I am often asked how I managed to get out of that place of darkness to live with such light and joy in my heart today. The answer is fairly simple — I chose to. The reality is much more complex. The following piece describes where I got to in that journey. It is an excerpt from my book, The Dandelion Spirit. I originally wrote it on a forum I belonged to about a year after he was arrested. It was my ‘explanation’ of what happened to me in that relationship.
There is a warning with this post — it may trigger you. If it does, breathe — and know, when a trigger explodes in your mind, it is your opportunity to embrace it, walk into it, accept it and heal it. Only you can make that choice. Triggers exist in our mind. The past is no longer. It is gone. The memories are what are hurting us. And when we pull the trigger and let the bullet of memory pierce us, we give ourselves the grace of being free. Nameste
He told her it was ”˜love at first sight’. Destiny. Fate. He asked her to marry him on the first date — has anyone ever loved you so completely? Has anyone ever swept you off your feet with such passion? Such fervour? She told him she was not ready. He pursued.
He wanted sex within the first week or two of meeting and showered her with gifts, flowers, champagne, to prove he truly, madly deeply loved her and only her. When she told him it was too soon for physical intimacy, that she needed to ”˜go slowly’ he respected her wishes. But, then he arranged a ”˜special’ weekend away at an exotic location to surprise her. How could she refuse him?
And on that first time together, he became short of breath, his skin started to flake from lack of oxygen. He had a heart-attack. The ambulance came. She was whisked away, and though his business partners kept her informed of his health, she never knew where he was, or what was truly happening. When next she saw him, he sadly told her of his rare heart condition. Being ”˜a man’s man’ he could not fathom living with someone else’s heart beating in his body. He must undergo experimental surgery, but only once his heart has deteriorated to a point that it was feasible — 1 month, 2 months at the outside 3.
He gave her a new cell phone so that she did not need to worry about the expense. He constantly reminded her that though she was successful in her own right, all that she had accomplished to create her beautiful life was nothing compared to what he would make possible. He told her that no one would ever want for her what he could give her, for what he was going to give her were her dreams come true. The dreams she had whispered to him while lying safely in his arms, the world far away and silent. He held her and told her of his love. He laughed and teased her, told her with fervent kisses of his dreams for ”˜them’, for their happily ever after.
And she slid into his arms.
Everything circled around his desires and wants—he was dying, he was weak. He could not be ”˜excited’. But even in his ‘ill health’, he was only concerned about her well-being. He told her he was setting up trust funds, changing over his insurance policies, investing in her business, investing in other businesses to create a life for her greater than any she could ever imagine — or ask for or wanted. She only wanted him to live.
As his health failed, he would confess that he was part of an organized family. One of the ”˜upper echelon’. She didn’t understand. She didn’t believe those things really existed. He told her that was what made her so beautiful. Her innocence. Her belief in goodness.
“You do not believe in evil,” he said, stroking her hair where he held her head against his chest. “You have not seen what I have seen.”
What did the past matter, she wondered. He was dying. Now was all they had to share.
As a parting gift, he wanted to give her the story of his life — “It will be such a story,” he said. “Your fame as a writer will be assured.” It will be called, ”˜A New Don Rising’ for he was changing the old guard, he was ridding the ”˜family’ of its unethical, illegal businesses. He was honourable, righteous. He did not want to be remembered for the destruction he had created, but for the lives he had saved through his ”˜good works’. She was his inspiration, his reason for hanging on to see that what he started was completed, and that she never need for anything again. That she and her daughters were safe from harm.
He had secret friends, and many, many enemies. He will toy with her by telling her that his enemies were willing to harm her and her children to get at him. He told her evil men had sent him three bullets. Pictures of a young girl being violated — she looks like your eldest daughter, he said. These evil men were threatening to kidnap her daughter, drug her and put her in the sex trade unless she remained silent. He promised he would never let harm come to her and them, but she must do what he says and be silent. Only silence will keep her children safe. She will never see these evil men, but he will tearfully tell her of the threats he has received against her and her children.
He will triangulate his relationship with her and with other people. He will tell her who is ”˜plotting’ against her. He will tell her who is working with the police to build their case against him and using her and her love for her children as the wedge to destroy him. He will tell her that she is being investigated by child services, that he has men following her to keep her safe and the police have people following her to spy on him and the bad men have people following her to get at him. Wherever she goes there are people following her, taking pictures, watching. And she knows they are there, because sometimes she sees them. Sometimes she is shown pictures. Sometimes, he comments on what she was wearing that day, even when he has told her he wasn’t there. She never knows when someone will be watching. Or not. She never knows.
