By Ox Drover
Someone was talking about how she should have seen what her ex-significant other was up to with all of his sweet words. He was in prison, and telling her how he had changed and found the light and how wonderful things would be when he got out. She knew what he had done to get in there, the bad acts he had committed, but she chose to believe his “sincere remorse.” Now she wanted to know why she had been so stupid.
She wasn’t “stupid—”she was using denial to protect herself from something so painful the thought of it “scared her to death.”
Years ago, when I was married the first time, my husband and I were friends with a couple. I felt close friendship with both the man and the woman. I knew that they had been separated once in their long marriage because she had caught him cheating, and that they had lived separate for a year or so before getting back together. I also knew that the woman would not put up with any more cheating on the man’s part. She had made up her mind that if he cheated again, that would be it. They would separate and divorce.
The life they had made as a couple was satisfying. They had an adopted son. The man had a good, steady federal job. They had a paid-for home and some land in a community they liked. She was a stay-at-home wife who enjoyed that role and kept busy with homemaking and taking care of their son.
After my husband and I separated, I was totally devastated and frequently I would take my two young sons and go to my couple-friends’ home to spend the weekend. They lived out in the country and raised meat animals for sale. Our children were friends, and I considered both the man and the woman to be my friends.
One weekend a month or so, my boys and I went to see them for the weekend. Just before dinner on a still, bright and light Saturday afternoon, the man mentioned he had some new animals in the barn that he wanted to show me. With the full knowledge of his wife, who was cooking dinner, we walked out to the barn to see them. While we were walking down the aisle my friend appeared to stumble and fall, and I tried to catch him, but then realized he was making a “lunge” at me, literally!
I gave him a firm “NO!” and backed away from him. He got a sheepish grin on his face and said, “Well, you can’t blame a guy for trying.” I said, “Yes, I CAN blame a guy for trying, but I love your wife and I will not tell her what you just did.”
We went back in the house and ate supper. After supper, the boys and I left instead of spending the night. I was disturbed by my “friend” lunging at me, but I felt that it was wrong to tell his wife what he had done because I knew it would hurt her. I doubted that he would tell her, so I decided to just stay away from him without someone else present.
About two weeks later, in company with another female friend of mine, I went to visit the couple for an hour or so, and the wife was very, very “cool” to me. I couldn’t figure out why she would treat me in such a manner. After we left, I started discussing the situation with the girlfriend who had gone with me, and she said, “Silly, he figured you would tell her even though you had said you wouldn’t, so he had beat you to the punch, and he told his wife that YOU made a pass at him.” DUH!
Well, obviously my friend had it figured out, and that was exactly what this serially cheating, unrepentant creep had done. He had told his wife (my friend) that I had made a pass at him.
His wife knew me pretty well, I think, and she knew I would not have in any way encouraged her husband to make a pass at me. She knew also that I was reeling from the separation from my husband in a divorce from hell, and she knew her husband was a serial cheater in the past. But she chose to believe him. She went into denial about what she knew or suspected was the truth—that her husband was lying to her (again) to protect his behavior.
She knew if she acknowledged the truth, that her husband was a lying cheat who would not stop trying to cheat, she would have had to leave him, and she didn’t want to do that. The pain and financial problems, the loss of the “lifestyle,” would have been too painful, so it was easier to deny what she knew was true, and to get mad at me, rather than accept the truth.
What would have happened, I asked myself, if she had believed what she knew, instead of what he said? What would the woman whose man was in prison have done if she really looked at his actions, rather than listen to what he said? They would have had to act on those truths, and because the very thought of acting on those things was so painful, they chose to believe the lie. It was the less painful option.
I, too, have chosen denial of the seriousness of the things that were true. I did not want to admit that someone was evil, that they will not change because they do not want to, that a lifetime pattern of doing illegal, immoral and mean things means that person is not likely to alter that pattern. I did not want to accept that truth.
Denial in the short term is a salve to the heart of the devastated one who cannot immediately accept the whole raw truth that, for example, their loved one has been killed in an accident. They must accept that truth a bite at a time, like eating an elephant. Short term, denial is protective.
