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Forgiving Yourself for Being Human

You are here: Home / Recovery from a sociopath / Forgiving Yourself for Being Human

September 9, 2008 //  by Joyce Alexander//  255 Comments

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By Ox Drover

In my journey toward healing from life’s pains, and from the PTSD and the pains caused by the trauma from the psychopaths, I think one of the hardest things has been to forgive myself.

I was raised in an abusive Christian atmosphere with a terrible, impossible definition of “forgiving others,” no matter what they did, no matter if they weren’t sorry, or how likely they were to repeat the abuse to me. I was programmed to try to meet my obligation to “forgive” when there was NO WAY I was going to trust them again. How could I?

While this previous “definition” of forgiveness of others who are unrepentant has changed post-trauma to a definition of getting the bitterness out of my own heart for what they did, but it does NOT INCLUDE restoration of TRUST or “pretending it didn’t happen.”

That done, I recently had an “ah ha” experience about “FORGIVING MYSELF” for the things I have done to others that were less than stellar acts. Acts that were down right nasty, vengeful, spiteful, etc.

Some of you may have read my little “parable” about how none of us would hold a grudge or get mad at our little pet dog that was injured and lying on the street with a broken leg, if we were to rush to our puppy’s aid, and in its blinding pain and fear it lashed out at us when we tried to pick it up and it bit us. That would be a totally different reaction on our parts from the way we would react to a dog that bit us every time we went to pet it or feed it, would attack us in our sleep or when our back was turned. Few of us would keep the “psychopathic dog” very long, but we would not at all be angry with our pet that bit us in his fear and pain. We would be understanding and compassionate, though the wound was deep and hurt like heck!

The old saying “there are two sides to every story” is one we have all heard, and many times that is true. There are in the above story two VIEWS—the one of the owner, and the one of the dog.

Many years ago I fell on some brick steps and hit my shin so hard that a huge bruise immediately rose up on my shin the size of half a large grapefruit. The injury was so unexpected, and so sudden, and so painful, that when my beloved husband reached out to extend me a hand to help me up, I immediately struck out verbally and actually SNARLED at him, “DON’T TOUCH ME!”

Another time, a couple of nights after my husband’s tragic and sudden death, a beloved friend of our family was there to console us, she had driven over seven hours to be there. She was very anxious and just kept chattering and chattering. In my pain, the sound of her voice was agony, and I asked her to please be quiet and go to sleep, which then upset her more and made her more anxious and she chattered louder and longer. I finally got up in her face and seething in rage, looked at her and told her to “Shut your lips, if another word or sound comes out of them I will hit you.” Right at that moment in my horrible pain I could have done so. I could actually have hit someone I dearly loved who is in no way anything but loving to me.

Looking back over these instances, I realized in my “ah ha” moment, that there are various things like this that I have done in my life that I am sure not proud of. In pain at various times I have struck out at the very people I loved who were there for me. I have also struck out at the psychopaths many times. I have said things and done things that I am sure not proud of. I have hurt people who loved me and were only trying to comfort me in my pain.

I also realized in my “ah ha” moment that I have not forgiven myself for these things. They still make me feel bad about myself, guilty, shamed, and imperfect.

How do I forgive myself for these things? Restore my own self esteem and trust in myself? I realize that I am human, and looking at the “parable” of the injured dog from the dog’s view point, I realize that those that love me realize, just like the little dog’s owner, that I was striking out in intense pain, and that those people still love me, and forgive me. That I also should realize that I have forgiven them when in their own pain they might have hurt me, so why am I holding myself to a higher standard than I hold others to? Why am I not allowing myself the same forgiveness that I extend to others, even the psychopaths?

I realized that I need to get the bitterness against MYSELF out of my own heart for being human. I acknowledge the wrongful acts I did in striking out at others, even the psychopaths, I feel great remorse for these acts, I have “repented” (made a promise to myself and others that I will not repeat this type of behavior), I have apologized, made restitution if I could, and in short, done everything I can to “make up for” these acts. The people I wronged (except for the psychopaths) have all forgiven me, and restored me to a trusting position in their lives, so I should also forgive myself and trust myself. Being in pain is no “excuse” for biting a lovingly extended hand, but it is definitely understandable.

My forgiving others, getting the bitterness out of my heart so that it does not hurt me, is important, I think, but forgiving myself, I think is just as important. My unkind acts or verbal assaults toward the psychopath did not “ruin the relationship.” If I had been perfect it would not have improved the one-sided relationship of all-taking on their part and all-giving on mine. My failure to please them was not my “fault” in any way. No one could have pleased them. My failure to see that and to cut the relationship sooner, to set boundaries and enforce them, rather than trying to placate them by allowing their abuse was not “right,” it wasn’t a good decision, but it is understandable considering the pain that I was in. It is now time to forgive myself for being human, for being fallible and making mistakes, and for even doing things I knew were wrong.

