE WHO IS BEING PUSHY or who is in your life and you don’t want them there.
GET RID OF HIM! If you see any red flag. RUN DO NOT WALK AWAY FROM HIM…..”this just isn’t working” rinse and repeat.
I’m sorry to hear about your grandmother’s death, and the other things going on in your life right now..when it rains it pours.
I quit smoking too and so I know how you feel about it. Each time I “tried” to quit I knew I would cheat, and so I did…but this last time a couple of years ago I decided I WOULD QUIT…as Yoda says “there is no try, there is just DO. So I DID and I am, and I can’t even remember how long it has been over 2 years I know and I’m proud to say NO ONE….because I know if I ever do one that’s it. So I’ll be your “quitting buddy” and any time you need encouragement let me know!
That back ground noise can be kind of loud and we don’t even realize it because the volume gets turned up slowly. We just get used to it and tune it out. Becoming aware of that is a good thing and I know that you and the little one will do just fine. You are learning fast and growing, just as the little one is. (((hugs))) Hang in there.
I wish I could walk from my malignant narcissit – he is my brother and the trustee of the estate my father left me – don’t know what dad was thinking.
I finally took him to court and as he is “defending the estate” I get to pay his lawyers bills as well – it is costing me ~ $40K just to have a bank trustee appointed so that I may curb his abuses.
He is really enjoying running up the legal bill!!
This is my future this maniac is frittering away – you would not believe the damage he has already caused
He earns a living selling “rent to own” properties to immigrants, etc who he then fleeces.
He is particularly repugnant in that he encourages them to spend their money to fix the homes up (he knows they will never buy them) and then evicts them for some small infraction like a late payment
I saw a few of these properties and it is really tragic to learn what a slumlord he is and how poverty stricken his victims are already – at least the real estate board is after him now
where do these people come from
Great post, Oxy!!
I ignored the background noise, intuition & gut instincts that poured on me when I endured the ex spath, but now? Now that IT’s out of my life I hear those background noises and relive them loud and clear.
I do believe that everything happens for a reason too, so this serves a purpose. It reminds me of the importance of NOT ignoring the background noise and the necessity to follow your gut.
Thank you for an enlightening read. 🙂
Coping,
if you are afraid of angering him, you could try using Gray Rock on him. Be so boring he can’t stand it. Don’t give him any drama. If he’s a spath, he’ll run.