By Joyce Alexander, RNP (retired)
I’ve written here many times that I used to think that healing was a place we arrived at and that once we got there “everything would be wonderful.” I have learned in my latest tangles with the multiple psychopaths in my life that healing is NOT a place that we arrive at, but it is a Journey.
I have no doubt looking back at my relationship with my P-sperm donor that I had PTSD when I escaped from his clutches at least alive, which is more than some of his victims have done. I was 19 and had no one to advise me. Looking back, I wanted to talk to people about this trauma and no one seemed to either believe or care. Even my Egg Donor didn’t believe a word I said. I felt invalidated and alone. Eventually I managed to “move on” with my life by burying these memories and injuries, and I felt I was “healed.” I thought I had arrived at healing.
Frustrated about my son
Years later, in dealing with my psychopathic son, I was so frustrated that I couldn’t get through my beloved son’s head that he was ruining his life with his criminal behavior. All he had to do was to quit robbing and stealing, apply himself in school and he could have had a free ride scholarship to any school in the nation, on his SAT scores alone. But I was frustrated because I couldn’t find the “magic words” to show him how much I loved him and how great his life would be if he would listen to me.
A few years later, when he was 20, out of prison on parole, I found out that he had murdered a 17-year-old young woman. Talk about a “relapse” into PTSD— I had one. I still didn’t really realize just what I was dealing with. I only knew that my son, who of course denied he was guilty, was going to prison for possibly the rest of his life. I locked myself in my house for three months and cried continually. I didn’t eat for nearly two weeks, and didn’t sleep at all for one full week. Can we say “Shell Shocked” or “PTSD”?
Then, eventually, I felt like I was “healed” from the trauma of learning my son was going to prison for “life” and adapted. Life went on and I planned for the time he would get out and come home to live and straighten himself out. He could have some life left after prison. The family would support him and help him reestablish himself.
Father and son psychopaths
I read Robert Hare’s book Without Conscience, and I saw that my P sperm donor was a psychopath. I yellow highlighted almost the entire book, but I was in denial for years that my beloved son, also fit every criteria. Eventually, though, I realized that my son was just as much a psychopath as my P sperm donor and that I could no longer “be supportive” of him. I cut him off. No more visits, no more commissary money. NO CONTACT.
The “summer of chaos” came, when I realized that he had sent someone to kill me. Then the PTSD returned in full force as my other son and I fled our home in fear of our lives. All the issues I had buried and not dealt with from my family of origin resurfaced. I had to heal or die, I was a total mess, like I had melted into a heap, and I knew somehow I had to find that elusive “place of being healed.”
Learning and healing one layer at a time through self help
I started to read obsessively about psychopaths. I read everything I could find on the Internet and in books about them, and about self-help for healing from trauma and I started to find comfort. I found Lovefraud and I realized I was not the only smart woman in the world who had been traumatized by psychopaths. I had to find some way to stop the pain, though. So I would find comfort in one thing and “get over” something else. It was like “peeling an onion—”when I got one layer of trauma peeled, there was another one underneath that one, and so on.
I learned all I needed to know about psychopaths, and knowing all of that helped in my healing. It made me feel better, but I also realized I needed to learn about myself. I needed to learn a lot about myself. Why I allowed people, not just the psychopaths, to walk on me. I realized I felt responsible for other people’s happiness, and that I would let them walk on me repeatedly. I realized finally, that my boundaries were weak or non-existent.
The healing “journey”
Finally, at some point I realized that I would never find a “place” called HEALED. I would never be totally and completely healed. I realized that healing is a journey, not a destination. I realized that it starts off learning about them. At some point though, we realize that all the knowledge in the world about psychopaths isn’t going to heal us. We reach a point that we may not know everything about them, but we know enough. Then we must start to learn about ourselves in order to really start to move toward healing. I used to think I knew “enough” about myself and that I was a pretty nice person and fairly well adjusted to life. But I realized, finally, that now the healing road is a continual one, one that moves on and on.
Sometimes that road may have smooth sailing. Other times it may have pot holes, or steep mountains to climb, or snow and ice and chilling winds as we start to process what happened to us. But there are always going to be setbacks in life that will try our strength and our determination.
