At 9:12 am on May 21, 2003, the only peace I knew was the unsettling desire to die, the constant throbbing of the voice screaming at me to let go, give in, give up, give over my life to the darkness that consumed me. I wanted to end it all. To have the turmoil and pain and fear of living with an abuser die with me.
At 9:13 am on May 21, 2003, everything changed. Everything shifted and my world as I knew it ended. A police car drove up and I stood watching as two officers stepped from the car.
At 9:14 am I followed the officers into the room where my abuser lay sleeping and watched them arrest him.
They took him away and I sat in a chair in a room I did not recognize, captive in a body I could not feel. I was catatonic. Frightened. Terrified. I had 72 cents in my pocket, a few clothes and my dog, Ellie, who had journeyed through that four year, nine month voyage through hell beside me. She was my ballast but with his arrest, I was cast adrift. I clung to her fur, cried into her shoulders but still fear eroded my being, clawed at my heart, tore my world apart.
In my fear that this horror that I was enduring would be the rest of my life, I didn’t know where I’d find myself. I didn’t know where I’d come ashore. I only knew, I had run out of options. Run out of running away, of hiding, of being frightened and alone.
I called my sister and she and her husband came to get me. We drove the hour from the small town where I had been hiding out with my abuser for 4 months, into Vancouver. They didn’t ask me questions. They didn’t prod and poke. They didn’t dig into where I’d been nor share their fear and anger. They let me sit in silence in the back seat of their car and I was grateful.
My abuser was gone but still I felt the tendrils of his control lapping at the shores of my consciousness. I felt the fear of his absence from my life ripping at the delicate thought of freedom seeping into my mind. The enticement of peace from his abuse and anger seepped quietly into a tiny corner of my heart and began to take up residence.
It was the first peace I had known for months, years even. The first sense of peace I’d let in since meeting the man who’d promised to love me ’til death do us part, and then set about making the death part come true, sooner rather than later.
And in that moment of peace, sitting in the back seat of my sister’s car, Ellie beside me, I watched the countryside roll by and wondered, where had I gone?
It would be many months before I found an answer I could live with, but in the intervening weeks, I would dig deep into my psyche to uncover the truth about what had happened to me. In my digging, I would discover there was one choice I could make, every moment of every day — to be or not to be filled with peace — peace of mind, a peaceful heart, to claim a piece of calmness within my day.
Peace didn’t come cheap. It came with great effort. With a constant reminder of the question, “What do I want to create? Harmony or discord?” “Is what I am doing creating more harmony in my life? Or less?”
And when the answer was, ‘less’, I would ask myself, “What can I do to restore peace of mind, right now, in this moment? What am I willing to do to have more of what I want in my life?”
He was arrested in May. By July I was working, rebuilding my life. I had one focus and that was to heal myself so that I could help my daughters heal. And constantly I reminded myself, my peace of mind comes when I know that what I am doing creates more of what I want in my life and less of what I don’t.
And peace came. It drifted into my being like fog rising from the ocean shores upon which I walked at night with Ellie. It came. Dressed up in a gossamer gown of morning dew resting upon the delicate petals of the flowers strewn across the garden in a joyful disarray of colour. It seeped in, shrouded in the night falling sweetly upon the end of day. Peace came and I became filled with peace of mind.
And then, the phone call arrived. It was a hot summer’s morning in August. I was getting ready to walk to the Seabus that would carry me across the bay to the downtown core. I was getting ready and peace of mind slept unaware of the moment about to arrive. The phone rang. I answered it and listened to the disturbing words of a police officer.
“Conrad has escaped from jail. We don’t know where he is but we assume he’ll come looking for you… Just thought we should warn you.”
And in one moment, my peace of mind evaporated. My sense of well-being vanished.
I started to shake. To cry. To be consumed with the fiery fringe of fear lapping at my heart, sending its beat into erratic rhythm.
My mind began to race. What if… no way… but then he could…
I shut the windows. Locked the door. And still I feared.
I wanted out. I didn’t want to let go of my peace of mind.
I took a breath. Refused to be scared. I got Ellie’s leash and called her to my side. “Let’s go for a walk,” I said.
The thought of the great outdoors enticed her. She didn’t care about my peace of mind. She just wanted to go for a walk.
And so we walked. Out the front door, through the gate, down the street. A left and then a right, across the avenue, along the trail leading into the woods. My sanctuary. My respite. My peaceful place.
I took a step into the forest’s tranquil embrace. A leaf rustled on the ground. A twig snapped.
Fear erupted. Peace escaped.
Suddenly, behind every branch, he lurked. Every rustle of leaf was his footstep. Every step took me closer to a deadly encounter.
I lasted less than two minutes in the woods before I bolted.
Peace was no longer possible. Terror reigned.
I raced down the street, back towards my sister’s home where I was living. I raced with Ellie loping beside me. It’s a game, her upturned face seemed to say. Can we play?
No, I cried. No time to play. We’ve got to get home. Home to the safety of a locked door, drawn blinds, darkness.
