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!!!
WhyMe,
You’re one of those souls that will come out the other end, not staying in the river of denial. It hurts to stay in the river of denial and it hurts to get ourselves out of the river of denial, but once we’re out, we’re free.
newlife08,
You’re 54 years young. I hope that your desire “to be loved by a good man” comes to pass too. Wouldn’t that be fun and great! For some reason, I think that I’ll recommend a book to you, The Power of Positive Thinking, by Dr. Norman Vincent Peale. If I ever get it completely read (I’m still reading it after, oh, quite a while of having the book), it will be an accomplishment – it is a good read. Take care.
SeeingClearly and ErinBrock,
I have to go get dinner started, but I am so glad that you two responded to Newlife 08 – it is helpful to hear from others, knowing that people do care about you and your situation. I hope that she feels that she isn’t alone.
whyme,
you kill me!
that’s not denial, denial is a river in egypt.
What you’ve described is cognitive dissonance. an uncomfortable feeling caused by holding conflicting ideas simultaneously.
One of those ideas has to go. It has helped me so much to read here that all of our exP’s said the same basic bs.
So let me assure you that I heard the same crap from exP that J gave you after leaving.
I heard about how he prayed that God would protect my kitties, but God never answers his prayers and sure enough he found Julian, my favorite, run over by a car.
I heard that he was a “simple man with no ego”
I heard all the crap, don’t get me started!
BTW, when he said “nothing but my soul” he meant “I HAVE NO SOUL” That was a tell.
We are all in our own way children helping other children with the void each feels. WE have decided for what ever reason to bring ourselves to a full circle a never ending circle that increases with each new child that wishes for and expects healing.
It is my wish that each of you close your eyes and imagine a baby in your loving arms.Caress the baby with your eyes, smell the baby, now kiss the little sweet helpless baby. Look and see the love the baby gives back, It’s sweet baby smile—
it’s trust—whisper it will all be ok it will all be ok-
That sweet baby is you
Hi, gang, just got back home, went to a “kill, skin and gut” party at a friend’s house, going back tomorrow for a “cut up and package the meat” party!!! It all went quite well and only one little tiny scratch on one finger—no stitches this year!! Yea!!!! But took my chain-mail glove and that helped.
Actually, Whyme, yea, I have a river side cottage on the RIVER DE-NILE myself, and two ski boats and a canoe on it! I think you are my next door neighbor there! LOL I’ve seen you swimming there as well!
Denial is very protective in situations like where there is an accident and someone gets killed, or someone gets a diagnosis of terminal cancer…it gives us time to absorb that horrible knowledge a bit at a time. If we tried to “swallow” it all at once we would choke to death.
However, if we stay in denial, denial PRECLUDES YOU DEALING WITH A PROBLEM.
Say for example you are going down the road and your car makes a “funny sound” and you have no money to fix a big thing, so you say “Oh, well, it’s probably nothing, I don’t have money to fix a big problem, so I am just imagining it is a big problem, it’s nothing.”
Well, because you are in DENIAL you do not stop to check and see what is wrong and you keep on driving. Maybe the OIL was just LOW and if you had stopped to check, you might have fixed the problem. The denial though, keeps us from doing anything to FIX any problem because we can’t admit we have one.
I had a patient come to me once and she had a big knot on her breast, it looked like a boil, and it was infected and I gave her antibiotics and made an appointment for a mammogram. She didn’t keep the mammogram appointment but did take the antibiotics. The boil got better but she came back a few weeks later for something else and I asked her where the mammogram results were.
She said “Oh, I didn’t get it, if I have cancer I DON’T WANT TO KNOW.”
Well, of course she DID HAVE CANCER, and it was treated and she lived, but if I had not insisted that I would fire her as a patient if she didn’t get the mammogram, she probably would have died….because of DENIAL. The thought of the cancer scared her so bad she didn’t want to know. (she thought)
TO ME, “wondering” if I had cancer would scare me, so I would WANT TO KNOW, but each of us has different things that “scare” us.
Realizing that we are SCARED and then listening to ourselves “rationalize” why whatever scares us can’t be true CLUES US IN when we are in denial about something.
But when you don’t know, it is hard to know you dont’ know. So watch for the signs that you are scared and listen to your internal dialogs. It will tell you when you are in denial if you listen closely, just like the psychopath will tell you s/he is dishonest if you look and listen closely.
Oxy
Are you telopathic? I had been thinking about the same car annalogy?????????? A little different but along the same lines. Thanks for clearing up my thoughts. LOL You are a wonder.
Nah, Seeing, I’m not telepathic, but just had someone explain the denial thing to me with the car thing and IT STUCK and I remembered it. Should have put it in the article to start with. But being in DENIAL does make us NOT FIX anything because we deny there is a problem so, no problem, nothing fixed.
It is only when we come out of denial and admit that we have a problem can we start to even figure out what to do to fix it.
ADMITTING “WE HAVE A PROBLEM, Houston!” Is the start of fixing it. Just like they say in AA, you have to admit you have a problem.
You know, Oxy,
sometimes you really are a WONDER. Sometimes–many times—you are so incisive that it might make one *wonder* if you really are telepathic!
Nah. Just insightful, having learned from your own life experiences, & so capable of expressing all that you’ve learned.
You’re a tentpole here, Oxy. Namaste, & all that implies.
bluejay,
thanks for the vote of confidence, darlin. I had SUCH a good session with my therapist today. She gave me SUCH a big thumbs up: “I’m so proud of you for how hard you’re working on your therapy on such a BIG process!” Man. That made me feel really good. I’ve ripped & torn & inspected & rejected & expected so much of myself in this “interior cosmetic surgery” for the last 6 months….& you know what….I actually am thinking there might even be a chance of REBIRTH at 66 somewhere along the line! There HAS to be SomeThing Excellent to come out of alla this!
Sky,
I’m flummoxed on the cognitive dissonance point. I *don’t think* it’s cognitive dissonance, from everything I know about that. I do think it’s an attempt to keep denying that the last 8 yrs of my life had been a TOTAL LIE…it’s so tempting for me to give in to self-immolation & believe that it was all TRUE & I was the one who f***ed it up!
AussieGirl had a great explanation of this awhile back—talking about our being unable to give up the ILLUSION….of trying to find a “body to bury”, but only finding wispy nothings in our hands. Ya know? Blaming yourself has some sort of “reality” to it….that’s the way we Human Beings are conditioned to think of things….it has to have some logic to it…..the loss of a job or a relationship or whatever. This elusive nothingness is really confusing!