I’ve worked on fixing myself, from things like learning to set boundaries about how I will or will not allow people to treat me. I’ve learned to enforce those boundaries even if it meant that long term relationships were lost.
I’ve also done other things to “improve” myself, like stopped smoking, lost some weight, went on a low sodium diet, all the things I used to advise my patients to do, but didn’t do myself. I quit being a hypocrite, in other words.
I learned the “red flags” of a toxic person, and realized that if a person is dishonest in any way, or irresponsible, a liar, or unkind or lacked empathy or compassion, I didn’t need that person in my life.
I’ve done a lot of things to improve myself, and I realize that I need to continue to work on becoming the kind of person I would want my children to be. There is no place called “Healed,” but there is a journey called “healing” and it is “life.” Anyone who has dealt with a psychopath for long enough that they were traumatized by the association needs to heal, and that “healing” is a process that takes time and work, and is a journey, not a destination.
as long as you are re-running the experiences, questioning where and when you “went wrong” then in a way you are still doing that running battle with him.
“there is a thin line between love and hate”…but each tie you to a person. myself, i learned to realize i was thinking about him/us, and each time i did that, i was “giving him my energy”. for me, that phrase was very illuminating, and led me to finally closing all contact, doors, phone calls and finally even any thoughts.
and that is just deliciously GOOD!!
carriesguns, yes! as another poster here put it: “Mind over Matter…I don’t Mind anymore, because he does’nt MATTER!
carriesguns
I still do find myself doing a lot of ruminating about my life….but you’re right.In doing that I am giving him more than I ever wish to…. I have my daughter’s wedding to plan now so maybe there will be less of my energy to give to him anyway!!!!
OXY
Your cigarette example to me is a great way to put it.We are addicted to our children just like a cigarette. No mater how much they hurt us just like a cigarette does we tend to forgive and go back for more. Although we know the truth deep down we live in denial because we do not want to face the truth. Why is what keeps me wondering? Why is our love so strong for our children that we do not want to give up hope. We hope that one day they will change. One day they will love us as much as we love them. I loved my mother as much as I love my children. I think it is my love for my mother that makes all of this so hard to understand. My mother was like you and me. She also suffered at the hands of a daughter like mine and they did not talk for 20 years. Mom did welcome her back.She never talked about the past, but never trusted her again either. It was all caused from misunderstandings and gossip but my sister to this day has never really forgiven my Mom and my Mom died not trusting her. It was me who invited my sister to my Moms 80th birthday. If I would pay her way home she would come . Moms eyes light up with surprise and happiness but by the time the visit was over There was a relief in Mom when she left. Mom died loving her but not sure how to deal with her and was afraid to say the wrong thing. Although my Mom took a drag of that cigarette again she never felt comfortable with it. This is where our journeys take us. Just like a addiction up and down up and down.
Hugs Oxy hope all is well!
Dear Grandmother,
I noticed the other day when my son D and I were talking that I no longer “miss” my egg donor, I also no longer “miss” my son Patrick.
It’s odd, he hasn’t lived in my home since 1988, yet I missed him every day for two decades. I’m at peace with the separations now. It has been a long hard road though.
I stiill fear him, but not miss him.
I know about the long hard row and it has only been four years. I sure hope I find peace before two decades. I have excepted and forgave a lot to be able to live with myself and my mixed up feelings but I still hang onto that hope button. I just need the proof one way or another. Prove to me she is a manipulating liar. Or prove to me she is brainwashed and submissive because I really do not understand how a whole town can despise the ground he walks on and she only see’s the love even though she admits it has been the hardest four years of her life. I am a common sense person and none of this makes sense. I do not know how big of a brick has to hit me but it has not hit me yet. I fear the man she is with but I do not fear her. I do not trust her and sometimes think I should fear her. I do still miss her too! How much does a child have to do to a mother before we wake up?I see what has happened to you and what it took.Please dear lord do not even let me feel the pain that you have gone through.What I have gone through is more than enough pain for anyone to handle. There is no dought God has carried you through your journey other wise I do not think you would be here right know. No one can carry all that pain and mental abuse alone. We are all with you here oxy and I am very grateful for your story your honesty and your strength.