And in the comfort of my room, lying on my bed, Ellie watching me from the floor beside me, I cried and I cried.
How dare he steal my peace of mind. How dare he erode my tranquility.
“He doesn’t have to,” a voice somewhere in the darkness of my mind whispered. “You don’t have to let him in.”
“It’s not my choice,” I cried.
“You always have a choice,” the voice admonished.
I took a breath. A choice? A peaceful choice? The voice was right. I always have a choice.
To live in fear or peace?
Which would I choose?
There is a story of a First Nations elder who tells his grandson about the two wolves that live within each of us. One is black. One is white, he tells his grandson. And always, they are fighting to gain control of our being.
“Which one wins?” the grandson asks.
“Whichever one you feed,” replies the elder.
I fed the black wolf that day. I fed it my hard won peace of mind, my sense of well-being, my comfort. I fed what I had worked so hard to achieve and still it was hungry. It wanted more.
I had so little to give. I could not give it what I cherished most.
I took a breath and let my breath feed oxygen to the white wolf where it sat waiting at the doorway to my mind. With each breath I stoked the fires of my passion to live with peace of mind residing deep within me, a calm, clear lake of tranquility resting at my core.
I took a breath and chose to let go of fear and step into courage. I chose to let courage drive fear out, as I drove clear of the darkness.
I claimed my peace of mind and stepped out into the sunshine of the day, confident in my choice to live fearlessly in the rapture of now. I took a breath and slid effortlessly into the grace of being free to choose more of what I want of my life, letting go of what no longer serves me.
The question is: Which wolf will you feed?
Its been a month since I spoke to my Spath.
In that month I have been going over this site reading other peoples stories and drawing strength and hope from them.
When I found this site I was so confused and suffering from the shock of what I had been through with that man. I could not understand how a man could be so loving one minute and so cruel the next. I was swimming in a sea of lies, cheating, manipulation, abuse, pain and overall confusion. I felt like he had me over a barrel and my happiness was tied up in having this man and all the bad stuff that came with him in my life. When he was good he was so so good but when he was bad he was evil. He called me fat, unlovable, disgusting yet his love was like a poison I was addicted to.
Now I’m beginning to see that there might be life after the spath. Its been a month, of NC I still miss his loving persona and I battle the urge to pick up the phone and call but Im determined to stay strong. Surely there has got to be a better kind of love waiting for me out there.
Reading these posts keeps me strong.
Rache,
Stay strong! Remember that the “loving persona” is only an act to keep you there for more abuse.
You deserve to be treated with love and respect ALWAYS … not just when it’s convenient for him.
My Spath called me fat, unlovable, and denied me tenderness and intimacy for many years. It was extremely painful and it brought my self esteem down to nothing.
I shouldn’t have let him do that to me, but I was in love with his charisma and, as you said “When he was good he was so so good”. The thing is … it all of the goodness never makes up for all of the evil.
I didn’t feel strong and determined when I left my Spath. On the day I said goodbye, a big part of me still hoped that he would reach out and give me some sign that he cared about me. That sign didn’t come and it was devastating.
Looking back, I’m so happy that he didn’t give me any sign of hope between us. Looking back, I can see that the “goodness” he occasionally displayed was only an act. It was an intentional act to get something HE wanted. It never had anything to do with me at all.
That’s not love! As painful as it is to accept, keep reminding yourself.
Kimberly
EB:
ROTFLMAO….reading about your message from the collection agent. THAT STORY IS PRICELESS!!!!!!!!!!!
Scratch that — YOU are PRICELESS! Thats a feat in and of itself to not only bring awareness to a collection agent – but to get them to leave you a kind civil message and one that has nothing to do with collections !! You rock!!
TooLate/Kimberly (do you have a preferance 🙂 –
You sound like you have been struck by a bolt of strength and clarity and determination !!! Im especially glad your car didnt run out of gas! I checked out your link –your photographs are BEAUTIFUL!!!!!! The poem to your daughter is wonderful! Sounds like with consistency and tough love your boys will see the beauty and rewards for having good respectful behavior towards themselves, eachother and others (With boundaries of course :))) Have another S-Free day! Good luck with dealing with the mess he left behind with your property. They are notorious for that. Im glad your days are filled with more positivity strength and direction !!! LTL
When you share a child with an S, there will never wholly be peace. Even after you find a way to ignore their little antics, they’ll find a way to jeopardize your children enough that you have no choice but to respond.
I am much more at peace this time around than I was three years ago when I had to go to war to protect the son we share. I know what he is, so the struggle to unravel that is not part of my mind cycles. However, I still have this gnawing feeling that I’m being sucked into a maniacal game.
I will stay focused on what I can impact and accept the things I can not. I will not permit him to put our son in mental, emotional and/or physical danger without as much opposition as I can muster; as I must live with my own actions and inactions. But I will do so while observing no-contact except in the presence of a legal or psychological professional as witness.