Long term, denial is worse than dysfunctional. We must accept that they are “deceased” in order to be able to “bury the body” (so to speak), because if we don’t do that, the corpse of our existence starts to stink and rot. If we accept the truth, we must ACT on information instead of perpetually remaining in denial.
I never saw my couple friends again. I knew that there wasn’t any use in trying to tell her that her husband had lied, that I had not made a pass at him. If I had told her the truth and she had believed it, she would have had to ACT on it, or continue to deny it. She did not want to ACT, so she therefore continued to DENY he lied, and put the “blame on me.”
I do understand, though, how that woman felt. I stayed in denial for many, many years, rather than accept the truth about my psychopathic son and his lack of repentance for his crimes, including murder. Accepting that truth after decades of denial was difficult, and at times I asked myself why I denied it. I think the answer is that at the time, I thought it was easier and less painful. Looking back, I know I wasn’t stupid, but I did make a choice that, “knowing what I know now,” I would not make again. There is no use in beating myself up for not knowing then.
I know now. I make decisions now on what I know now.
TOWANDA!!!
OXY – thank you for sharing such private thoughts. I , too, feel so guilty and stupid not only for the damage I allowed to myself out of denial – but also to my children. I chose and fell in love freely – to a very Narcissistic , even Sociopathic man. We suffer his B-S daily.
My Daughter is worried about getting a job , a car – college.
My son has been crying for days about his dad promising something for Christmas and it doesn’t look like he will come through with it.
My heart breaks for him and his big rolly tears – even at 12 yrs old.
There is nothing I can do to protect him and I can’t fix it for him because then I still protect the N/S.
I pray his eyes open soon and he can learn to protect his heart – my son – suffers because of me.
Oxy;
The Eagles “Yes, I’m Already Gone”. My victory song because I have the key.
Some women and men too will not awaken out of their sleeping beauty slumber. As you say, denial is a powerful drug, and “I” will not have to do the work necessary to make me responsible for me.
Love ya Oxy—Seeing Clearly
Oxy,
I finally told my evil sister that her husband is a trojan horse. Turns out my mom had already told her and she refused to believe it AT FIRST.
But I’m very good with words and symbols. After about 3 hours, I could tell I made a dent. Fact is, I knew all the WTF? moments that she had experienced. Those were her cognitive dissonance moments: the WTF? bucket.
I pulled items out for her and explained them to her. matched up her socks, so to speak. By the end of the conversation, she was still not convinced, but she wanted to know more…because she knew I wasn’t lying to her. She knows that I’ve always told her the truth. Now she holds simultaneously in her head, the contradictory ideas that I’ve told the truth and her husband does love her. How long will that last? and which one will win?
The reason I told her is because, if the positions were reversed, I would want to be told.
A wise woman once said, “the truth will set you free, but first it will pith you off!”
Dear Newlife:
Your son is not suffering b/c of you. You are and I am sure you will continue to do the best that you can. A 12 yo should have the capacity to understand this.
Sit your children down and talk to them in a very calm and collective manner. Give them choices to make for the good of all 3 of you.
Would you rather have xyz(toy game whatever) and do without abc(cable, internet). You can empower them to get what they want by them raking a neighbors yard,helping someone clean out a garage, babysitting selling their old toys, cd’s games. How about baking cookies together and selling to neighbors. There is nothing free in life a price has to be paid either by you or someone else even if you benefit i.e. foodstamps, ss, welfare. Somebody pays. They will have learned so much more than expecting something or given something out of guilt. Tell them how very proud you are that they have done so well under the circumstances. Explain that the economy is not good and how tight things are. You may be surprized by their willingness to except less. Your ability to communicate with them is everything.
Remind your children that the most important thing you have is each other. Things(stuff) comes and goes, friends come and go. Love for each other remains constant. If you have each other you really truly have all you need. God Bless.
