By Joyce Alexander, RNP (retired)
Years ago I used to think that healing from an emotionally devastating experience, like tangling with a psychopath, was like recovering from a physical illness or injury. If you cut yourself, you put a band-aid on it and a few days later, the cut was “healed” and you didn’t need to work on it any more. Or if you got the flu, once you were over it, it was all done; you didn’t have to worry about it again. Or if you got the measles once, you could not get it ever again, because you were immune.
Now I realize that healing from an encounter with a psychopath is not like a simple cut that heals, never requiring any more care or even notice. It is also not like having the measles and becoming immune to that kind of disease. Having an encounter with one psychopath does not convey immunity to the rest you will encounter in your lifetime. It isn’t something that you “get over and never have to think about it again.” It changes you.
Tangling with a psychopath leaves serious emotional injuries that are not “healed” easily or quickly, never to be thought about again. Serious emotional healing is a continuing process that lasts a lifetime because emotional trauma literally causes the brain’s chemistry and structure to change.
Emotional wounds are different
Psychological and emotional wounds are wounds of a different kind. First, they are not “visible” to others. Also, others may have strong opinions about how long your emotional or mental wound should take to heal. In fact, society in general, and your friends in particular, may tell you that you should “be over that now, it was just a break up” and give you “medical advice” about emotional healing which they are not qualified to give you. Many times the wounds left by a psychopath need to be dealt with by a professional therapist who “gets it” about psychopaths! Just as you wouldn’t try to treat your own broken leg without professional medical help, or continue to limp around on it saying “oh, it will get better if I just give it time” we shouldn’t try to treat our own emotional wounds either. (This is coming from someone who tried to self-treat for way too long, but who finally got the help I needed.)
If you had an unhealed and grossly infected wound on your arm, I doubt that many people would try to give you advice on which antibiotic to take (though there are even a few of those people), but most people would recommend that you go to a physician for treatment. With emotional wounds, though, everyone is an expert and tells you to “just get over it.” I can’t see them saying the same thing about your festering cut on your arm or your broken leg.
Physical cuts do, with proper treatment, heal and scar over, never again requiring any care or work, but emotional “cuts” will always to some extent, require a continual maintenance, if nothing else. In addition, deep emotional wounds leave behind invasive memories.
Memory good and bad
Memory is a good thing in many, many ways, bringing back enjoyable experiences from the past, bringing back warm feelings when we think about loved ones who have passed away or the fun experiences we had when we were children or on a special vacation. Yet, memory can be a two-edged sword, also bringing back the unhappy memories of being abused, the emotional voids of being neglected as a child or the devaluation and discarding done to us by a psychopath. Sometimes these memories become “invasive” and intrude into our “today” and our “now” to the point that we can’t seem to think about anything else.
I don’t mean that we can never overcome the damage done to us or that the memories must always be invasive, but what I am trying to say is that we must continually work on keeping our emotional health healthy, that we must not let these unpleasant past events recur in our memories and minds to bring about emotional pain. We must also overcome the emotionally dysfunctional ways of coping that we learned to use in order to survive the abusive relationships previously in our lives, and learn newer and more functional ways to think and live in the present.
We must develop new tools, one of which is NO CONTACT with people who are dishonest, unkind, abusive, or in any way toxic to our wounded souls and spirits. I have found the “hard way” that some of these people are members of our families, people that we wanted close relationships with and people that we love(d). The truth is, though, that we can not allow anyone, no matter what the blood or other relationship is, to continually emotionally wound us. We must set boundaries. If boundaries don’t suffice to keep these people from acting in toxic ways to us, then we must cut them from our lives with NO CONTACT.
Peeling the onion
I’ve also realized that as I heal one level of dysfunction in my life and in the way I handle things, I find that there is another layer underneath that one that I should “improve” on. Al Anon calls this “peeling the onion.” I had picked up that phrase somewhere not knowing the origin, but a friend who is in Al Anon told me that she thought it came from there. I think it is a very good analogy, as it is to me like peeling an onion’s very thin layers, and when we get one layer peeled off we find—ANOTHER LAYER that needs to be worked on.
So, healing becomes for me a continuing process of self-improvement. I learned to set boundaries ”¦ so there is always practice to perfection on doing that and as I practice, I get better. There are self-esteem issues, and again, as I practice, I get better and feel better about myself. Each layer of the onion I peel and each improvement I make in myself gives me a new awareness of the next thing I need to work on in Joyce.