He will appear emotionally hurt at what he tells her others are doing to turn her against him — and though she will never see or know what others are doing, he will ensure she believes him and is too frightened of her daughters’ safety to risk confronting him or these ”˜others’ about him.
He will tell her about his past lovers and relationships — before his marriage. He will tell her how cold and sterile his marriage was. He will tell her that he has never paid for sex, never used pornography, never been with a woman other than his wife while married — but theirs was an arranged marriage between families — she was an exceptional wife and mother but they had never truly, madly, deeply known love together. And now, with her, he does know true love, and he’ll leave out the mad part but she will feel it. And he will ask her about her experiences — and keep the intimate details stored until a later date when he will use the information to terrorize her.
He will always give her compliments. He has known her through many lifetimes — but this is the first time he has to show her his love. She will come to wish it were the last. She will come to believe that his love will kill her. And she will remain silent.
He will act overly concerned, soft and caring when she speaks to him of her terror of these unseen evil men and her fears for her daughters’ safety. He will tell her not to cry. He will tell her it’s okay to cry. He will take her tears and use them as his weapon, to show her how weak, stupid and ugly she is. How pathetic.
And she will believe him. She is pathetic for not being able to handle the terror. She will try to take her own life and he will laugh at her pitiful attempt to end it.
“You can never leave me,” he will tell her. “I will never let you go.”
And she will grow silent and only say those things that keep him calm, that cause him to applaud her, to appreciate her, to admire her.
Eventually, he will tell her that she reminds him of his mother. He will tell her how sad it makes him that his mother will never know her — for she is the woman she would have loved as her daughter-in-law.
He will create a ”˜husband’ for her. One of the top family men whom no one will mess with — and to ensure no one messes with her. He will show her the wedding invitations, the marriage certificate. He will promise her that he will have the ”˜marriage’ evaporate as soon as he has corrected all the wrongs so that then he can marry her himself — as soon as he has wrought vengeance on those who have tried to harm him. She will never wear the dress. Never walk the aisle. But he will convince her that isn’t necessary. He is doing this all for her. She must trust him. Believe him. She doesn’t. But she never tells him. And she never tells herself of her fears.
He will always take away the evidence and leave her with nothing to show for his promises, his threats, his lies. He will tell her he has signed papers in her name. “It is for your own good,” he will say. And she will remain silent. Sometimes, she’ll wonder where the papers are. But she doesn’t dare look for them. He will be angry if she does. And so, she stays silent and holds onto the darkness he tells her will keep her safe.
He will tell her of the many assassination attempts against him. He will carry a gun and show it to her ”˜accidentally’. She will panic and he will laugh at her and tell her to face the truth, “life is tough and if she wants to keep her children safe, she’d better learn to accept he has a gun.” He will call her in a panic, telling her of the latest assassination attempt, telling her his cousin is dead, but he escaped with only minor wounds. He will call her from the funeral, tears in his voice. Begging her to help him understand why it has to be like this. Why can’t they just leave him alone to love her as she deserves to be loved.
He will keep her on the rollercoaster of his lies and she will keep her eyes tightly shut, missing the exits flying by.
He will make sure she fears for her life, and her daughters’ safety. She will despair that she has brought such terror into their existence, and he will tell her it is his fault, but he will fix it. And then, he’ll blame her for the mess and remind her that only he can fix it.
He will arrange for ”˜things’ to happen to convince her that the evil men are watching, plotting, attempting to kill her or harm her daughters. There will be dead birds on her doorstep, bombs beneath her car. Kidnappers lurking, items missing from her home.
As her terror rises and she become less and less able to function, he will promise to protect her, to take care of her. He will remind her it is all her fault that she is like this and that the beautiful life he was building for her was destroyed. When a police investigator comes to see her about him and she spends five minutes talking to the investigator, he will yell and scream at her that she is stupid, stupid, stupid. When the ”˜other woman’ accosts her in her office, he will scream and yell at her that she should not have gone into the office that day. And he will never explain why there is an investigation, or why the other woman exists. And she will be too frightened to ask.
He will make her change cell phones many times — to foil the evil men from listening to her calls. From tracking where he is and knowing where she is going. But he will always know and make sure she knows he sees her, even when he isn’t there.
He will ensure she knows he is taping her calls by repeating conversations she’s had with others. He will call her from far away places in the middle of the night and accuse her of having another man in her bed. He will accuse her of having at least two affairs. He will accuse her of vile things. He will use every ounce of knowledge he has about her against her. He will use her.