Grandmother, he has her fooled like Patrick fooled me, and my boy friend fooled me, and my sperm donor fooled me and Donna’s husband fooled her and Liane Leedom’s husband fooled her and every one here has been fooled but she has made her choices, and you are not able to change that. It doesn’t make any difference if she is ALSO a P or not, the way she has chosen to treat you and her kids is TOXIC, but there is nothing you can do except pray.
God has held my hand when I couldn’t stand. I do not claim to have survived on my own. My faith was only as a mustard seed but He helped me through.
Dear Oxy – I finally got some time to sit down and catch up on my reading. Thank you so much for this wonderful article. I’m probably going to ramble a bit.
After 30 years of marriage to a spath, I made my discovery of the spath husband’s extracurricular activities in Aug 2009. I found Love Fraud soon after and the first piece of advice I followed was from you – take dead relationships off life support. I lost most of my kinfolk within a few weeks, but I started sleeping better. It shocked me that they dropped me so easily and yet I felt so much better. That was my initial step in healing – your advice was so practical and so helpful. It has been such a journey since then with so so so many twists and turns and feeling more and more like myself, if that makes any sense.
Talking about masks, he had so many. The hurt little boy, the angry psycho hose beast, the competitor for attention, the cutesy performer, the shameless flirt, the envious disdainer, the self-proclaimed expert, etc. I don’t think there is a real person in there anywhere. He always blamed me for his bad moods.
Here is an article that helped me in terms I could understand about his moods. Scroll down to the Pin Ball Wizard entry – hilarious but oh so true. You may have to copy into the browser to access (April 2011 entry).
http://alexandranouri.com/2011/04/
Throughout the marriage he left me on multiple occasions due to changing jobs so often. He would only keep a job for 2-3 years at most. He would always leave me destitute and having to join him. Of course he did. Now it makes sense.
Lately I have been considering how to navigate from here. Thinking of transferring or retiring, but neither one is realistic. Thinking of what you have said about just leave, just do it. I started praying about it – laying out all the outrageous unbelievable truth about my situation. Not talking to anyone but God and LF. Thinking now about what you have written here about the journey.
The spath husband received a letter last month about all his car accidents – he’s about to lose his insurance at least and maybe his license. He blew it off of course. But it got me talking to my public health colleagues and I got to thinking about his father – a spath who went into early dementia. Light bulb moment !! The past 2 years, he has been more ADHD and impulsive than usual. I’ve been working through all the signs and bingo – early dementia – he’s been “lost” twice in familiar surroundings, had 3 public meltdowns the past few months and been confused about simple procedures.
The really weird thing about the twist in the journey now is that I’m seeing his mask slip more and more but SO IS EVERYONE ELSE. Same thing happened with his father. Of course everyone is blaming his behavior on the dementia, but I know better. So my journey is about to get easier in some ways – people tend to accept “dementia” when they would never get “sociopath.”
I have no idea where this is going – but I’m okay. The most precious gift from this journey is that I can sleep now – really sleep. Never had that opportunity in my life.
I’m about to turn 58 and feel like I have been “wandering in the wilderness for 40 years.” I like that metaphor – not hopeless but just lost for a long time.
Thank you – bless you.
Dear OpalRose, I am so glad that my ramblings have given you comfort…my Rolodex is very thin now…I didn’t realize how many of my relation-shiiats were dysfunctiiional and abusive. I think we have been in them so long that we accept them as “just the way it IS”
A DRAMA-FREE life will allow you to sleep for sure. And yes, the dementia will let his mask slip as his short term memory goes bad. Unfortunately many men with dementia become VIOLENT so watch your step. They loose their impulse control and become very enraged.
You may not yet be in the “promised land” but I can guarrentee that when you get away from him, you will sleep even better.
God bless you Opal Rose, just keep on praying and ACT on the good sense God is opening your eyes to see.
Thanks Oxy – (((hugs))) to you