Acceptance and grief
As I focus on improving Joyce, I also realize that there is nothing I can do to improve the dysfunctional people who abused me ”¦ and I can’t do anything to change the past. So I must also start working on the acceptance of what was. I grieve the losses that go with my emotional injury. I work on coming to acceptance and peace with that loss, the way I have finally been able to accept the loss of my late husband and my late step-father, and the loss of the aspirations I had for my son Patrick, and the dreams I had for the relationship I wanted with my son C.
Some of the losses I have suffered due to the behavior of my psychopathic son, Patrick, weren’t losses of anything that was actually “real” and tactile. They were simply my dreams for my son, who is so bright and talented that he could have done or been anything he wanted to be. He was blessed with the smarts and intelligence to do or be anything! I guess it was selfish on my own part, because I wanted to say, “Oh, yes, my son Patrick, who invented the way to run cars on water, cured global warming, cured diabetes and cancers of all kinds”¦” so I could, in mock humility, be so proud of him! LOL
Of course my continued working on “healing” doesn’t take up my entire life or thoughts any more, but it makes the rest of my life more fulfilling and more fun because I am slowly eliminating the people and the behaviors that make my life difficult or painful. It is amazing just how much time I have now to do things that I enjoy, when I am not dealing with the drama and dysfunction of people who are not healthy, or people who are actively abusive. I have more time for the fun and enjoyable people and experiences, since my time and energy are not taken up by the drama of dealing with dysfunction.
Tired in body and mind
The cost of emotionally unhealthy relationships and unhealthy people is very expensive in terms of time and effort. Just as digging a ditch with a shovel will make your body tired and sore, emotionally “digging a ditch” in an encounter with a drama king or queen, or an abusive person, will also make your mind tired and sore as well. If you dig the ditch physically, when you come in the house and shower and sit down, you are not able to handle mental or emotional tasks; the body is so tired that the mind doesn’t work well either. The reverse is also true: If you are emotionally tired from dealing with dysfunctional situations, your body is also tired. There is no big dichotomy between body and mind. We are one!
We are well aware that emotional stress puts great strain on our bodies as well as our minds. So it is important for us to continually take care of both our emotional and physical health. Just as we wouldn’t go to the gym one time and work out and expect to have “abs of steel,” we would also not expect to read one book about psychopaths and expect that we would instantly be healed emotionally from an encounter with psychopaths.
Applying the knowledge
Knowledge is what we must acquire by study. Wisdom is the ability to use that knowledge to our benefit, which is acquired by reflection.
Learning about psychopaths, learning about ourselves and then applying that knowledge for our emotional and physical well being is a life-long process.
I’ve frequently said that the healing process starts out about “them” (the psychopaths) but ends up being about “us,” changing our thinking and behavior. I still think that is true, and when we start focusing more on us, and less on them, we are well on the way to growing and “healing,” but the road continues onward as long as we live.
While none of us would wish an experience with a psychopath on our worst enemy, and while it has been a painful process for us, it can be the impetus for us to go on to greater and better things.
God bless.
G1S, OUTSTANDING response, and it applies to me, as well.
Yeah…the anger can become all-consuming and I know this truth from personal experience. Am I allowed to feel angry? Dammed skippy, I am! But, do I want to LIVE angry and lash out at people or their efforts to assist because that anger has grown to such proportions that it’s spattered on EVERYTHING? Oh, hayell NO.
Healing is NOT warm and fuzzy. It is NOT pleasant. It is NOT instant, and it is an ever-evolving process, as you said. THIS was the lesson from yesterday – I’ll be blindsided by Life, at times, and I’d better get a farking grip on those triggers.
That marble is mine, too – even if it IS the only one that I have left!
Brightest blessings
12 hopeful,
For myself, I couldn’t have progressed as far without my focus on knowledge. I let my curiosity to understand the spath, the experience of the spath, my connection to the spath etc… be the road to growth and healing.
We can’t heal until we let go of the old world view we used to have. Instead of letting our anger fester more hurt, use the experience as a springboard to a new understanding and a new life.
I explained it better here:
http://bit.ly/IaxfHE
12hopeful….so, you maintain a facade so that your daughters are led to believe that you’re made of iron? You’re maintaining a false strength and constructed persona that you are impregnable and immune to hurt? That’s the way, ‘ole boy! Teach your daughters that EXPRESSING the anger, hurt, fear, resentment (oh, yes you WILL feel it and QUITE so much, in due time), and the host of other self-killing emotions is forbidden! That way, THEY will swallow their own disappointments, pains, anguishes, and miseries just like e.colii that will drain them emotionally and physically, too! YIPPEE
I’m not going to apologize for sarcasm, here, 12hopeful. You’re holding onto your issues as if they were a buoy of life, and they aren’t. I’m no psych or physician, but you are describing all of the hallmarks of SEVERE PSTD, as I stated, above. And, you have choices, here.