Stay Strong Stay Safe Stay Sane
Dear Newlife,
I pray that your son does not close his heart off. Pain can also make us cut out the source of the pain and cast it aside. In all things speak gently and with compassion to him and validate his feelings and pain. Let him know it hurts you too. It’s not about the object that is the source of his pain, it’s the unmitigated neglect and freaking F hatefulness of his sperm donor(thanks Oxy) that he hurts so badly—-the empty feeling of abandoment. I despise what these creatures do. Stop the cycle,
More later—I’m getting worked up over this–need to distance for a while. I’ll be back. ((((Hugs)))).
Ox Drover,
What a good article, explaining what denial is, how it is implemented by our psyche to keep us from completely falling apart, crashing, when we are hit with shocking information. I guess denial is somewhat of a shock- absorber, steadying us until we’re ready to peel it away, looking beneath the surface (at the reality of a situation), then embark on implementing changes that can help us reach our new goals.
newlife08,
SeeingClearly is so right. Please don’t beat yourself up over things that you can’t control. You and your children are in my prayers – my heart goes out to all of you. The BEST GIFT that your children have is you – a mom who likes to spend time with her children, giving them love and affection, conveying to them day-in-and-day out that they are precious souls (you’re their rock). Your children (and mine) will learn some lessons earlier than others (about human nature), being useful information to have in the long-run. It is hard now, but all of you will come out all right. Peace.
BLUEJAY – SEEING CLEARLY
This is such a soulful place – to come here – read – and remember we are not alone in this.
You are so right – the lessons hard learned now will serve my children in their adult lives.
My own denial and hopes for things to get better wasted the best years of my life. But no more – I still fight the memories and the pain – the lonliness and every day hardships – but someday I hope to know what it really is to be loved by a good man.
I’ve learned only over the last few years my own mom is Borderline PD, with strong Narcissistic traits and abandonment issues. I am 54 and always knew she was off somehow but didn’t know why. She threatened suicide in phys/rehab a few years ago so they evaluated her.
So now, I know why my N/S husband seemed so normal to me – crazy-making was always a part of my life.
And I praise Donna Anderson for now wanting to educate our high school kids.
OUCH, Oxy!
This isn’t anywhere so far away from me than a “river in Egypt”—–in fact, this one landed right on top of my house!
Yes, I remember a woman who talked about her ex-insignificant other in prison, who promised her that he’d never cheat again, & that once he got home to her house, everything would be wonderful…..they’d reach their dreams & live happily ever after.
And so she dwelt in the dreamy land of his golden promises….waiting & believing for years after he got out of prison….never wanting to see what was happening….going out of her way not to snoop or pry & possibly find something that would bring his betrayal to light. Hell, she would’ve had to act on it, wouldn’t she!!
Yeah. You’ve nailed it, Oxy. EXTREME truths you’ve shown here!! wow.
You know, it’s hard to get out the river of Denial….it’s so easy to just let go & drown in it….a sort of emotional suicide.
I find myself still battling that current every dang day. I STILL agonize every day (tho less & less as time goes on & I get stronger & more self-aware) that J was telling me the truth after he left—that he honestly had intended to reach those dreams With Me, that he’d patiently tried to live with me, loving me, all those years, & just finally had to give up & flee because there were “fundamental flaws in our relationship that were irreparable”. That he was “praying all day” on the day he left, asking God if he was doing the right thing, after “finally” realizing that he was “just a simple, quiet man” who had “nothing but his soul”, & couldn’t live with me anymore.
God!!! I was SO AWFUL! I MUST have been SO AWFUL! What a TERRIBLE human being I am! I destroyed the love of this kind, patient man who loved me SO MUCH in spite of all my AWFULNESS! If only he’d told me years ago that there were things I needed to change! Why didn’t he tell me? It must’ve been because I’m such a “dangerous, angry, & destructive person”! That’s why I’m in therapy, you know—trying to find a way to correct all my AWFULNESS….because he would’ve never left me had I not been a “shrew, a shrike, a honey badger!”