Engaging me in his game is going to be as uncomfortable, expensive and unfruitful for him as I can make it! And when this round is over, I will allow myself peace that I did all I could do and the rest is just going to be.
Duped
learnthelesson:
You may call me TooLate or Kimberly, whichever you prefer. I suppose it’s less confusing if you use TooLate or TL … in case some people are new or not reading my posts or not putting the 2 names together.
Thank you for the compliments on my photographs! Although I am an amature, I think I get lucky once in a while … and I enjoy them … even the ones that don’t turn out.
As far as my children go, it’s going to take a lot of hard work, firmness, fairness, and consistency to get them to the point that they need to be. I am afraid that sociopathy may be partly or wholly genetically passed down. I am not very knowledgable about that yet.
I can tell you that I don’t want either of my sons to become sociopaths. For as much as I love them, I will be watching them carefully for the signs. I will not enable sociopathic behavior in them. I am currently looking for a parenting class to help me learn how to parent children with “special needs”.
Does this sound ignorant? It is because I haven’t educated myself on the “children of sociopaths” yet. I won’t be ignorant for long. It’s my next step in healing.
So … about my property. I called those nice people who are buying it and was able to give them some advice and peace of mind. I told them to tell my husband NOTHING. If he harrasses them, they should give him my attorney’s name and number and tell him to take up his issues there. That way, they don’t have to deal with him, and neither do I. The people who are buying the property will begin sending the payments directly to me.
I also called my attorney and I am waiting for a call back. I want to find out if I should be sending half of the property payment to my husband (50/50) … or what I should do with it. It’s not a large sum or anything. Maybe I should just put it into savings until the divorce is over.
Just as I suspected, they paid him the deposit in cash, but he never gave them a reciept. Now he is saying that they never paid it. I know they did, because he told me they paid it. So … I will write them a reciept.
Sorry hubby … you’re not going to win this round!
Just a question.
Do you believe in good and evil … like in the old western movies where the bad guy wore a black hat and the good guy always won? Even in modern day movies, Star Wars and whatever … the good almost always prevail over evil.
Do you think that with honest love, affection, and understanding … we will prevail over the sociopaths?
I was just thinking about my kids. Will they go to the Dark side … or will my genuine love win the battle?
I still want to believe that good will always win against evil.
A side note: When I left my husband and returned home, the mileage reading from there to here was 666 miles. A coincidence? I don’t think so. LOL. That’s odd, I felt like I DID just leave hell.
banana:
I don’t know yet what happens when they lose control over you, but I’m afraid for you and your son.
I have a NO CONTACT with my Spath and have no idea what he is up to or how he is on a daily basis.
I hope someone here can give you some valid answers and advice.
Bananna….they move on to other victims…..they can’t be without control of others……Not possible….it is the nourishment their ego/minds require….and they are not capable of feeding their own egos from within/self esteem….hence the control over others.
You son very well may be his next victim…..I would remain vigilant.
Unfortunatly….and this will NOT make you happy…..our society doesn’t punish/avert things that COULD happen….
what a person is cabable of doing etc…
It has to happen first….then the punishment phase…..
It’s not good enough to ‘think’ a person will kill you……he can’t be punished for your thoughts…..
He will only be punished after you are killed!
Boom!
The only thing you can do is to document, and videotape your sons behaviors…..he is so young, it’s going to be hard to prove….You are doing all you can.
If the daycare provider is noticing this, have her document it also…..DOCUMENT EVERYTHING!!!!
Your doing your best….
It sounds as if he is hanging himself…..give him the rope…..he’ll be dangling soon enough!
Good luck!
Toolate –
The bigger question for me is “Is Sociopathy a result of nature vs. nurture?
I didnt believe in Evil – until my experience with it.
The winner is whichever we choose…. right?
As long as you do your best with your sons with honesty love affection understanding and discipline and boundaries — your lifes work as their mom will be the best it can be!!!
In my opinion we can give our children our best — but in the end their choices will be their own. We can guide and educate them (and ourselves) for the best possible outcome!
P.S. perhaps an escrow account for the property funds. Although you mentioned it was in your name. Guess your lawyer will be the best one to give you advice with that!
TooLate:
Good vs evil.
Hmmmmmm……I think there are always dynamics that go along with it…..
I have hoped for so long, and been told by my friends…..EB, your influence on the kids will prevail……
For the ‘most’ part, I see it has…..but, I got one kid who, at times resembles his father….NOT always…..but enough to scare the hell out of me…..and he’s my oldest.
I see where things turned for him…..and then how he has ‘allowed’ his own personality and victimization to reighn him.
I don’t have your answer…..but we are where we came from…..and it’s up to each of us individually to decide ‘what’ to do with it…..kids included.
The best we can do is continue to love and show our kids the way……..again….we can’t contol the outside factors…..
Just do our absolute BEST!
Sometimes, evil seems to prevail…..but in the BIG picture….the overall sceme of life…..NO, I don’t think evil prevails…..overall…..
THey win some battles….but NOT the war of life!