He will ensure she knows he is capable of murder. He will ensure she knows there is no getting away from him. He will ensure she witnesses his ability to harm others, to obtain vengeance. He will build the case to ensure she tries to kill herself and when she fails, he will hold her pinioned in his arms until she becomes the walking dead, alive only through his munificence.
And when he is not there, when he is away, she will sleep with one eye open for he is always lurking, somewhere in the corners of her mind.
I no longer sleep with one eye open. He is not lurking anywhere in the corners of my mind. I have filled my thinking with all that loves and supports me. I have no room for him in my mind today. He is not important. He has no value.He does not count in my life today.
henry,
he is 16 soon to be 17.
Erin,
I think the differences between your son and my son are substancial.
One is that you seem to have moments when you can “reach” him. Even if these are RARE occurances. They do happen. I would find ALOT of hope in that.
You said that you know he loves you…. THIS is the most HOPFUL (and powerful) thing that you have.
If you can REASON with him even for one moment. That is a
positive thing. If you feel he loves you and you know he FEELS your love for him that is priceless.
If he can SEE your hardships with the bills or your past illness or ANYTHING such as this….The fact that he said he was sorry that he didn’t help you more. These are all GOOD signs.
Alot of kids, boys especially go through a period of showing anger and resentment when they are teenagers. To a degree alot of this is pretty normal stuff. Teenagers make some bad choices, THAT is normal. School, peers, parties, drugs, girls, they have alot of hard choices to make. My older son had a period of time when he went through this. He was angry about
mine and HIS fathers divorce. My Ex husband was not there for him much after our divorce. He went through a period of time when he was about 17 where he blamed me for this. It was hard but I could see the light at the end of the tunnel. He wasn’t LOST to me in his sea of anger. He was just angy and feeling that he had to blame someone. He still made other good choices in his life at the time. He was still learning “lessons” as he went through this period…..All the stuff that is SUPPOSE to happen.
I looked at the “big picture” of him and saw that all was going to be ok with him. This “thing” he was going through, it was temporary. A part of growing up.
I knew it wasn’t necessary to “defend” why I had divorced his father with him. This wasn’t the core of the issue, “why”. The issue was that my son was going through a phase where he felt that his life would have been “better” (financially, emotionally) with his father in IT. All his friends had “nicer” cars, alot more than he had. They had dads at their sporting events in the grandstands, or even COACHING, etc….I knew his dad wasn’t capable of meeting his sons needs if he was in his life or out of it. And I knew in time, he would see this for himself. I SHOULD not be the one to tell him this about his dad.
I told him that he WOULD understand as he got older. And HE does. He gets it now. He calls me to complain about his dad.
My younger son, I see no light at the end of the tunnel. I don’t claim to be a fortune teller…. I don’t know the future.
But the darkness of his anger, his hatred, I HAVE seen. The fact that no one can reach him. The shallowness of his “ties” with others, even his peers. The constant lying, manipulating, the entitelment, lack of reality, control, grandiosity, all of it….It doesn’t seem to even equal his young age. When I see these things in him somehow he seems much OLDER than his years. And yet in other ways he is SO vey immature.
In short it all doesn’t add up. Its different than being a defiant “I know it all” teenager. And the difference is he is so unreachable. Its like nothing “good” can touch him.
Generally, I am a pretty level headed person.
I know when I come here I am full of dismay. I might not sound like a level headed person…. I am all “over the place”. Because I don’t know what to do anymore. I have exhausted everything I DO know how to do.
But this is where I let it all out. My friends do not understand this. They can’t relate to any part of it.
Wits:
I do see these things as very hopeful!
I do!
I get so frustrated!!!
I think you are doing a great job, you need a constant ‘venting’ place.
LF is it……
We can only write about a portion of our lives…..and it’s usually the negative parts…..
This is why I have fun….’teasing’ others, talking about rustoliuom lube, donuts, skillets and hot guys….it’s also a release!
your right…..if you shared every inch of your life with your ‘real’ friends, they would scatter……this is just how people are……no one seems to have the stamina…..they just don’t want to hear about it!
But here it’s different! We can share, we can be harsh, we can be soft, we can be loving, supportive and a shoulder!
We all need that in our lives!
I think of you often……I want you to know this!
You sound just fine and level headed to me…….don’t ever question yourself!!!!!!
XXOO
Wit – I agree with EB – come here for support. It is good that you are aware that something is off with your youngest son. I feel overwhelmed and dismayed as to what to say too you. I think Ox is your best source of advice and comfort. Encourge him to join the military? sheesh let’s talk about skillet’s..
wit – most of us here are talking about these kinds of pdo’s in the past tense, Your living with the enemy.