Category: Recovery from a sociopath

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Stargazer

    November 8, 2008 at 8:26 pm

    Frozen rats. Just what I went there for. I wanted a retic so bad but it won’t be happening.

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  2. Indigoblue

    November 8, 2008 at 8:49 pm

    Star

    What that sweet adorable albeano dwarf tiger retic ? what are they about $100.00:)~~~~~~~

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  3. BloggerT7165

    November 9, 2008 at 12:08 am

    I posted this in another section but wanted to post it here also as it seems to apply to the OP:

    Something else to consider. Some psychopaths use a persons strengths against them and this throws some folks and gets by their defenses. Many people are aware, at least in some way, of their own weaknesses and tend to be sensitive/guarded about them. Not so with their own strengths.

    People who have a great deal of empathy and care deeply and passionately about people and causes/beliefs are people who have changed the world and left their marks on history. It is this strength that carries them through.

    But if the psychopath can find a moment of vulnerability and get their hooks into a person they head right for their strengths. They then turn the perception of these strengths into weaknesses so by the time the psychopath is gone the person now perceives their own strengths as a horrible lingering weakness they often can not seem to shake or figure out.

    And because this perception has been changed problems can linger for years or forever. The perceptions need to be put back to where they were and strengths needs to be seen as strengths again. You still care about him/her even after everything that has happened? Not a weakness, its a strength. The ability to care about someone deeply and passionately even after they have treated you horribly is a noble thing (and for the christian crowd it is christ like). How you see it and what you do with that strength is what needs to change.

    I may love peanuts and long for them, pine for them, yes even crave them. But if I have a severe peanut allergy I certainly will have no contact with them. The same applies to the psychopath (though I am stretching the peanut analogy a tad).

    So think about it in this light before you are critical of yourself. I think some will find that what they think are weaknesses are in fact strengths and they have just had their perceptions of them warped and this is one of the things that causes such deep and lasting damage on some people.

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  4. Indigoblue

    November 9, 2008 at 12:15 am

    Yuppers I second that ! :)~

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  5. Indigoblue

    November 11, 2008 at 10:47 pm

    Here it is I hope this works and I hope this helps It sur helped me

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  6. blondie

    November 11, 2008 at 10:50 pm

    thanks

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  7. hens

    November 11, 2008 at 11:57 pm

    Blondie – I don’t know if you have been keeping up with (As Henry’s Stomach Turn’s) but after 8 months NC – my X showed up here 3 days ago – and I was sitting there thinkin of him as usual – and he drove up – he just came to intimadate and harrass me after all this time – his demeanor was arrogant – it did something to me – I want to call it closure – but I don’t think of him the same way – I hope something click’s for you – something set’s you free – you have been struggling with this too long – there is nothing wrong with you Blondie – stop looking at yourself through His eyes – who were you before he came into your life?

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  8. blondie

    November 12, 2008 at 12:41 am

    henry~

    im so happy for you that you got that closure. i dont know why i keep looking at myself through his eyes? i sometimes i feel like i have to keep up this show. instend of enjoying my life to the fullest i feel like i have to watch what i do. i really let his opinions of me, his opinions of what i should be or what i should wear stick with me. when someone emotional abuses you for so long you start to think its true. thats the point im at. i hope i can snap out of this.

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  9. Trinity

    December 7, 2008 at 1:25 pm

    Great blog thank you very much for posting this it has helped me. I need to let go of the resentment I feel toward him or it will consume me and turn me into him. Only I will be worse because I have a conscience and feelings. I don’t get pleasure out of hurting others or attacking people trying to help me like he does. I need to let go of blame, resentment, and hurt. I need to give him back everything he gave me which was hurt, deceit, betrayal, emptiness, loneliness, lust, anger, hatred, and nothingness. Thank you. I need to humble myself and forgive myself.

    Henry you said something that made me realize I was doing this: “stop looking at yourself through His eyes- who were you before he came into your life?” that describes me and I am trying to get back who I was before him. I feel like he took the good in me but I also know he could never take the heart and soul of me. Thanks for writing that it really made me think.

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  10. Wini

    December 7, 2008 at 5:55 pm

    Trinity: Pamper yourself right now … you are still in the shock phase of finding out the TRUTH. No matter how painful your TRUTH is … the TRUTH will set you free.

    And yes, forgive yourself. Be good to yourself. Getting over the hump of horror to forgiveness is the hardest mountain to climb. Forgive him, not for him right now, for yourself. Then soon, you will get through the maze to forgiveness … then compassion will come back into your life … then ife is beautiful again and he (they all have) has issues that we couldn’t even imagine.

    It’s OK to waffle back and forth. That’s natural as you go through your healing process of TRUTH.

    Peace to your heart and soul.

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