By Joyce Alexander, RNP (retired)
Someone posted one of those “signs” on my Facebook page today that everyone forwards and shares, which I call “one-sentence wisdom or humor” but this one struck me as suburb wisdom.
The past is where you learned the lesson.
The future is where you apply it.
Don’t quit in the middle.
We have all had the misfortune to learn our lessons the “hard way” in associating with a psychopath (or two), but actually I think “misfortune” may be the wrong word, because learning things “the hard way” means that we will not forget those lessons. “The burned hand never forgets the fire” is another way to say it. Maybe we have actually been fortunate to escape from the psychopath when we are still able to escape, and when our “burns” were not fatal. We read in the newspapers, on the Internet, and see on television the faces of women (and men) who did not escape with their lives from associating with a psychopath.
Now that we have escaped, I think we need to apply those lessons learned in the past, to the future. We can’t quit in the middle.
Treating the wounds
While I realize that many here on Lovefraud still have open wounds, sores that are still bleeding or weeping, that are still painful to touch. The pain caused by those wounds, by the physical, financial, and emotional wounds can be horrific. Worse, still, can be the pain of treating those wounds.
I recall my son D’s burns after the plane crash. They weren’t quite severe enough for him to be hospitalized since he had a trained medical person at home, so they sent him home with me with a car load of creams and potions with minute instructions on how to cleanse and re-bandage his burns daily.
Each day I would pre-treat him with a dose of morphine to numb the pain somewhat, though he said it didn’t actually numb the pain, just made him where he didn’t care. Then I would start the process of taking off the old dressings, exposing his wounds to the open air, then wash the burns, removing the old, dead skin, then put on the creams tenderly and carefully, and then replace the bandages which went from the tip of his fingers to his shoulders and back.
I can’t even imagine just how he must have hurt, but my own empathy for him as I treated his wounds was extremely painful to me as well. I know there were many times he wanted to just “give up” and many times I wanted to as well. Just quit! It was too painful to go on treating the wounds! (Just an aside: my son’s wounds healed successfully and unless you know where to look with a magnifying lens, there are no scars visible.)
Emotional wounds
There were times I felt the same way with my emotional wounds in life. It was just too painful, I just wanted to QUIT! Anything to stop tearing the bandages off and treating the wounds again. It was too painful.
After my husband died, I was in such emotional pain that I didn’t want to do the grieving. I didn’t want to tear those bandages off and treat those wounds of my loss. It was just too painful. So I became vulnerable to the psychopaths in my life. The new boyfriend looking for a new “respectable” wife to cheat on was not a successful way to end my pain and grief. I had quit in the middle and didn’t apply lessons I had learned in the past to the future.
Associating with psychopaths leaves us with wounds of all descriptions and levels of damage. Those wounds are difficult and painful to heal, but we must not quit in the middle. Therapy is painful. We have to tear off the scabs that keep us from being able to heal and allow new growth. Whether the therapy is from a professional or is self administered, it is painful to expose our raw inner selves to the open air of examination.
Applying what we learned
When those wounds are healed, however, we must apply those lessons learned to the future of our lives. We must watch for the RED FLAGS of disordered people in the future associations of our lives, and when we see a RED FLAG, we must HONOR that red flag by running as fast as we can away from the person(s) waving it. If not, we will be burned again ”¦ and again ”¦ and again.
Our healing processes start out in learning about the psychopaths, but they end up being about learning about ourselves as well. Learning why we were vulnerable to the psychopaths in the first place. Fixing those vulnerabilities and using the knowledge we learned from our past, to make our futures better.
Don’t quit in the middle.
re blocking numbers – sometimes you can do it in the phone itself. I have done that with my cordless phones at home and with my cell, when i still had it. the spath used a cell.
One/joy,
Hi one step…I was reading your post about your feeling some fear of the part of the healing journey that is ahead of you…And not sure if you will feel at peace with who you might become.
I can relate to that feeling very well tonight.
Sometimes as you said with your father seeing him more accurately…That you can really SEE him. That sometimes initself can create fear, I think. Because when we take off those rose colored glasses the world really can be a more scary place than we want to believe it is.