Well, at least he wouldn’t have left me had he not started the concurrent relationship with the 16yo younger, insanely wealthy woman with the powerful family biz connections within 2 months after he came “home” from prison. The woman who’d opened a joint checking acct with him just a few months after that, who’d given him $19,000, who flew to meet with him in the finest hotels all over the country & in Mexico for 4 yrs. The woman who he called “a sexy, yet practical, delightful potential partner” in an email to her only a few months after he came “home” from prison—the “home” that was a “shelter from the storm” for him for 2 yrs as a federal fugitive, & again, for the 3 1/2 yrs that he was on probation.
The “home” that was actually another “prison” for him……& all the time I thot we had the most PERFECT relationship. NOW I realize that he’d learned the skill of “doing his time” as an adopted half-Pyute wild child having to adapt to life in a very staid Quaker home, sent to camps all summer, sent to Christian boarding schools from 1st -12th grades, 2 yrs in prison, dealing with people in big business (while he was making 250# of Ecstasy in his spare time). He knew how to please the authorities, & how to survive with—but never CONNECT TO—his roommates & companions. (One of his fellow students was Franklin Graham, who he & his buddies delighted in beating up!)
Now, I’m slowly giving up beating myself up! It continues to dawn on me again every day that “OH! he was lying to me the whole time….lying that I was everything he’d ever wanted, lying about what he was doing on his ‘business trips’, lying about who he was talking to on the phone all the time, AND LYING TO ME AFTER HE LEFT about what a terrible person I am!”
THAT, my dear, is an example of Extreme Denial! Even after KNOWING all I now know, I still try to tell myself that he was good & I was bad. Criminy! NOW, THAT’S what I’m doing in therapy—-finding the sense of self-esteem, self-worth, & belief in who I am……that self-esteem that would’ve made me strong enough to accept long ago that he was a liar & a sociopath who was scamming & using & betraying me (& having Fun Doing It!)…..I would’ve had the strength to see it & ACT ON IT!
Thanks for another of many AH-HA moments, Oxy!
Newlife:
I understand your heartache at seeing your kids let downs and fear and stressors.
Please keep in mind….all the lessons of life. What your kids are learning will be valuable lessons for their future AND enable them to see their father for what he really is….outside of ‘dad’.
As painful as it is to see our kids being let down…..and every excitement they show when their spath father is involved, we already know the ‘ending’……all we can do is be there for them.
At 12, let your son (and daughter) know, they have a voice. (doesn’t have to be a convo in re; to daddy-0)….just generalize….
It’s Okay to let a person know how your feeling and that they can express their disappointment in someones letdowns….as long as they are respectful, say your feelings.
It’s okay to tell someone when they promise repeatedly something, and never come through that they have no trust for their words and why.
Teach them that their feelings are valid and they can’t be argued with (others may attempt to), they are entitled to ‘feel’ whatever they feel.
Teach them about looking at someones ‘track’ record……history will predict future.
Kids hold onto each promise as if it’s separate……they don’t look at the ‘big’ picture, and maybe this person has done this eachtime…..broken the promise.
Explain to them that this is how some people operate to get through the moment.
I taught my kids that if someone follows a statement with…..I promise, I swear……that kind of statement……to look closer.
If my intent is to be there to pick them up at school….do I really need to say I PROMISE?
Why do people say I promise……it’s becaue they are trying to be convincing.
People either DO it, or they Dont’.
If I am not sure I can do somehting a child is pressuring me for……I am honest and say…..I will make my best attempt but I can’t commit to a yes on that.
Or I say a flat out no, I am sorry.
This is somehting that toxic parents use with kids….reel in, let down, promise, promise…..just to keep the kids on the hook…..they don’t think longrange.
Seeingclearly is right…..it’s not the end of the world he won’t get an XX or YY promised by daddy-0. If you can look at it as the eye opener your son will get to see his reality….which isn’t going to change in HIS lifetime…….the sooner he see’s pops for what he is……the better off he will be.
Yes, there is struggle ahead for the kids……but i’ve learned that struggle builds character…..and they have an edge on the world at some point with all they’ve learned with their own parent.
Try not to dwell on what they don’t have and see things as gift to their character and longterm growth.
and X-box will be so passay next year…..but knowing their fathers true character as they build theirs is pricesless.
XXOO
EB
I’ve found this to be a valuable lesson for my kids…..