Wit
My oldest son is more stable and more loving and smarter than anyone I know, I really am blessed and my youngest is still yet to be seen…I see what appears to be love and concern but I’ve also seen no concern or feeling at times when I felt there should be and it scared me, now that I know his dad is a P and what that means, I worry but pray for the best and try to teach and love and do see signs…
I’m not saying it’s the same, dealing with it in your children must be awful and I can’t imagine and hope I don’t ever know what that is…but your posts have the vibe of stress and anxiety in and worries that I feel… in that I feel like I understand your feelings.
I just wanted you to know I’m thinking of you…love, hugs, and prayers, heavenbound
Amber,
I did see your post to me earler.
Much of what you say though adds to my dilema…Of trying to understand.
If I had burned my son with an iron, or beat him, or sent him away when he was young to live with someone else, or did anything that I could put my finger on now that could be considered abusive….I could/would understand where his hatred came from. I am sure the guilt of it alone would be more than I could live with.
My husbands mother (my MIL) is an N. So my husband (my sons father) was raised with this disorder. He was also adopted, she is not his bio mother. She has ALWAYS, at least since I have known her been very much in denial. I am talking of the “product” she raised, the adult son. He was an alcoholic. She denied it. He was a drug addict. She denied it. WHATEVER situation he was in…If he lost his job. she made excuses for it. It wasn’t because he missed days because he was drunk…It was because his boss was an ass hole. His first DUI. The cop was a jerk. You know….She had more excuses for him, than he himself did. And HE was the alcoholic. alcoholics are masters at this….excuses. Its part of the disease….
It is very difficult to look at your own child and admit and SEE that they have SOME BIG problems. I understand this. I am there. I think it would be much easier to be in denial about it.
My son tells alot of people that he has a terrible life here at home. Not just his friends but adults to.
Everyone that will listen. He has some people convinced that this is true. Granted these are people that never heard my side of the story or people that don’t even know me. BUT the fact remains, he’s telling his “story” and he has a captive audience. Some people are believing him.
GOD knows what he says to them. For all I know he could tell them that I beat him or abuse him. He did have someone willing to take him into their home when he was going to runaway. I have to assume that any adult that would be willing to take a 16 year old kid into their house and “harbor” a runaway must believe the kid is in trouble.
…..If a 16 year old kid came to me and said he HATED his mother and he couldn’t take living in the house with her anymore…..And he was convincing enough that I believed him. The HATE part, not so much the getting out of the house part. (alot of teens might say that)
I would have to think that any 16 year old kid that really hated his mother must have reason to….. In other words I WOULD be looking at the MOTHER with different eyes. (not the kid) What the hell did she do to him to make him feel this way? This kind of hatred doesn’t come out of nowhere….THAT IS WHAT you would think, logically. Isn’t it?
If a 16 yr old kid actually DID come to me and say this NOW I might question it ONLY BECAUSE of my own experience. But I have to honestly say without having experienced this first hand, I would most likely believe this kid must have a very legitimate reason. If I saw this hatred. He must come from a very bad home.
Did you question your X when he told you of his abuse as a child? Probably not to much. I’m sure your heart went out to him….It’s what any compasionate person would do. Feel bad for this kind of abuse.
If my son at 16 years old can convince people that his life here is so bad…..(and its working for him)
God ONLY knows what he will be able to “pull off” when he is an adult. He might have a hot iron story of his own. Or like Skylers Xp story that his mother drowned a bag of kittens (or something like that)
It ALL goes back to the same question. Nurture or Nature. And sometimes both.
Did your X lie about his childhood trama, or was his childhood life pure hell ?
What you described to me was pure hell. If that was his childhood truth, no wonder he is toxic.
My son wasn’t abused but he certainly did face a childhood trama. BUT he percieves his childhood here, that I am a terrible mother. So isn’t that PART of the COMPLEXITY of this whole disorder. When he leaves here he TAKES WITH him “his story”(however true or untrue this story may be)…..That is what he will share with the woman who falls in love with him…How terrible his childhood was.
It is also interesting to note that my sons story (as he tells it), does NOT include the most single tragic incident of HIS life, his fathers suicide? Why is that?
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/019286212X
this book, the meme machine, looks good judging by the reviews. I haven’t read it yet, but seems to be about how memetics influence culture and the human conscience etc…
It might give us some insight into the P-brain.
(P-brain, LOL, no pun intended)
I think everybody should walk outside at midnite and look at the moon and we will all smile at each other OK??
BTW the moon is full tonight.