I had a conversation with my MIL tonight…And when I really do SEE her, for what she really is, she kind of scares the hell out of me?
hurt95:
Yeah, I thought AT&T could do it. Good luck to you!
hurt95:
So here’s a weird question…are you blocking him because you don’t care about him anymore or are you doing it because you know you don’t want the temptation…trying to break the hold he has on you? I think I know what the answer is, but just curious.
I still care about him but am removing the temptation as well as the hurt. That way if he doesn’t call or email, I won’t know. If he does, I won’t know, either. Protecting myself, I guess.
Question: How do I search for all of your posts so I can read your story?
hi witty,
i don’t feel comfortable with who i have become and am not sure if i can change it. somehow the ick seems immutable.
understanding that they scare the hell out of us is important. life scares me at this point. the spath still scares. what will happen when i sue my father scares me. i ‘use’ – i eat when i am scared. i numb out by watching movies….
I have made a lot of progress, but now must work on healing. in 12 step programs FEAR is an acronym: false evidence appearing real. well, with spaths it IS real, and with other dysfunctionals it IS real. but it has given me dark glasses through which i view the world.
i have come a long way, and i want to feel some curiosity about the road ahead. curiosity is the antithesis of fear, and i have always had more than my fair share of it. it is one of the qualities that got me in trouble with the spath. i closed down most of those qualities that led me to the spath and caused her to be able to snare me. now, part of the journey is to reclaim them, and learn to use them wisely.
So…..an update to my post a few weeks ago. I have not responded to Spaths letter regarding taking me to court for time with my son if I dont contact him and his chiild support continues to accrue. I have stayed strong….dealing with my fear. He has still not filed any papers through the court for visitation. I have been in contact with the sate and have provided info on where he works, pictures of his cars and license plate and a picture of him as they are going to be serving him for contempt. Its hard to sit on my hands and just wait to see what his next move will be. He knows I know where he is now as he has deliberately run into a friend of mine..to ensure she saw him….its almost as if he is saying..Im here..see me….I dare you to do something….
Is it odd that he hasnt followed through on the threat?
endthepain,
He is essentially saying (I think) that if you push for the child support (and get him arrested for not paying) that he will insist on visitation….which he can do….and so it is a THREAT.
I don’t know if your state allows someone to sign off their parental rights in exchange for being allowed to not pay child support. In my state if you are getting welfare or aid to dependent children from the state the STATE has the right to go after him to make him pay. So, it will depend on what state you are in and if you are getting aid from the state. I would contact an attorney to find out what your rights are and what is possible or not.
IF you can get him to sign off his rights to the child (and visitation) I would be GLAD to give up any rights to any money because he will NEVER PAY, and every cent you get out of him will be like pulling teeth or getting blood out of a turnip….because he will never willingly pay. It will be a total mind fark and he will keep your child stirred up and you miserable…but I really would talk to an attorney and see what is possible to get him out of your life. and more importantly YOUR CHILD’S LIFE.
Last night, the sister-cousin asked me for a favour… to delete the exposive profile I made about him last year. Plus she talked about how much she and his late father thought I was the ideal woman for him.
And this small exchange turns out not to be so bad after all… First of all, I cannot delete the profile I made on him last year unless I pay the site for special annual membership, and I refuse to pay any dime for this spath’s life more than the last two more months of personal loan to the bank. I ain’t paying any dime to cover this jerk’s ass. The “emotional” appeal (aka manipulation) didn’t phase me, though I understand and sympathize with the request from the pov of the family. As for the emotional smooching over how I should have been the one he ought to have stuck with – A part of me giggled over it when I first read it… the only thought in my mind was – well, I don’t think he’s the ideal man for me (more like the opposite) and never will be.
Anyway, I wrote her back today to tell her I was not allowed to delete or edit it, unless I paid an annual special member sum, which I was not gonna do; that he’s not the ideal man for me, nor ever will be; and I disclosed a dream to her I had about his father (who had passed away for several months by then) more than a month before the end between us, where his father revealed to me he had a secret double life and advized me to move on… that I felt I had his blessing.