Yoiu’ve been GIVEN superb, sound, and reality-based suggestions, and you are choosing to throw each effort to support and encourage you back into the faces of those who are reaching out to you. With every positive response to your pleas, you’ve tossed them right back because of whatever reason – they aren’t instant enough, they aren’t easy enough, they aren’t soothing enough – whatever.
But, I’m in my own farking state of disrepair, and I’m not going to waste my valuable energies on ANYONE who asks for help, is GIVEN suggestions, and then dismisses EVERYONE’S concern to engage in a “Woe Is Me, I’ll Never Be The Same” party. Nope. Not going to do it, and this will be my final response to your posts.
12hopeful,
would you say you feel “slimed” by the ex-spath? And that the slime just doesn’t go away, no matter how you try to cover it?
(((Truthspeak))) and (((12hopeful))) Is everyone having the same kind of PTSD day that I have been having?
We are all here for the same reasons.
We have all been deeply hurt and betrayed by someone we have trusted and/or loved, in our lives. I think the two of you, by just reading what was written, are misunderstanding one another, IMHO. Peace to you both.
SKYLAR: I STILL FEEL SLIMED; like the meat is rotting off my bones, from the inside out, SLIMED. Like I have been dipped in a pot of acid and my flesh is slowly being eaten alive. The only thing that helped me was getting help trying to figure out this ugly maze that pscyopathy/sociopathy has left me in….I am starting to dig myself out of the grave he threw me in and doing better than I ever dreamed could be possible. I still have a long ways to go yet but I am doing it –
“IT” is almost gone.
Just like a popping bubble on the summer’s breeze…
(POP!!!!!)
I wish you all the ABSOLUTE BEST on this journey…
Every single last one of you. May we find comfort in one anothers words…
Dupey
Guys, quite simple…
Pain is unavoidable; suffering is optional.
G1S, that is as brass-tacks as it gets. I will definitely experience the feelings, but I kinda have to kind of recognize what’s appropriate, and what’s turning into martyrdom.
The thing is, hopeful, from the very beginning you present as a contradiction. You name yourself “hopeful and then contend you are without hope. WE NOTICE stuff like that, but, we, still give the benefit of the doubt. We listen and you sound like one of us….so we try to tell you what has worked for us, but, instead of making ANT KIND of impression on you, you continue to simply maintain your stance….which would be ok, except that it signals something to us…we are so accustomed to folks who only want to take our sympathy and pervert it, that when we see this sort of thing, we recoil.
You are already mad at us, because we are telling you all we know, and it isn’t what you want to hear.
That’s sort of a problem for most of us. We can’t build your innards for you. We can’t fix what the spath destroyed. We can’t take away your pain. All we can do is listen to you. But, I won’t spend too much time trying to fix the unfixable….and YOU are the one saying you are unfixable….not me.
Oh, dear. I don’t think he sounded like he was mad at us. I just think the poor guy is in a lot of pain and just feels hopeless even though he is trying to be “hopeful” by the sound of his name. I have to do that a lot of times myself…fake like I feel good when I don’t because what alternative do I have?? I don’t know…I guess I can relate to him. No one wants to be around us when we are down and sometimes we only get beat down further by the people we go to for help. Someone doesn’t need to come here and get hurt even more. I have seen this happen over and over on here. IF he is for real and not a troll, this is not good. IF he is a troll, well then…I don’t give a shit. But…I know how I feel so many times knowing that even though I’ve gone to therapy many times, it hasn’t helped; even though I’ve talked until I’m blue in the face, it hasn’t helped; even though I’ve gone no contact, it doesn’t help. I think that is all he was trying to say…that he has done all these things that “we” are telling him to do to heal and it hasn’t helped him. We are all different and all heal in our own time. I am so sorry that this man triggered so many people…I really am. I am just not really sure why????? I am confused as usual…sorry, I don’t want to upset anyone either, but I just don’t get it. Once again, I feel like the odd man out…
12hopeful,
I understand, as Louise does. Attempts at “getting over it” are futile. That’s why I asked you about whether you felt “slimed”. The question is pertinent to understanding why you are still stuck.